The Town Hall of Tide, in reference to its refusal to collaborate in the celebration of the feast of Our Lady of the Carmen, says that it does not finance religious acts. We assume that they refer to the acts of any religious belief, whatever it may be.
Even there we could agree on the intelligence that the religious practice of any confession is not a general feeling in a universe like our city; It would, however, have to admit that, in practice, most of the Coruñeses, like the rest of the Spaniards, manifest themselves as Catholics, practitioners or not, which brings a new dimension to the problem; But let us even overlook this point, and equally despise the fact that, in most cases, these are acts that have a great popular support.
A question then arises which demands, at least, a thoughtful response. Why then does the Tidal City Council finance the activities of a concrete sexual inclination that is also not a majority in the city?
In the end the answer is always the same, not all of us are measured by the same standards even though we all religiously pay our taxes.