Spain

VIDEO: Spanish Doctor Destroys Government-Media COVID ‘Crisis’ Narrative

When this mainstream Spanish news program brought on this medical expert, TV producers and their presenter had no idea how quickly their guest would completely dismantle the mainstream media and government ‘crisis’ narrative for COVID-19. 
The situation got so bad for the network that producers had to remove their female presenter and replace her with a more aggressive inquisitor in order to try and discredit their own guest.

Is the U.S. about to move its strategic naval base from Spain to Morocco?

Submitted by InfoBrics, authored by Paul Antonopoulos, independent geopolitical analyst …
Located near the point where the Atlantic Ocean meets the Mediterranean Sea, close to Morocco, is the Spanish Naval Station Rota that is co-tenanted with the U.S. Navy. The issue for Washington to renew its tenancy that allows the Americans to use the Andalusian military base has arisen.

The Quiet Return of Feudalism

Silicon Valley oligarchs are ushering in a new age of serfdom, aided by the left.
Jorge GONZÁLEZ-GALLARZA
The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class, by Joel Kotkin, (New York: Encounter Books, 2020), 224 pages.
Few policy items have more ominously heralded the ongoing realignment of our politics than Universal Basic Income. That its proponents and detractors can’t seem to agree on what UBI is intended for in the first place is merely a measure of that omen.

A Statue of Hatuey

Chief HatueyIf you look at a US $20 bill, you might notice Andrew Jackson nervously watching statues of Columbus and Robert E. Lee coming down and wondering if his face is going to disappear from currency. As Democrats ponder which militarist they wish to glorify in the next round of monuments, it is critical to realize that statues which go up are at least as important as the ones that come down. Perhaps the best nominee for a new statue is Hatuey.

Reopening-- Italy, Spain, Saudi Arabia...

A Hajj gets much more crowded than a Trump rally-- or inaugurationI lived abroad for 7 years and I'm a "member" of the century club (meaning I've been to over 100 countries). When I was still in my twenties and people asked me to name my favorite countries, it would always be Afghanistan, Morocco, Nepal and Ceylon (since re-named Sri Lanka). Over the years the only constant has been Morocco.