Our parliament seems to have become the scene of a crazy war, where all are fighting against all without knowing for whom and for what. Contrary to what they know well: a comfortable chair to ensure their economic future. What desolation! However, while our politicians bicker over buttocks and parties, and since yesterday even among institutions, the IMF tells us (see article above economic) for the next two years our public debt will cease to rise. So the real country will sink deeper into poverty and "the government elite" can afford, stocks, lackeys, secretaries, parties and parties against the taxpayer, oppressed by taxes and levies that now exceed 60% of income per capita. There were at least efficient services to ensure the payment of the taxes paid there would do a reason. Instead, the endless waiting lists in hospitals and health care, insufficient network, especially in the south, transport, cities besieged by traffic and lack of education that the school sends to young people, to name some public failures, only serve to make us understand that, of course, our money is misused. E 'therefore unacceptable static government, but it is equally the complicity of the opposition holding more talk and lace from the genuine problems of the country. And so for people like me, close to fifty, that has got to live long enough, the "first republic", it is not difficult to see the clear difference in thickness education between the current policy and those of yesterday, so mistreated and accused of everything but far more competent and above all political dignity far higher than that of the current political leaders. Not that I'm a nostalgic of the "it was better when it was worse" but the lack of efficient, yet persistent, was at least the level of intellectual honesty and political actors parliamentary period. Instead, the current neglect and selfishness of the most dominant political figures shows that it is increasingly necessary in a generational turn leads to political power that people are willing to work for the country and not for themselves. So, I admit that I've changed my mind: is a elections. But above all, and here the idea is old, is the new generation, is the total change in political leadership today. New? For all three names: Matteo Renzi, the mayor of Florence (pictured right), Roberto Cota, president of the Piedmont region (left in photo) and Maurizio Lupi, vice-president of the Chamber of Deputies (the center). Sorry for the political short-sightedness, but I do not see others.
Enzo Di Stasio
Photo: multimedia.quotidiano.net - mcl.it - \u200b\u200birispress.it
Enzo Di Stasio
Photo: multimedia.quotidiano.net - mcl.it - \u200b\u200birispress.it
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