Galicia is Spain and here tourists from the rest of Spain are welcome

The three options for fanatics who don't want to see people of Madrid in my Galician land

Every summer, the left trots out its latest stupidity, tourismphobia, because it knows it makes headlines easily in August.

Why does the far-left reject legal tourism and at the same time support illegal immigration?

In the Spanish regions where we suffer from separatist movements, this tourismphobia is directed against the Spaniards who come from the Meseta and particularly against Madrilenians . Of course, tourismphobia is as asymmetrical as the idea that some people have that there are too many people on the planet: those who are always too many are the others. Thus, the separatists can go on holiday wherever they want, but the others cannot do that because they bother the separatists.

I am Galician, the son and grandson of Galicians, I have lived in Galicia since I was born and I have a very simple message for the separatists: if you don't want to see Madrilenians in my Galician homeland, you have three options: the first is to move somewhere else. Personally, I recommend North Korea. I don't like it (I find its regime detestable), but there you will be surrounded by totalitarian fanatics like you. The problem is that they don't easily accept foreigners there either. The second option is to put a blindfold on, which prevents you from seeing not only tourists from the rest of Spain, but also any other person or thing that is not to your liking. You have a third option, which is my favorite and is much simpler: that's tough!

When a Spaniard goes on holiday to a part of Spain, what he is doing is exercising the right recognised by Article 19 of the Constitution: "Spaniards have the right to freely choose their residence and to move around the national territory." So if some totalitarian does not want to see Spaniards in a part of Spain, he can always go somewhere else, cover his eyes or - better yet - get bored. His intolerance is not above the rights of others.

On the other hand, it is curious to see that the leftists who call for open borders and support massive illegal immigration, at the same time cannot stand seeing Spanish tourists in a part of Spain (unless the tourists are them, of course). They simply ignore all the problems caused by mass immigration, but then they do not want to see people from Madrid in Galicia simply because they speak Spanish, a language that is also the mother tongue and habitual language of many Galicians (those of us who have to put up with the nonsense of these separatist fanatics all year round).

Deep down, these separatist fanatics don't like the real Galicia: they hate what has always been their own land, a land renowned for its hospitality and a famous pilgrimage destination for over a millennium. You only have to look at the red star on the separatist flags to understand that they want to turn Galicia into something like Cuba, Venezuela or North Korea, a far-left dictatorship run by a handful of paranoid fanatics like themselves.

As a Galician, I appreciate that people from the rest of Spain come to my land (and in particular people from Madrid, a region where I have always been treated well). Tourists from the rest of Spain are always welcome here. In fact, this tourism generates work and wealth in Galicia. Those who harm my land are not the tourists, but the fanatics who promote tourismophobia.

Don't miss the news and content that interest you. Receive the free daily newsletter in your email:

Opina sobre esta entrada:

Debes iniciar sesión para comentar. Pulsa aquí para iniciar sesión. Si aún no te has registrado, pulsa aquí para registrarte.