Antoni Bassas' analysis: "We must dig the grave" of the Sánchez government. This is how fascism speaks.
"Dig the grave." Just when we hadn't recovered from our disgust at this excrement, Feijóo goes up to sing a song about fruit, and on the screen he says, "I like fruit," which is how Ayuso calls Pedro Sánchez a "son of a bitch."

It seems like it's all about to start this week. This is the case with the school year, which in Catalonia will be held without cell phones, which may not even be used for educational purposes. This correction is welcome, even if it brings us back to the pendulum law. There were years when, if there were no screens in schools, we were missing the boat on educational modernity, and now, frightened by the consequences of screen dependence, we ban them. That's fine, but everyone knows the problem is deeper: if screens devour the students' parents (which is what happens), they end up devouring the students.
The political week is shaping up to be busy: on Thursday we will celebrate September 11th, on which "we will celebrate" is a conventional term for a day that will mark the beginning of a long weekend for many people. As Lluís Llach says In the interview we published today, "the entire independence movement is in absolute depression." And yet, it represents 40% of the electorate, at its lowest point. Even the president of the Generalitat, Salvador Illa, a socialist initially opposed to the amnesty, He now says (yesterday in La Vanguardia) that there will be no normality in Catalan politics. Until Carles Puigdemont returns and Oriol Junqueras can run in elections, Isla feels comfortable in the role of overcoming the Process through self-interested fraternity. The problem is that the facts contradict himThe Supreme Court refuses to apply the amnesty without restrictions, yes, but the PSOE is resisting negotiations with ERC (Republican Socialist Workers' Party) to allow the Catalan Tax Agency to collect personal income tax in our country. It's a well-known story of non-compliance and negotiations that are gradually slowing down.
In the background, Spanish political life has been reduced to Sánchez's resistance and the insults of the PP, desperate because Vox is eating away at its voting intention, which means that if he ever wins the elections again, Feijóo will have to make a pact with Vox to govern. And since he sees Vox eating away at him in the PP, he had no better idea than to speak like Vox. This weekend, Tellado said this at a public event:
"This may be the last political year of this government. The last. Here we can begin to dig the grave where the remains of a government that should never have existed in our country will be replenished."
"Digging the grave" is the language of fascism, which in the case of Spain has historical precedents that have yet to be overcome. And when we hadn't yet recovered from the disgust caused by this declarative excrement, Feijóo goes up to sing a song about fruit and on the screen says "I like fruit," which is how Ayuso calls Pedro Sánchez "son of a bitch."
It's unacceptable. First, because Feijóo, when he was made president, said he hadn't come to insult Sánchez, but to beat him. Now he's insulting him. Between the resistance of some and the desperation of others, the start of the year couldn't be sadder.
Good morning.