The hardest part of living in this health crisis, and the most difficult to manage, is the permanent state of uncertainty that it continues to maintain. We learn every day things that we did not know the day before about this unmanageable virus that roams from one country to another along a capricious route and an unpredictable pace. Full confinement is followed by partial confinement. We do not know everything about its future, if not the omens of an economic crisis of unprecedented magnitude and the tragedies it will cause.
This disconcerting purgatory of indefinite duration did not prevent the professors of certainties from uttering definitive predictions in bursts. At the end of globalization, as if the eradication of the virus were to make closely connected production systems disappear because it was in their interests. On the planned sinking of the European Union, whose emergency measures, however, and the economic rescue plan eclipse gravity and divisions from afar.
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