Ah! Something unbearable has happened for this news program. They told us: “Unprecedented! It’s never happened before! A rudeness that’s hard to justify! Sánchez was late and forced the King and Queen to wait in the carriage!” waiting man A little minute inside a Rolls-Royce It must be very difficult, I have no doubt about it. However, the interpretation of this news release went further. They told us that arriving a minute late was actually a strategy Sánchez had calculated beforehand. “He tried to avoid being booed by coinciding his arrival with the arrival of the Kings. But he was in such a hurry that the Kings had to wait!” Curious comment. The biggest problem of the Head of Government is that he travels around the world without a clock. Naturally, this unbearable minute of waiting in a Rolls-Royce Carlos Lesmes and the entire dome of the judiciary in the second information period. Long live journalism.
Ayuso’s intermittent kneeling
Of all the creatures that bowed to the royal kiss on this flamboyant, warlike and festive day, I saw only one genuflex: Isabel Díaz-Ayuso. He knelt intermittently before the Kings. Before the military parade, at the Paseo de la Castellana stop, yes; but then, at the Royal Palace reception, no. Ah! It’s like padrón peppers: sometimes they’re hot and sometimes they’re not. Regarding the huge mass of elite creatures invited to kiss hands in the Royal Palace, I thought the professor’s retort was timely. Anton Losada ‘Speaking openly’ (TVE-1). “It’s torture for the Kings to line up and greet 2,500 people one by one. Beware, they’ve even arranged for four breaks to drink water.” Yes, sir, for hydration and, I think, for comfort, too. As the great, ironic and monarchist ‘nostrat’ said many years ago, Antoni de Senillosa“The hardest thing to be a good King or a good Queen is learning to hold your pee”.