Alsina explica en su monólogo cómo Sánchez se resigna ante Trump: "El canto del cuclillo"
The host of Más de uno pointed out how Sánchez, who has portrayed himself as an anti-Trump superhero, backs down when he comes face to face with Trump, the villain who is starting to show signs of being unhinged. #psoe #spain #donaldtrump https://www.ondacero.es/programas/mas... Let me tell you a story, it's very short, you'll see. Well, today's story is told by Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente. It's the story of the cuckoo, or cuckoos, told by my friend Félix on his 1970 program 'Fauna'. The cuckoo, or cuckoo, announces the arrival of spring with its call and is, in Japan, a symbol of unrequited love. But Félix recounted it with truly stark images: it's also the little beast that hatches in a nest that isn't its own and gets rid of the other chicks by throwing them overboard. I've always thought that Rodríguez de la Fuente's way of speaking was an inspiration for José María García. Although, listening to him now, I think he's a mix of García and Íker Jiménez. But back to the cuckoo. It's believed that it's the repetitive sound of its call that gave rise to the expression "to be cuckoo" to refer, mockingly, to someone who is losing their mind. In Bolivia and Chile, and for the same reason, "Cucú-fato" refers to someone who's more out of it than here (in Spain, as we know, it's the saint to whom you have to tie your balls, if you'll pardon the expression, to find your glasses you've misplaced, or your lost lottery ticket: I won't untie them until I find it). The ayatollahs may be a bit off their rockers, to use a scrupulously diplomatic expression, but it turns out that Donald Trump is starting to show worrying signs of being "cucú." The petulant emperor of the United States, after declaring the peace agreement with Iran broken, calling the Iranian rulers "scum," and threatening to resume bombing Tehran today—no need to explain the effect such a declaration had on the stock markets (indices in the red) and on the price of oil (up 8%)—ended the day saying the opposite: that there is absolutely no possibility that the war in Iran will resume. Give me a break! tail. The one who is starting to show worrying signs of being crazy is Donald Trump. The boorish emperor of the USA, after opening the summit by humiliating his European counterparts, calling them useless and disloyal for not joining him in his Iranian adventure, and after again demanding that Greenland be placed under US control, met with them all behind closed doors. He didn't say a word about Greenland and left describing a kind of idyllic fraternity in which, inside, everyone had told him how much they loved him, and he them. Let's admit that with Donald Trump, it's already impossible to seriously analyze the development of a summit, NATO or anything else. He arrives grumbling, disdains his colleagues, cozys up—displaying bromance—to Erdogan, mocks Meloni, provokes Mrs. Frederiksen with the Greenland issue, gets revenge on Macron, Starmer, and Merz, and lets himself be flattered by Mark Rutte, the doormat, when he's driven everyone absolutely mad by his rudeness, arrogance, and defiance, makes a declaration of self-love and concludes that the summit was fruitful and frankly interesting. Well, fine. The strategy of sowing chaos and driving everyone crazy only really works in the mind of the US president. The European governments, meek but having already figured him out, know they are dealing with the greatest internal threat NATO has ever faced to its very survival and to the non-aggression pact with its partners, which is the essence of the defensive alliance. The American isn't a cuckoo, he's a cuckoo. The strategy of sowing chaos and driving everyone crazy only really works in the mind of the US president. The monster in the White House, whom Europe has already identified but has not yet been able to find a planned and rational way to deal with. Undoubtedly because he makes any attempt at... impossible. Planning nothing. A timid superhero. Trump had already demonstrated yesterday his slightly pathological fixation on us, Spain, and Pedro Sánchez's government… he had already said he was going to break off all trade relations with our country—you say: but again? Didn't he already break them off?—Trump had already fired, in short, all the ammunition he usually carries in his cartridge belts in case the topic of Spain comes up when Pedro Sánchez had the opportunity to exchange a few words with him in the room where the summit was being held.

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