“We were talking so well about books and…”. This is how a comment on X began yesterday, and among all the flames burning on the networks remember that there was a moment, on Tuesday, when the sky opened, also metaphorically, the sun came out and we all talked about books, which it’s the opposite of insults, if only because reading (and understanding) requires effort and mentioning the neighbor’s mother comes out on its own. To some, too much.

We were talking about books, but we’ve moved on to something else. Politics could also be talked about in a different way than this delirium, to use a mild word. All the trends in the networks are revolving around the same thing, Pedro Sánchez’s letter and its implications. An unprecedented situation opens up, what is not unprecedented is how it got here.

A curious question is that few tweeters answer each other, unlike what happens on other occasions when there is a minimal debate, shouting, yes, but it is what it is. Now it seems that each commenter writes to expose himself to the public, but since the most normal thing is to follow only yours, who are already convinced, they could save themselves this work, clearly then they would be left without a showcase.

All possible situations and names have circulated through the trends and some that we thought were impossible have been rescued. Even Goebbels, the Nazi Minister of Propaganda, which is to say, and who, at the height of crazy marketing, is used by everyone, left and right.

In order not to end up with the comments of the usual ones, it is better to follow them not by prominent ones but by recent ones, because the algorithm rewards the same names all the time. Yes, it would also be necessary to assume its role in the empire of mud. It is easy to discover which trends should not be promoted with visits: when they are labeled as “unpresentable”, “subnormal”, “shameless”, “thief” and the like, so that no one plays the innocent, which we all know about no way.

Surprisingly, the hashtag could be found yesterday as well

We used to say that all trends are political, but some in a different way. Like the Portuguese revolution that just 50 years ago consigned the dictatorial regime to history, a dumping ground, as one tweet recalls, “with a blow of the carnation”. This was indeed unprecedented.