Salis, the anti-state paid by the state

Dear Director Feltri, I have understood your position, which I fully share, regarding the Honorable Ilaria Salis. I recently read that together with her comrade Mimmo Lucano (another character worthy of the Nobel …

Salis, the anti-state paid by the state


Dear Director Feltri,

I have understood your position, which I fully share, regarding the Honorable Ilaria Salis. I recently read that together with her comrade Mimmo Lucano (another character worthy of the Nobel Prize for Peace and Human Rights…) she has sided with the Kurdish activist Maysoon Majidi, currently imprisoned in the prison of Reggio Calabria accused of being a smuggler.

Although respect for the law becomes evidently questionable for our MEP, I wonder if it would not be more respectful towards those who voted for her and the country she is supposed to represent to start fighting for those in Italy who cannot make ends meet and who with immense difficulty pay their mortgage on their house.

Your own home.

Thank you.

Andrea Petruzzelli

Syracuse

Dear Andrea,

It is difficult to keep up with Ilaria Salis, in the sense that this woman shows an extraordinary ability to string together one stupid thing after another and, what’s more, to do it in rapid sequence. We believed that she would have kept a low profile, that it would have been enough for her to save herself from detention in the Hungarian prison where she has been locked up for a long time awaiting answer for the crimes of which she is accused, but no, every day the lady delights us with one of her pearls, perhaps believing that she has become, through the election, a stateswoman of high caliber who has been entrusted with the task of making our society better, by applying the bizarre solutions proposed by herself.

Salis immediately began by proposing her warhorse, that is, the idea that the illegal occupation of houses, or of other people’s private property, should be made fully legal. After all, it seems that she herself has lived in occupied homes and that she owes thousands of euros to Aler, in Milan. A fact that has never been denied. In recent days there has been much discussion about granting citizenship to foreigners, the Democratic Party proposes ius soli, Forza Italia ius scholae, Salis instead is more drastic, she is a woman who cuts to the chase: rather than waste time in these vain controversies, according to Salis it would be better to directly abolish citizenship. In short, we must all become stateless, so that no one is or feels discriminated against. The problem of prison overcrowding? In this case too, the new MEP intervened by solving things at source: to defeat this plague it is sufficient to close the prisons. Everyone free. Which gives us the measure of the fact that Ilaria is not at all aware of the founding values ​​and principles on which the rule of law is based. I suspect that for her everything is legal and possible, after all she preaches that “not everything that is legal is also right” and vice versa. What is right for Salis is right, we could say.

Now the idol teacher of the radical left has given birth to another enlightened proposal: to cancel the crime of human trafficking, that is, of aiding illegal immigration, because, again in her opinion, these poor traffickers, or those who are accused of being so, do nothing wrong, indeed they carry out a charitable activity, clandestinely accompanying to Italy dozens, if not hundreds, of migrants at a time, often including children, putting at risk the lives of those who trust them and the sea. I would like to point out that traffickers are accomplices of human traffickers and that human trafficking is one of the most horrible contemporary forms of slavery. Progressives should condemn such practices and not encourage and defend them.

Ilaria Salis perfectly embodies the left’s feeling of intolerance towards the law and the State. Everything that represents legality, in her opinion, should be torn down and illegitimate conduct made legitimate, so that no one can be charged.

because of her behavior and end up in jail, a jail that does not exist in the model of society that lives in this woman’s mind.

I strongly doubt that she can marry one of the causes that concern the last citizens, the common people. The difficulty of having to pay the mortgage to avoid having your house taken away, Ilaria ignores what it is. The house is something that is not paid for, that is not bought, that you do not sweat for, but rather something that is taken by force and occupied. It is obvious, therefore, that Salis is the tutelary deity of the illegal occupants for whom he asks for pardon.

The teacher just can’t bring herself to change perspective, that is, to put herself on the other side, that of the victims, of those who suffer crimes of various kinds, of those who see their homes torn away from them, of those who are robbed of their property, acquired moreover with great sacrifice.

Don’t expect Salis to change his tune. If only he could, he would change the penal code. In fact, he would repeal it entirely.