Entertained with the fable of Junts and the wolf

Already in the 6th century BC, Isop warned of the dangers of unfulfilled threats. Peter would frighten the villagers by shouting that the wolf was coming, just for fun, until the beast actually came, and then no one came to his aid, thinking it was yet another of the boy's pranks. Together, he runs the risk of becoming the updated protagonist of the fable, after once again suggesting that he is willing to break the investiture blog. Beyond the understandable political strategy—when the fish in the bucket is lean, you have to shake the scarecrows by hand—it is interesting to see how the different newspapers already gauge on their front pages whether they are going to be in the same boat. lantern or not. The Country, naturally, tries to downplay the matter: "Together threatens another hot autumn, but the government is not afraid of a breakup." Instead, The reason cites the same sources to say exactly the opposite: "La Moncloa, faced with the rupture that Junts is threatening: "This is the time they are more serious." It is exactly like: "I'm counting to three, eh? One, two... two and a half, two and three fours...!"

In any case, now waiting to see if the brittle thing comes to fruition, The World He rubs his hands together and is already preparing a possible new alliance with the Popular Party: "The PP is courting Junts: 'If you want, call and we'll replace this stage.'" Look, how easy. You don't even need a call, listen, with three WhatsApp We'll fix it. The only consolation for this political-media seduction is that we'll see media outlets that have spent a decade calling Puigdemont names, taking up the rag and wax, ready to polish him clean. I suppose it's the strategy of having a white knight with which to cheapen Vox's support, which is what they're looking for and what they've been working tirelessly for all these years.