More Internet, less Lega (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lega_Nord)
Zanna Bianca Interior Minister Maroni wants to *gag the
Internet*<http://www.lastampa.it/redazione/cmsSezioni/politica/200912articoli/50435girata.asp>.
To put in *filters* to prevent the Italians accessing sites of a
(government) black list, while  Deputy Minister Paolo Romani is proposing a
*prohibition on live
streaming*<http://www.repubblica.it/2009/12/sezioni/spettacoli_e_cultura/sky-cielo/dirette-web/dirette-web.html>.
China has not dared to do so much. From one who plays the sax (quite well)
and one who (perhaps out of anger) mauled the calf of a police officer, I
didn’t expect that. From one who defends oppressed peoples.

In another country, an Interior Minister incapable of defending his Prime
Minister *would have resigned*. He is instead setting off once more in
search for external enemies. The truncheon of the police is by now the
symbol of Padania {the Po Valley}. Hit and hit. Students, ALCOA
workers, *demonstrators
in Piazza Fontana* <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-ybhhxPrZo> just the
other day. The Lega of the *bullets at 300 lire*, of the Italian flag with
which you can clean your backside, of the “*I have a dream in my heart, burn
the tricolore* <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7lANKt2fMI>” {national flag}
sung at Lugano by four Lega Ministers, of the "educational" games “*Bounce
the clandestine* <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fr_3RB4VdQI>” and against
the "violence" on the Internet. If millions of Italians go *online to say
“F… off”* to a corruptor, pimp, P2-ist, friend of the mafia, is it the fault
of the Internet that informs them, or the fault of the corruptor, pimp,
P2-ist, friend of the mafia? (P2:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_Due)

On 8th July 1998 the Lega's daily paper “La Padania” asked *ten
questions*<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBbDthMDUoc>about the
(mafioso?) origin of Berlusconi’s wealth. Perhaps even “La
Padania” was instigating people to hate? Should it then have been closed
down by Cicchitto-style P2-ists? The "mafioso of Arcore" (Berlusconi),
(words used by Bossi, Lega's leader) is today the master of the Lega who
keeps it on a short leash. Maroni knows that in politics *nothing is worse
than renegades*. Of those who have fought, I believe in good faith at the
beginning, against the P2 and the mafia to then find themselves the servants
of a P2-ist who defines a multiple mafia murderer like Mangano to be “a
hero” (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vittorio_Mangano).* Why vote for
them?*At this point of time for a Centre Right's supporter the
original is better.
The Internet is the bad conscience of the Lega. Anyone can listen to what
the Lega leaders were saying a few years ago and can see what they have
become today: the doormats of the P2. *More Internet, less Lega*, it’s
arithmetic. Maroni has understood this. In a bit all the Italians will
understand it, even above the river Po. To help them,
*download*<http://www.beppegrillo.it/documenti/lapadania_10domande.pdf>the
PDF with the ten questions of “La Padania” to Berlusconi, read them to
the Lega people, print them and distribute them everywhere. For those
questions the Italians *are still waiting for responses*. They will never
give up (but is it in their interests?). Neither will we.

>From Beppe Grillo blog: http://www.beppegrillo.it/en/
www.beppegrillo.it/en/2009/12/more_internet_less_lega.html#comments



2009/12/20 marc garrett <[email protected]>

> Italy contemplates Web restrictions after Berlusconi attack.
>
> The proposal comes after a Facebook fan page draws thousands of users
> following the attack.
>
> Philip Willan.
>
> The Italian government has proposed introducing new restrictions on the
> Internet after a Facebook fan page for the man who allegedly attacked
> Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on Sunday drew almost 100,000 users in
> under 48 hours.
>
> But the planned clampdown on Internet hate speech sparked a heated
> debate over censorship and freedom of expression, leading Interior
> Minister Roberto Maroni to execute a partial U-turn Wednesday.
>
> Maroni and Justice Minister Angelino Alfano promised swift action to
> punish those who instigate violence on the Web, suggesting the
> government might pass an emergency decree Thursday to create new
> sanctions for the offense. But Wednesday, Maroni was at pains to
> reassure the public that any new legislation would be fully debated in
> parliament and would not curtail freedom of expression.
>
> The controversy followed the creation of several Facebook pages praising
> Massimo Tartaglia, the mentally disturbed man accused of hitting
> Berlusconi in the face with a statuette of Milan's gothic cathedral,
> sending the prime minister to the hospital with broken teeth and a
> broken nose.
>
> Lawmakers from Berlusconi's People of Freedom party argued in parliament
> that the attack on the prime minister was the result of a climate of
> hate generated by virulent opposition criticism and expressed outrage
> that so many Italians could justify such a serious physical assault.
>
> Facebook, which has been criticized for its slow reaction to previous
> complaints about groups that praised the Mafia or were titled "Let's
> Kill Berlusconi," moved rapidly to eliminate the most offensive sites.
>
> more...
> http://www.pcworld.idg.com.au/article/330180/
> _______________________________________________
> NetBehaviour mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
>
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