Awake, for morning in the bowl of night has flung the stone that puts
the stars to flight.
And, lo, the hunter of the east has caught the sultan’s turret in a noose of light

Spanish life is not always likeable but it is compellingly loveable – Christopher Howse: ‘A Pilgrim in Spain.
Cosas de España/Galiza
The right-of-centre site The Corner claims that the PM has run out of narrative and neither governs nor stops the rise of the far-right Vox party.
Said PM has announced the setting-up of a state-owned sovereign wealth fund to boost sectors including housing and national security. The fund will be called ‘Spain Grows’ and aims to extend the economic stimulus of the European Union’s Next Generation fund, which helped the country recover from the Covid pandemic.
The EU’s ETIAS scheme has been delayed yet again.
The Prado’s plans for this year.
The UK
I don’t know why they bothered asking which is the best UK city, when the answer is so obvious . . .
Iran
How Iran’s military power made Trump think twice. The tone in Washington has changed significantly and the US president’s missiles have not materialised. Trump has explained away the apparent pause in military threats to Iran. The regime had assured him that “the killing had stopped”, going on to present the apparent halting of 800 executions of protesters as clear evidence that his threats had been effective. As if the statements of the Iranian government are any more credible than his. The estimate for the slaughtered protesters has reached 30,000.
A safe prediction: Iran’s ayatollah will fall — but the road may be long and deadly.
The USA
- Mad: In the recent NYT interview, Trump was asked about his promise of $2,000 cheques funded by tariff revenues. He replied: “I did that? When did I do that?”.
- Madder and madder: Trump threatens tariffs against those countries which oppose him taking over Greenland.
- The Epstein files: Astonishingly, only 2% have been released, with 5 million to come. Unless Trump somehow succeeds in his increasingly desperate attempts to prevent this.
- Greenland: No one believes Trump thinks owning it is essential for US security. So, apart from the obvious distraction value of another invasion, who’s behind it and what’s the rationale? A very plausible view is that it’s being driven by the vile pair of Miller and Vance, whose real objective is to destroy NATO. Aware that Congress will never approve a US exit from NATO, they see a takeover of Greenland as an effective way to achieve what Denmark has said it will achieve. Hence the European resistance and the show of force. Trump might not be serious and the Europeans might be right to totally discount an invasion but they are – understandably – treating the threat of a NATO break-up as very serious.
- Public Opinion: Per a WSJ poll . . . By a 15 point margin, voters now rate the economy as weak rather than strong, up from only just 4 points last July. I guess it’s possible even some idiots now don’t believe Trump’s ludicrous assertions.
- The Post-Trump Literary Cornucopia: When he’s finally left the presidency, there’ll be no shortage of books on him and the destruction he’ll have wreaked by then, while making himself and his family even more wealthy. I wonder whether one of them will be An Encyclopedia of Trumpian Corruption. Surely a long tome.

Quote of the Day
One year of Trump in the White House and The USA is more divided than ever.
Russia
With friends like Putin, who needs enemies? The Russian leader has failed to support his allies in Syria, Venezuela and Iran, undermining his anti-western alliance. It shows not just cynicism but weakness.
Possibly the understatement of the century . . . The Kremlin is still struggling to understand Trump’s ‘America First‘ policy. A club of many members.
The Way of the World
Lenox Napier asks whose side Trump is on.
Spanish
- Esperanzador: Encouraging, hopeful, promising, heartening, hope-filled.
- El algodón no engaña: ‘The cotton doesn’t lie’. Equivalent to ‘The proof of the pudding is in the eating’. [The expression comes from the idea of the prueba del algodón , where a piece of cotton shows whether something is truly clean.]
- Estruendo: Rumble, sound, crash, din, bang, thunder, rumbling, boom, noise.
Did you know?
Red wine might be good for you Or not.
You Have to Laugh
The world’s third richest person was forced to change the name of his superyacht after he realised it spelt “I’m a Nazi” backwards. Larry Ellison named the vessel the Izanami after a mythical Japanese deity. But he scrambled to change it when the horror name was pointed out to him.
Finally . . .
The Crypto Queen who swindled her way to billions is said to be still with us. Four new episodes from the BBC’s podcast will bring us up to date with the latest theories about Dr Ruja Ignatova, on the run since 2017 and accused of defrauding countless victim in the One Coin currency scam. Was she murdered by co-conspirators? Or is she, as new rumours suggest, alive and living quietly in Cape Town?
My thanks to those readers who take the trouble to Like my posts.
The Usual Links . . .
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I can also be read on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/colin.davies.752861 or on Substack at https://doncolin.substack.com/
For new readers: If you’ve landed here looking for info on Galicia or Pontevedra, try here. If you’re passing through Pontevedra on the Camino, you’ll find a guide to the city there.
For those thinking of moving to Spain:– This is an extremely comprehensive and accurate guide to the challenge, written by a Brit who lives in both the North and the South and who’s very involved in helping Camino walkers. And this is something on the so-called Beckham Rule, which is beneficial – tax-wise – for folk who want to work here. But see here on this. And this article ‘debunks claims re wealth and residency taxes’. Probably only relevant if you’re a HNWI. In which case, you’ll surely know what that stands for.
Getting a mortgage in Spain: Some advice on this challenge.
Re Iran, 30,000 deaths among the protesters is quoted. I would urge caution in believing this. What is the source? They lied to us about Iraq (and that went really well, didn’t it?!) – why should we believe them now about Iran?
It seems to me to be part of a propaganda campaign to “manufacture consent” for attacking Iran again, using the now classic “combined method”: start by weakening the economy with heavy sanctions; identify a stooge who can be promoted as the ‘saviour of the nation’; using NGOs as cover, stir up unrest; identify, pay and arm local activists; infilitrate other fighters through the long and porous border; use social media to coordinate demonstrations, based in the first instance on legitimate grievances; quickly stoke up the violence level in the demonstrations, including setting fire to bins, vehicles and buildings and in the confusion attack both police and civilians, to try to provoke a violent reaction, so that the claim can then be made that “they’re killing their own people, we must intervene on humanitarian grounds”. Does this sound familiar?
It doesn’t appear to have worked this time, but that’s not the end of it, for sure.
I’m no fan of the Iranian regime but this is not the best way to bring about change. And besides, is it really anyone’s business but the Iranians’?
For an alternative view to that of the mainstream media, try reading for instance https://thegrayzone.com/2026/01/12/western-media-riots-iran-govt-regime-change/
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I agree that foreign intervention, particularly US and Israel, is probably not the optimal solution.
But here is the thing. If in 1946 the allies, the US, Britain and France had decided to put an end to Franco’s regime, and have the bastard hang on a public square, would that have been a bad thing? After all foreign intervention in Spain would not have been a novelty. The Liberal Triennium was put to an end in 1823 by the Quintuple Alliance (of which Britain was a part) by sending French troops (The Hundred Thousand Sons of Saint Louis) to restore to power the absolute monarch (Ferdinand “the Pig” the VII). So why didn’t they in 1946? Not worth it? not in their interest? Same thing in Iran. The reason intervention won’t work is because it will be seen as serving the interests of Israel which wants the Iranian regimed removed – so it can ensure its own survival.
Thus, we will have to wait for a split or disent within the regime itself – as it happened with the USSR or in Spain during the transition.
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sorry hang in…..not hang on…….
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The school bully is determined to make his gangsta buddies pay for his non-friends to give up a small corner of the playground. 10%, 25% .. what next. Sooner or later the school bully gets their comeuppane.
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Irán tiene un régimen espantoso que de alguna manera habrá que derrocar pero no creo que Trump lo ataque.
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A comment above wondered: “If in 1946 the allies, the US, Britain and France had decided to put an end to Franco’s regime, and have the bastard hang on a public square, would that have been a bad thing?”
With Truman now US President, one US priority was to ‘contain’ communism, so Franco (along with others, such as Salazar in Portugal) was treated according to the principle “the enemy of my enemy is my friend”.
Would deposing Franco have been a good thing? Possibly, but it might also have led to terrible civil strife. It would also have undermined the principles of the incipient United Nations, which for all its faults was probably a force for good in the world and, if reformed, might still be mankind’s best hope for a peaceful future.
“Irán tiene un régimen espantoso que de alguna manera habrá que derroca.” Is it really worse than despotisms such as Saudi Arabia, which the West treats as allies? Why should regime change in Iran be a priority for the US and its allies (vassals)? I think I know – do you?
Phil
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