Pedro Sánchez said in the Senate that the Spaniards can make sure the Government is prepared for any eventuality. I think it’s time to start worrying. For the first time, the president acknowledges an “extreme uncertainty” scenario, but assures him he has a plan. Before getting into a fight with Evander Holyfield, Mike Tyson said that “everyone has a plan until they get the first blow.” This phrase has remained with us to describe any kind of deliberate unreality.
In addition to the dynamite of his fists, Tyson sent another clear expression, described as ingenious with his half-neuron. For example, he said he was afraid of the weather. “It’s like a book. You have a beginning, a middle, and an end. He also occasionally made candid remarks: “I aged too soon and prepared too late.” After all, with half a neuron, it’s easier to believe in Sánchez’s philosophy of life than in his own. Sánchez’s philosophy of life has long since come to encompass the philosophy of life of all Spaniards who agree to be governed in any way. He did not explain “measures to reduce inflation,” as he said the pandemic was under control. He assures that he will do it gradually, not in a snap, that is, by improvising and being able to make them public when he proposes the opportunity and election year. Judging by his background, there is no reason to believe everything he says, but if anyone is still willing to do it, the EU’s savings and he should know that he is beginning to suspect violations in terms of savings growth forecasts. Ez the man of the plan will take the first army that Tyson speaks of in the metaphor of rough life one day or another.