This is our last full day in Silves, a last chance to go up the hill to the castle, which I suspect we won’t bother doing, even though it’s less hot than earlIer in our stay here. Tomorrow we should just about manage a last lunch at one of our favourite restaurants before a taxi arrives to take us to the airport.
In one of those favourite restaurants we have established a nodding acquaintance with an elderly lady who lunches there every day, sitting at “her” table in the corner.
The restaurant is decorated with a mix of traditional agricultural equipment,
ancient carpentry tools (the sort my father and his father used to use),
mariachi-style hats and curious musical instruments.
I have just discovered “disappearing messages”, which seems to be something that you can add to your WhatsApp so that your messages conveniently self-destruct after a set time. I came across this as I was reading about the Mandelson vetting business; it seems that it’s hard to establish exactly what communication went on between Starmer and Mandelson because of “disappearing messages”. I suppose it was inevitable that such a facility would eventually be available in this modern age where your posts on all kinds of social media can be scrutinised and used against you. I wouldn’t be surprised however to discover that those disappeared messages are still floating about somewhere in the ether, in a version of the cloud, just waiting for a clover bod to publish the scandal they contain.
Here’s something else I have just learnt. Marina Hyde began an article (about the Starmer - Mandelson stuff if I remember correctly) with the statement: “We are in the TL;DR days of Keir Starmer’s government
So I had to look up TL;DR. This is what I found:
“TL;DR stands for "too long; didn't read," and it is commonly used to introduce a brief summary of a longer piece of content or to indicate that a text was too lengthy to read in full.”
Which just goes to show that there is always something ew to learn.
Here’s some more serious stuff. Following the murder of a young man, Henry Nowak, by a Sikh man (a sad, mixed-up story involving racism, police mishandling of the whole business, the right to carry ceremonial knives - all in all a nasty mess), Nigel Farage has been finding another way of publicising himself, organising a broadcast to “address the nation”. Here’s a link to an article about that.
The estimable John Crace comments on that beginning like this:
“The email invitation arrived shortly after 7am. Nigel Farage would be making an “address to the nation” an hour later. The grandiosity. The self-importance. An address to the nation is something usually delivered by the monarch or the prime minister during an emergency. Not from a leader of a political party with just eight MPs.”
Thank you John Crace. We need more reminders that Refirm UK has ONLY EIGHT MPs. Instead of going on about Farage possible being a future prime minister, someone should organise huge posters all over the country declaring in large, brightly coloured letters that
HE ONLY HAS EIGHT MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT!!
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!
























