Borderlines of a Broken Country

In the days after his killing, Alex Pretti is caught between myth and memory. To the people who knew him, he is not a symbol but a person: the nurse who volunteered for extra shifts when the ICU overflowed, who held gloved hands through last breaths, who walked home bone-tired and still stopped to check on strangers. That instinct drew him into the storm the night he died, stepping toward a woman in distress instead of pretending not to see.

Yet once the shots were fired, his story was seized by others. A commander rushed to shield his agents with language that turned the man on the ground into a threat, and the men with guns into “victims.” Protesters heard an old script and refused to accept it. Now an independent investigation is promised, but trust is already fractured. Alex’s legacy may depend on whether the country can finally admit whose fear has always been believed, and whose life has always been expendable when power feels afraid.

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