We are going to Bridge and to a wedding

This week Barbra Streisand has done her thing again: the idea that the best thing to keep people from talking about you is to keep a low profile is not completely understood.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
04 April 2024 Thursday 04:22
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We are going to Bridge and to a wedding

This week Barbra Streisand has done her thing again: the idea that the best thing to keep people from talking about you is to keep a low profile is not completely understood. Come on, Óscar Puente announced/commented a few days ago that his team is collecting the insults that he is subjected to in some media, the minister, not the team, although also by extension, and it was all about announcing/commenting on it and filling the networks with a summarized selection of their best. The world and its things are not the same since X and its surroundings exist; The hunt against Kate Middleton had already given us proof. We should know, or maybe we already know and that's just what we're going for.

Among comments like “this is what the taxes that should go to health and education are dedicated to” (@pabloharour), “maybe we can put the people that Óscar Puente has counting insults to count potholes” (@naroh), those who they put in jugs to announce in turn that if you don't want broth, two cups, and that they are not going to keep quiet, we sense that keeping quiet has become synonymous with offending, who wonder what that data is going to be used for ("blacklists?" "Voodoo?", @oscardiazdliano), and those who jump to the defense of the minister asking for more wood, let's face it.

Of “this is how you have to play on the left, attacking. Not one step back” (@ToroenReposo), praising Ayuso, and the dozens of “give them cane” with their different unrepeatable complements giving the wave to Puente (“come on, give them the same medicine”, @GodoyLapen48994), let's go fine again . Even more so if we pay attention to the prediction of @Davitxu70: “In the times we live in, elections are won on the RRSS. Hit them hard.” Politics as hooliganism.

The week that began with the Easter weekend and Puente as a hashtag concludes with a wedding, that of the mayor of Madrid, Martínez-Almeida. We were already missing something to celebrate, majestic plural, eh. Of course the networks have something to say about it, will they wish the bride and groom to eat partridges?

Spoiler: there are none on the menu, in the good wishes of X, very few.

Yes, the B side of humanity manifests itself in networks thanks largely to anonymity, but also to polarization, it is always the other who starts and they also deserve it. Ordinary tweeters are not spared either, many have compiled the insults they themselves receive. We would have to ask if, in addition to being receivers, they are also senders. We only keep records of what there is, what fabric.