

There’s a podcast called “We’re Not So Different” that has covered many aspects of everyday life for working people in (mostly) medieval Europe. It’s super informal and insightful, both co-hosts are Marxists and one is a history professor. I know they’ve specifically talked about the “peasants had more days off” point, but I can’t remember when. But for anyone who’s interested in getting deeper into the subject (but maybe, like me, sucks at reading) I’d give it a big recommend.
Here’s the Spotify link, but you can probably find it on your preferred platform too: https://open.spotify.com/show/5dd2yPjrJJA48s1QXyENZN
And the following sentence:
So yeah, January 29th. The rest were February. Of course one single incident in January, and several more in February, isn’t going to have a huge impact on the number of incidents in January. February is what we should be talking about.
I have to assume that the actual message being obfuscated here is “please keep buying plane tickets, you still probably won’t die and even if you do it’s just really important for our up-going line.”