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Showing posts with label Size is not important. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Size is not important. Show all posts

Friday, 4 April 2025

Mexico leads the UK

 Blog Readers

Size is not important
If you are wondering about the headline, the meaning is the blog has more readers in Mexico this week, than in the UK.
The image in the post is from a lost film from Spain about a man who hid during the Franco reign, and refused to come out of hiding, despite his wife, and friends telling him Franco had died. In the end, his wife was forced to ask for a divorce, for a Catholic lady to do that is unthinkable, but owing to her circumstances, she was granted the divorce.
I am not a Catholic, but I agree with their belief we should worship the Mother of Christ, without the mother there is no son.


Sunday, 16 March 2025

Germany could take over from the USA

 Something wicked this way comes

Readers in Germany
I would not be surprised if before long, this blog, has more readers in Germany than the USA. Proving Size is not important, the turnaround is caused by the increase of readers in Germany, and the stagnation of readers in both the USA, and Canada.

The first eBook I sold, shown here, was to a lady in Munich.

Friday, 6 September 2024

Size is not important

Canada or Germany 


While writing my blog, one thing is obvious to me, other than few people in the UK read it.
The size of a country does not mean I get more viewers from larger countries, a point made clear yesterday when the blog had almost as many readers in Germany as in Canada.
The figures for readers yesterday (September 13, 2025) enforce this concept, the blog had as many readers in Mexico as it did in the USA (4), the USA was dwarfed by both Hong Kong, and Singapore.
The fact the blog gets constant high figures in Hong Kong, and Singapore is a puzzle to me. Both areas are high finance zones, an area which I never write about, as my finances are always stretched.
My previous blog had many readers in Russia, I put that down to I can relate to the struggles of the poor, never having had a lot of money.