The Spanish this time, aboard two caravels.
Tune in whatever channel it is, today in Spain, they will introduce you to Araceli, a very nice nonagenarian, who has voluntarily put her arm on, to get a puncture that could save her life or cause side effects, which are not 100 percent clear.
And it is that in that of "knowing everything" to most human beings, there is no one who beats us.
If a person is not a specialist in epidemiology, is not a doctor or anything like that, it may be that a rational behavior is the following:
1 I'm going to look at the most serious sources on this topic for example the most widely read magazines with information on health and medicine in the world.
2 I'll read to see what I find in relation to this. I could read at least two or three articles of half an hour each, which may be a low percentage of the time I spend on TV and other demons.
3 I will make a decision based on expert opinions.
But on the contrary, a high percentage, when hearing a neighbor say such a thing about the vaccine, or seeing a comment on Facebook, falls on their ass saying that this is what to do, and the most incredible thing: they do it.
So there are two main streams of opinions that are heard on the street on the issue of whether to get the happy vaccine:
1 That this is a hoax of the pharmaceutical industry to sell vaccines, and you don't have to play their game. Therefore, you do not have to wear anything and thus ruin the aforementioned industry.
2 That you have to put it on as soon as possible to be safe and save your family and other people.
3 Others, perhaps the most sensible, say that you have to wait and see how many die first, if one of them grows a third ear or becomes Spider Woman.
At the moment today in Spain we have dawned many millions of intrepid and adventurous navigators of caravels, queuing to throw our luck to sea and see if the end of the road is Las Indias or death.