Egr. Director Feltri, I am forced to make amends for, at the time, unfortunately having believed in a person like Matteo Renzi. Sometimes I have faith in politicians who have excellent elocution in a squalid panorama like the current one. The last performance of the arrogant Renzi in the Senate of the Republic, where, on top of everything, he shouldn’t be there, because a person who doesn’t keep what he promises is someone who is worth nothing except for himself. What do you think you’ve done by calling the second-highest-ranking person in the state a stupid old man and a comrade? I remind this senator, who stuck it out despite everything, that President Mattarella is even older than La Russa, the value of people is not relative to age and, if Renzi behaves in this way today, who knows what he will have in store for us when he will also be of a certain age, if he ever gets there. Dear boy, it is useless to infect people with this nonsense, since the left no longer considers you one of them, perhaps they only use you for electoral purposes as they do with useful idiots for electoral purposes, in the meantime you continue to live well at the expense our.
Ugo Doci
Dear Ugo,
Don’t blame yourself, it happens to all of us that we make mistakes like this. It is not out of naivety that we place trust in the so-called new man (who can be male or female, specifically for those who are already ready to accuse me of sexism, something to which I am now accustomed and which, whatever the case may be, I worry little about). We are simply full of expectations and hopes that we can’t wait to entrust to this or that, to those who burst onto the political scene deceiving us and deluding themselves into making a difference. Think of the M5s, Beppe Grillo and company.
Then it ends up that the politician in question disappoints the voters and the latter disappoints the former. In the case of Matteo Renzi this dynamic was clearly evident. He was so sure of the love of the electorate, whose pulse he had not yet felt at a national level, that he personalized the referendum he proposed and sponsored, also promising to get out of the way, or rather to abandon public affairs, if it was necessary. came out defeated. For the voters it was a provocation, a challenge and even a fun bet: they had the opportunity to verify the consistency of the Florentine. At that point they wanted to see it all, so they rejected the referendum above all to reject this man who had suddenly turned out to be snooty. It was predictable, as was predictable, that Renzi’s promise would be in vain: he did not leave the political arena, but only the presidency of the Council, therefore not retiring to private life, nor did he give up the secretariat of the Democratic Party, which he still held until 2018. I think that Matteo Renzi is not bad, sometimes, although increasingly rarely, he happens to say or do the right thing and I have often appreciated his dialectic, but what ruins him is precisely his long tongue, as well as to the proverbial presumption in the Greek sense, that is, understood as hubris, proud arrogance and the bringer of trouble. I found the words reserved for the President of the Senate Ignazio La Russa serious, not only for a question of protocol, of respect for positions and roles, of institutional decorum. Resorting to gratuitous insults only to give vitality and strength to one’s speech, or to vent one’s nerves, is a painful and vulgar choice. To make your point of view count, you don’t need to try to humiliate the other. Something I wouldn’t have expected from Renzi. I made him less of a bully. He is indeed pungent, but going so far as to offend a man by calling him old, as if age were a shame or a crime or a guilt or an element justifying discrimination of various types or an impeding condition, was an indecent lapse in style. as well as a sensational own goal. Does Renzi perhaps think he is not destined to grow old? He too is getting older day by day, moreover he is putting on weight and I see that he is aging badly too, and I wish him to get older again because it will mean that he still has to live and bother us. Youth is not a virtue to be proud of and which allows us to denigrate those who have lost and overcome it. If stupidity, ineptitude, uselessness depended on old age, we wouldn’t be infested with so many young and thriving idiots even within the institutions. They also often call me old in the eagerness to offend or discredit me. Which makes me laugh so much since it demonstrates that the interlocutor has difficulty contesting my opinions and statements. Then he resorts to any impropriety, whatever comes to mind.
La Russa did well, as a great lord, not to respond to the insults of an individual who was not capable, within a room in which the sovereign people are represented, of managing his anger over a rule contained in the law budget, which would harm his personal interests, prohibiting him from receiving compensation for assignments from non-European countries. The leader of Italia Viva points the finger at the Meloni sisters, who, according to him, designed this rule to damage him. The reasoning is quite ridiculous. Here it is: «Because, when I campaign, I can get, like in the European elections, almost 4% and these are votes that are worth double because they are taken from the centre-right».
I confess that I have difficulty understanding this delusional argument.
In short, the Meloni sisters, who have become scapegoats of the left, out of envy, or fear, or to hinder the electoral growth of Renzi, who does not seem to have grown much in recent years, would have concocted a law to create damage to Renzi’s pockets ? And how could this damage to Renzi’s finances affect the election campaign? How could this rule decrease the voters’ consensus towards the Tuscan? Or perhaps the Meloni sisters did what they are accused of by Renzi to keep him under blackmail?
I didn’t understand anything at all, but not because I’m old. Only because Renzi, despite being young, at the mercy of a sort of persecution mania, appears seriously numb.