“No tenemos conocimiento de que viva nadie, sí de la existencia de construcciones”, asegura un portavoz municipal. Neither will they surely have noticed the far greater numbers of people living in shanties and mud along the other bank of the river – the same pattern is to be found along chunks of the Llobregat, and in other interesting places. Some Czech bloke must have written something about people who do live where they don’t, and others who apparently don’t where they do. Another triumph for internationalist socialism.
Similar posts
- Sex tours, anyone?
Fortunately not all the requests I get at follow the baldie are this interesting: I and my female companoin propose to visit - The Tory Scumbank
How to fund Jeremy Corbyn’s “people’s QE” without killing off the Bank of England and destroying the British economy. - Foundry extension near Castellbisbal
This is Celsa‘s bigger, badder steel recycling plant on the Castellbisbal side of the Llobregat, taken from the train on the - Top 10 Catalan cities
An example of the complete bollocks with which travel sites think you’ll be satisfied is to be found on Travelcreek, which - New directors of Instituto Cervantes in New York and Dublin “can’t speak English”
Javier Rioyo Jambrina and Rosa León will apparently struggle to make themselves understood to their target audience in their new jobs.
I understand them building there. After all, the gypsy neighbourhood down the road was all unlicensed and they’re still there (with some very interestingly constructed properties).