The Spanish biologist Ruben Garcia He was stunned on February 22 in his laboratory at Harvard University (USA). He had just deciphered the code that cells use to send messages remotely and had published his results in the temple of world science, the magazine Nature. That morning, the Spanish newspapers were talking about the internal war in the Popular Party, after it was revealed that the brother of the president of the Community of Madrid had received an income of 283,000 euros from a company that obtained public contracts by hand to supply medical supplies. The Harvard researcher was struck by the amount, because he was pending aid from the Community of Madrid—created to encourage the return of elite scientists—and the amount was similar, although in exchange for five years of hard work. That morning, a technician from the Ministry of Education informed him that, “given the pandemic circumstances suffered,” the Government of Isabel Díaz Ayuso had eliminated an annual call for aid from its Talent Attraction Program.