The Mein Kampf collective of the far-right in government in Italy and elsewhere. The Concept Maranza

 

The Mein Kampf collective of the far-right in government in Italy and elsewhere. The Concept Maranza



The great italian comedian Benigni in the film " Life is beatifull"


The far right in government is a wrecker, dismantling not only Italian democracy but also society and the very Christian civilization of solidarity and acceptance. Any means are appropriate to implement this new collective Mein Kampf of the extremists in power. The themes, slogans, and above all, the concepts have now been outlined to eliminate the fact that he is different, even if he has become a citizen of this country. They say it openly and without any shame: Maranza is a problem against our race and the culture of the country, and we must safeguard the race and culture: the nativity scene, Christmas, Easter, Easter Monday, August 15th, and perhaps Boxing Day—all "bullshit" told to their flock, intent on eliminating from the country this ethnic and religious diversity that marches against our values, but which ultimately remains unrelated to these infamous accusations and falsehoods. Because, after all, what stopped Vannacci, Salvini, and Meloni from celebrating Christmas? Who prevented him and his family from going to church or celebrating his saints' days and Easter and Easter Monday? These extremists are eager to see the destinies and even lives of those who found in our country a land of welcome and refuge from the tragedies, misery, and often wars that persecuted them in their homelands destroyed. Today, the extreme right speaks a language reminiscent of "Mein Kampf," shameless, unethical, without regard for violated human rights, without respect for our republican constitution, aimed at restoring Italian racial purity. But let us ask ourselves for a moment whether racial purity has ever existed in Italy? The great comedian Benigni joked about it in his great film "Life is Beautiful," where he showed off to students in a fascist school his muscles as an exemplary man of the Italian race. The children laughed, and he was certain they didn't know what it meant for them to feel Italic; if anything, it was a reference to a plural and multiethnic DNA, as it has been since the days of the Roman Empire. In short, Maranza's concepts, that of Remigration, and that of Enemies of the Fatherland, used by Meloni to condemn those protesting against the Milan Olympics, are a sign that this country has begun an era of ethnic and political battles and intolerance against minorities. Let it be clear that this trend has taken hold not only here but across the entire continent, and if these extremists aren't curbed in time, their plans to restore dictatorships in place of the old and defenseless democracies will soon become a reality we must reckon with, but also a great shame that will spare no one and, above all, the defeat of all democratic and civil forces in Europe. In this context, I would like to hear more forcefully from these parliamentary opposition groups, who must not only oppose but also raise barricades against these new Nazis. Italians! Your democracy is in danger! Fascists have no right to disrupt the country's constitutional structures and balances, and Article 2 of the Constitution is very clear: it establishes that the Republic recognizes and guarantees the inviolable rights of man, both as an individual and within social groups (family, associations), while simultaneously demanding the fulfillment of the inalienable duties of political, economic, and social solidarity. Any governing majority has no right to violate these rights, much less to do what it imposes as a limit on its action in Article 1: Italy is a democratic Republic, founded on labor. Sovereignty belongs to the people, who exercise it in the forms and limits of the Constitution.

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