Spanish life is not always likeable but it is
compellingly loveable.
- Christopher Howse: A
Pilgrim in Spain.
Life
in Spain
- Cataluña 1: The Day of Reckoning. And here's the almost-consensus: When Catalonia becomes independent, every Catalan city and town will erect a statue of [Spanish President] Mariano Rajoy. Nobody has done more than him to promote Catalan independence. Defending the constitution is all very well. But the job of politicians is to look for political solutions: Agustin Gervas, a retired diplomat.
- Cataluña 2: The future. Dark Days ahead? Click here for DQ's pessimistic view. Which is akin to mine of yesterday. Rajoy will continue to fail as a statesman.
- Spain naturally remains the favourite holiday destination for Brits. And, these days, for many others. So, rising demand. Which always means rising prices. See this Guardian article on this.
- Europe's largest shanty town is the huge slum SE of Madrid, called La Cañada Real - the abode of criminals and the truly destitute. It's reported that it's going to be demolished but I rather doubt this will happen any time soon. These things seem to take decades in Spain. But maybe they've already been talking about doing this for many years and things are finally coming to the boil. Or the lancing thereof.
Donald
Trump: It
is still too early to conclude that Russian use of social media
decided the election, says Niall
Ferguson. Who then goes on to provide the evidence which more than
suggests this is the case. See the fascinating article below this post. It's really worrrying to see the percentage of people who get their news from FB and Twitter.
Here in Galicia, Armageddon approaches. We have our first Starbucks in Vigo. Though there are already 2 in more 'cosmpolitan' (i. e. gullible) La Coruña.
Another success for me as regards the Pontevedra retail sector. As predicted, the deli-cum-winestore I've used for the last couple of years has closed its doors. Which is a bit of a nuisance.
Public
Service Warnings:
- If you're taking out cash in another country, banks routinely ask you if you want to be charged in your home currency. This is a scam. ALWAYS say NO. Otherwise you'll be hit with an additional charge. It's small but brings the banks millions, for doing nothing.
- This is now happening in Spanish supermarkets too, who are clearly on to this revenue generator. When you use a non-Spanish card, they kindly offer you the option be charged in either your home currency or the local currency. ALWAYS choose the latter or you'll get the supermarket's worse exchange rate. Don't just take my word for this. See here.
- If you're checking on flights on the net, be aware that the computer will automatically increase the quote to you, if you go away and come back. I'm told the way to avoid this is to clear cookies each time or use another computer, so the airline's computer doesn't recognise you.
Finally
. . . So, an engine broke and an Air France Airbus had to
make a forced landing on 3 engines in Canada. The same happened on a
747 when I was flying with BOAC/BA from Oz to the UK in the 1970s.
But I was luckier; I got to spend 3 days in Calcutta until they'd
fitted a new engine from the UK. To say the least, the plane was
rather emptier when we finally took off again. BOAC told my wife: Passenger Davies is indefinitely delayed in Calcutta. Happily, she was not the worrying type and didn't assume I'd been arrested for drug dealing or currency offences. Or both.
THE
ARTICLE
Dark clouds gather
over home of Fakebook: Niall Ferguson
It’s time Citizen
Zuck came clean: social networks won it for Trump
Last October, with just
a few weeks to go until the US presidential election, I pointed out
something rather strange about Donald Trump’s election campaign. At
a rally in Pennsylvania, Trump had read out a leaked email he claimed
was from Hillary Clinton’s confidant Sidney Blumenthal. It
suggested that, in Blumenthal’s view, the 2012 terrorist attack in
Benghazi, Libya, in which four Americans died, could have been
prevented by Clinton, who was then secretary of state. The crowd
lapped it up.
In fact, as I pointed
out, the words Trump read had been lifted from a Newsweek article and
falsely attributed to Blumenthal by Sputnik, a Russian news website.
It was already clear
that the Russian government was meddling in the election. The
Department of Homeland Security had issued a statement that the
Kremlin had “directed” the hacking of email accounts associated
with the Democratic Party and that its intention was “to interfere
with the US election process”.
Nor was there much
doubt that Moscow was behind the release by WikiLeaks of emails to
and from Clinton, including many purloined from the Gmail account of
John Podesta, her campaign chairman. However, we did not appreciate
the full extent or sophistication of the Russian operation.
Shortly after the
election, Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s co-founder, dismissed as “a
pretty crazy idea” the notion that fake news might have decided the
contest in Trump’s favour. Last week he had to admit that he
regretted those words.
We now know that before
(and after) the election, Russian trolls with bogus identities bought
more than 3,000 Facebook ads. Even though only $100,000 (£75,000)
was spent, the ads could have been seen by tens of millions of
people. Moreover, the Russians also used Facebook Events to organise
phoney political protests in the US, including an anti-immigrant
rally in a small Idaho town known for welcoming refugees. It was to
be “hosted” by “SecuredBorders”, a Facebook group exposed in
March as a Russian front.
Twitter was used in a
similar way. In response to congressional investigations, the company
admitted last week that it had identified about 200 accounts linked
to Russia, and that the Kremlin-backed news site RT had spent a
quarter of a million dollars on Twitter ads last year.
It is still too early
to conclude that Russian use of social media decided the election.
However, we probably can conclude that social media decided the
election. It seems that the Russians were aiming more to widen US
political divisions than to get Trump elected. The Trump campaign was
aiming to get its man elected — and it spent far more than $100,000
on Facebook. About $90m went on social media, most of it on Facebook.
Last November, Brad Parscale, the Trump campaign’s digital
director, said: “Facebook and Twitter were the reason we won this
thing.” I believe he is right.
I meet a lot of people
these days with pet theories about why Trump won. Some talk about
economic inequality, others about racial division, still others about
Clinton’s inadequacy as a candidate. What all these people have in
common is that they wholly failed to predict Trump’s victory,
despite knowing all these things before November 8, 2016. The other
thing they have in common is they underestimated the explosive growth
in social media in the years of the Barack Obama presidency. The only
indicators that reliably predicted the election result were Facebook
and Twitter. Trump completely dominated Clinton on both.
Or to put it
differently: if the social media platforms had not existed, Trump
would have been forced to conduct a more conventional campaign, in
which case the greater financial resources of his opponent — who
outspent him by more than two to one — would surely have been
decisive.
In less than a decade,
the public sphere — and the democratic process — has been
revolutionised. In 2008, the defeated Republican presidential
candidate, John McCain, had 4,492 Twitter followers and 625,000
Facebook friends. Obama had four times as many “friends” and 26
times as many followers. Yet the platforms were still in their
infancy. Facebook had been created at Harvard only four years
earlier. Twitter was set up only in March 2006.
Today, Facebook has
more than 2bn users around the world. In America, about two-thirds of
adults are on Facebook. Nearly half — 45% — get their news from
it. One in 10 get news from Twitter. About 40m people (and bots)
follow @realDonaldTrump.
The problem is not just
the outright fake news, such as that non-existent anti-immigrant
rally in Idaho — though that problem will persist as long as
identities can be made up without verification. Last week, a tweet
appeared from what purported to be the Boston branch of the “Antifa”
(anti-fascist) movement. “More gender exclusivity with NFL
[National Football League] fans and gluten free options at stadiums.
We’re liking the new NFL. #NewNFL #TakeAKnee #TakeTheKnee.”
How typical of the New
England leftists to side with those football players who have been
kneeling during The Star-Spangled Banner in protest at police
violence against African Americans! Except that the troll responsible
for the tweet forgot to disable location services. It wasn’t a
tweet from Boston. It was from Vladivostok.
Everyone — including
Russian trolls, as long as they remember to conceal their whereabouts
— can use social networks not just to spread falsehoods but to
spread extreme opinions. This is a key problem that the titans of
Silicon Valley gravely underestimated. Homophily — the tendency for
“birds of a feather to flock together” — means that like-minded
people form clusters in any social network, regardless of its size.
The result is massive
polarisation. One recent study of 665 blogs and 16,852 links between
them showed that they formed two almost separate clusters: one
liberal, the other conservative. A similar study of Twitter revealed
that retweets have the same character: conservatives retweet only
conservative tweets. Most striking of all, a newly published study of
language used on Twitter demonstrates that, on hot-button issues such
as gun control, same-sex marriage and climate change, it’s the
tweets using moral and emotional language that are more likely to be
retweeted.
The sky is darkening
over Silicon Valley. Facebook or Fakebook? Twitter or Twister? Last
week, Trump fired his first (and characteristically ungrateful) shot
directly at Facebook: “Facebook was always anti-Trump.”
Zuckerberg shot back: “That’s what running a platform for all
ideas looks like.”
The key question is how
tenable that defence now is. A platform for all ideas? Or the most
powerful media publisher in the history of the world? We used to
think William Randolph Hearst — the inspiration for Citizen Kane —
deserved that title. But Citizen Zuck has surely outstripped him.
In China he is
excluded. In Europe he is increasingly regulated. But in America?
Watch this Face.
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