Yes it does bring into focus the oft quoted, but false, Chinese curse of "may you live in interesting times".
Yesterday certain press in the UK and the EU were going their mile about how this was just the opening moves in a Bojo climb down on a trade deal.
Today we hear that Bojo is the hardest person in the room against a trade deal in its current state.
The we hear the cabinet is fairly supportive of Bojo whatever is decided.
To cap it off, a senior Tory donor says "well they might as well just walk away because the deal on the table doesn't include any services, only manufactured goods" and our services industry is larger than manufacturing and a huge component of our exports to the EU.
Honestly, if there were not tension in #10 right now, I would wonder if they had any competence at all.
As for 25 texts per hour being quoted in the press? If you treat each sentence in WhatsApp as a text, Hi, OK and
are each one text. I remember when a friend's daughter in Uni ran up a £2,500 bill, in one month, on texts like that, because her boyfriend had unlimited texts and she responded to every one liner.
The problem, right now, with press statements on the government, is that there is no middle ground and every article is polarised.
I prefer to view it through a filter of gain and loss. If the article is presenting action which is a zero sum game or even a net loss, it is probably wrong or, at best, highly spun.
I have no intention of taking any press articles on the government at face value until at least April.
By then all the pressure over negotiations, Covid and the US elections will be firmly in the rear view mirror, Covid exit strategies will be fully engaged, lock downs should be over or, at worst, going away and everyone should be looking to the future and how to make it work.
Idealistic, I know, but it is a target to aim for. It helps maintain a balance and a bit of sanity.