Dawn

Dawn

Thursday, March 25, 2021

Thoughts from Pontevedra, Galicia, Spain: 25 March 2021

 Night’s candles are burnt out, and jocund day stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops.

Spanish life is not always likeable but it is compellingly loveable.  

- Christopher Howse: 'A Pilgrim in Spain'

Covid 


Some sound advice.


Spain: The European Commission has asked Spain for ‘coherency’ on travel restrictions within its own national territory and on journeys to and from other European countries – underlining that the risks linked to the spread of Covid-19 are similar – in the case of both internal and cross border travel. Spain’s Foreign Minister Arancha González Laya defended that the travel restrictions imposed by Spain are ‘aligned’. She could have fooled me. 


Cosas de España  


From 30 March, British tourists will be allowed to come to Spain again, to join the Germans and French folk already here in large numbers for an Easter break, despite the fact 3rd or 4th waves are surging back home.


A whole raft of PP ex-minsters - including the ex PM - are denying there was a chest of black cash in their HQ and that the party treasurer - as he claims under oath - gave them great monthly wads of the stuff in brown envelopes. No one in Spain believes them, of course. Including themselves, I imagine. But it won't do their lucrative corporate careers any harm. A 'low ethics country', as they say.

 

Cousas de Galiza


An episode of a series called Un Asunto Privado is being filmed in Pontevedra city. Here's a press foto. I assume the 'female actor*' will take off her 21st century puffer jacket before they actually shoot the scene:-



Blimey! IMDB calls her an 'actress'. How very 20th century.


A Brit couple coming from Portugal this week to meet their lawyer here and armed with the appropriate bits of paper, were told by  police officer he was going to fine them. Not speaking Spanish, they called their lawyer, who was told by the officer that it was because they were in a camper van. But said lawyer was smart enough to persuade him to desist. Confusing rules permit arbitrariness. I’ve been assured by 3 Guardia Civil officers now that I can have 3 passengers in my car next week but I won’t be surprised if another one tries to fine us €600 each. You’d be forgiven for thinking they’re on commission.


This is a wall of one of the 2 weeds called Japanese knotweed, and very pretty it is too. Actually pinker than it looks here:-



Maria's Tsunami: Days 51&52

 

The UK 


Boris Johnson lives to joke, to prick pomposity (as he sees it) with a flippant statement, delivered tongue-in-cheek, preferably amid an avalanche of alliteration. This is his schtick. Clowning around is a key element of his style: it cheers up his supporters and enrages his opponents, who make the mistake of thinking he’s an idiot which, in turn, leads them into making fatal strategic errors. BUT . . . it’s not an approach suited to the row over access to vaccines. Joking about greed is not going to help us secure supplies when some in Brussels are convinced we’ve already grabbed too many. So it’s unhelpful for the prime minister, someone the EU and its leading member states are predisposed to hate, to casually introduce a caricature anti-Anglo Saxon meme and boast about the unfettered greed of perfidious Albion. It risks handing the incompetent commission political cover and allowing his opponents to say that he has ceded the moral high ground. His ill-judged attempts at humour only encourage stereotypical views of Tories and their capitalist cronies. All that said: He is a joker, not a real-life Gordon Gekko. How very true. Is no one capable of convincing him of this? And of the need to get a bloody hairstyle that doesn't encourage the image of a clown? 


BTW  . . . His remark was also silly because it’s not true. The success of the British vaccine programme is not down to greed. Collaboration between an enlightened private sector and the quicker-moving parts of government and the NHS are what did it. . . . It is deeply frustrating. Johnson is highly educated and surely understands the difference. But for the sake of a daft joke he has handed his enemies a weapon.


Essentially, he just can't help himself. A lability in a crisis. 

 

The EU 


What’s clear is that the EU is unable to assess risk rationally and is too bureaucratically rigid to respond to fast-moving events. What would you expect - even in non-crisis times - of a committee of 27 members? 


Oh, dear . . . It was an extraordinary story – the European Commission had turned detective to find AZ's secret stockpile reserved for Britain. During a surprise raid, an elite unit of Italian military police, acting on EU orders, discovered 29m doses at a factory near Rome. The discovery appeared to confirm the EU's long-held suspicion that AZ was giving the UK special treatment, secretly exporting doses to its home country while failing to deliver on contracts agreed with Brussels. Yet, as EU officials later admitted, the allegation, briefed to the Continental press, simply wasn't true. In fact, most of the doses were destined for the EU itself, with the remainder headed for poorer countries across the world. A Portuguese ex-minister called it possibly the "most embarrassing day in the EU's history". I'm not sure that's an accurate statement.

 

The USA


Intriguing . . . Having dropped 11 points in a decade, the USA has fallen behind Argentina and Mongolia in a global ranking of political rights and civil liberties.


Oh, Lordy, Lordy . . . Trump’s lawyer Sidney Powell is defending herself in a billion-dollar defamation case by arguing that “no reasonable person” would mistake her claims that the election was stolen from the former president as fact.

 

The Way of the World/Social media


How bleak it is that every dumb teenage remark is logged so it can be used to destroy adult lives. This has to end. But how? A cultural shift backwards??

 

English


To Americans – or at least Californians – phrases like “speaking your truth”, “reaching out”, “what you’re sharing with us” sound perfectly normal. Most of us in Britain, however, are left either squirming or scratching our heads. To us, it’s baffling: the bombastic jargon of corporate press releases, melded improbably with the mushy blathering of self-help books. We don’t get it.


Which reminds me . . . Yesterday I wrote quite to very optimistic. Later I recalled that, 30 years of experience with Americans had taught me that quite and very mean much the same thing to them. Whereas, in British English, the meaning of quite can be anything from very bad to very good.  Tone is critical here.

 

Finally  . . . 


Though an ex-RC atheist, I don't begrudge anyone their faith, especially as theism can be a source of humour to me. Someone in Madrid recently held up a sign saying: I shall die when God is ready. I'd have thought it was when your body was ready. Which, sadly, can be after your mind has gone before. Which God doesn't really seem to care about. He's only interested in your soul, I guess. The only one of the 3 things I can't find.

1 comment:

Perry said...

Is Japanese Knotweed an acceptable plant in Spain?

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/prevent-japanese-knotweed-from-spreading

https://www.knotweedhelp.com/japanese-knotweed-law/reporting-japanese-knotweed/

https://www.wiseknotweed.com/news/knotweed-mortgages/knotweed-property-value/

Spain’s Foreign Minister Arancha González Laya claims Spanish travel restrictions are "aligned". http://www.quickmeme.com/meme/3qzwqx

Boris lost his courage after catching Covid & continues to open mouth before engaging brain.

Social Media: Least said, soonest mended. By recording every little dickie bird they utter, Gen X,Y Z or whatever, hoist themselves by their own petards. Freedom comes with responsibility. Saying or doing whatever one wants always incurs consequences down the line. Do not open mouth before engaging brain, or be prepared to endure the brickbats of outrageous fortune.
Pandora's box opened long ago. They'll have to learn to live the corrupt culture they created themselves.

Edmund Burke in a letter to Thomas Mercer:

"Whilst men are linked together, they easily and speedily communicate the alarm of any evil design. They are enabled to fathom it with common counsel, and to oppose it with united strength. Whereas, when they lie dispersed, without concert, order, or discipline, communication is uncertain, counsel difficult, and resistance impracticable. Where men are not acquainted with each other’s principles, nor experienced in each other’s talents, nor at all practised in their mutual habitudes and dispositions by joint efforts in business; no personal confidence, no friendship, no common interest, subsisting among them; it is evidently impossible that they can act a public part with uniformity, perseverance, or efficacy. In a connection, the most inconsiderable man, by adding to the weight of the whole, has his value, and his use; out of it, the greatest talents are wholly unserviceable to the public. No man, who is not inflamed by vain-glory into enthusiasm, can flatter himself that his single, unsupported, desultory, unsystematic endeavours, are of power to defeat the subtle designs and united cabals of ambitious citizens. When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle."

In other words: “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”―

The only question that should concern anyone, is whether we retain our consciousness & identity after death of our bodies, which includes the brain, of course! And of course, we don't, if you think about it!

The body of a person with severe dementia is all that's left after their personality departs due to diminished brain functions. They aren't whom they once were & it would seem unjust if they were obligated to endure eternity as such. Blind faith is always disappointing.