:caffe: 'rno...
BOOOOOORN IN THE IUUUUESSSSEEEIIIIIII
(è più o meno l'unica che conosco e non l'ha fatta :chebotta: )
ma allora siamo sicuri su mfgvsm aka l'innominato? :uhm:
Visualizzazione Stampabile
:caffe: 'rno...
BOOOOOORN IN THE IUUUUESSSSEEEIIIIIII
(è più o meno l'unica che conosco e non l'ha fatta :chebotta: )
ma allora siamo sicuri su mfgvsm aka l'innominato? :uhm:
Eh? :pippotto:
che è fox
si :rotfl: fantastico fantastico siamo al bronzo dopo il ban (oro) e la rifondazione del tessuto nucleare (argento) :asd:
ma sono due maschietti? :timido:
Le cavie sono animaletti carini ma ******i fino al midollo :bua:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0e2jtG8VuSI
:rullezza:
perchè gurren lagann passa anche da qui
e se non vi piace ritenetevi ragequittati :gnegnegnegnegne:
Quello che a Sava non dicono:
La valle degli ignari
John Hooper (corrispondente dall'Italia)
Arguably the most striking thing about the Berlusconi tapes is that most Italians know, if at all, only vaguely of their existence.
The fact that the news magazine L'Espresso had posted to its website recordings claimed to have been made by a woman who says she went to bed with him last November in the hope of securing money or influence was just not mentioned on most of last night's TV news bulletins. As far as I can make out, the story was ignored not only by Silvio Berlusconi's own Mediaset channels, but also by the first and second channels of the public broadcasting network, RAI, and by La7, which is owned by Telecom Italia. Together, they account for about two thirds of the audience at that time of night.
It might be objected that, since the recordings and transcripts have been made available on the internet, and since they were reported in the press, it doesn't really matter that TV paid no attention to them. But that ignores two crucial points.
The first is that Italy is among the countries most indifferent to the internet. According to a report in the Guardian last year less than a third of the population had access to the web, and those Italians who were linked up used the internet relatively little. The average for the population as a whole was just two hours a week. This could explain why even Mediaset was happy today to post a story about the tapes to its website (though naturally leading on the claim by Berlusconi's lawyer that they were faked). The second important point is that, even before the arrival of free news on the internet, only about one Italian in every 10 bought a daily paper.
Word of mouth will undoubtedly spread knowledge of the tapes, in the same way that it has spread a generalised realisation that there is a scandal involving the prime minister and women. But rumour and gossip are unlikely to alter the fact that the details of this whole affair, together with its public interest ramifications, remain largely unknown to most people in Italy. That is an important reason why Berlusconi has been able to shrug off calls for his resignation.
The original controversy concerned the accusation levelled by Silvio Berlusconi's wife that he was "consorting with minors", just as it emerged that he had attended the 18th birthday party of an aspiring actress and model, Naomi Letizia. The other day I found myself (not exactly for the first time) having an argument with a Rome taxi driver. It gradually emerged that we were starting from two entirely different standpoints. He had heard Berlusconi's explanation (that the girl was the daughter of an old friend), because it was carried on TV news, and had given the prime minister the benefit of the doubt. But he was quite unaware that Berlusconi's explanation had not stood up to subsequent scrutiny, because that little detail only appeared in some of the newspapers.
What we are seeing in Italy is the emergence of an information culture typical of authoritarian regimes. There are the information haves: they include those who read papers like La Repubblica, Corriere della Sera and La Stampa; the mainly young people who regularly surf the web, and those who listen to the few independent talk radio stations like Radio 24 Ore. Then there are the much more numerous information have-nots who still take their news from TV bulletins controlled directly or indirectly by Berlusconi. This is a bizarre and alarming situation in a western European democracy, and all the more so because the have-nots are convinced they are just as well-informed as the others. They become quite indignant, even angry, if you suggest otherwise.
Before the fall of the Berlin Wall, there was a part of communist East Germany near Dresden known jokingly as the Tal der Ahnungslosen (the Valley of the Clueless). Because of some freak of topography or atmospherics, its inhabitants were unable to receive TV signals from the west and therefore had to make do with the news given to them by the regime.
No doubt they were not wholly clueless. No doubt visitors to the area told them about what they knew. No doubt, some of the young people who went to Berlin to study returned whispering tales of another and forbidden reality. But the essence of the world view held by these unfortunates was nevertheless formed by their leaders.
We are accustomed to thinking of Italy as a long, thin country with a mountainous spine. But for as long as Silvio Berlusconi remains in office we would do better to imagine it as having a deep, broad cleft running down the middle – a new Valley of the Clueless.
anche se non ho capito che c'entra ti do supporto, FLCL rulla e dato che son solo sei puntate correte a vedervelo tutti, l'anime più rivisto e anche quello che, con mio iniziale stupore, proponevano di vedere persino gli amici non-nerd nelle serate insieme
edit: grande wolf! purtroppo mi sento di sottoscrivere tutto, io la notizia penso di averla sentita sul tg di sky nel resto dei tg o non veniva menzionata o appunto ci accostavano subito le parole di ghedini che diceva "sono tutte invenzioni". In effetti per il peso che una cosa del genere potrebbe avere gli han dedicato un tempo ridicolo.
Ah comunque tra i giornali che sostengono la causa ci vorrei aggiungere l' Internazionale che dedica costantemente 2-3 articoli (ovviamente della stampa estera) a Mr.Silvio. E' un paese di cacca, o aspettiamo che il buon signore se lo riprenda e nel frattempo ci tappiamo naso orecchie e bocca o ce ne andiamo via.........wolf sei ancora nella soleggiata londra?
Sì Alfio, vieni che un chinotto lo troviamo :asd:
Mi spiace solo che Sava non possa (per l'inglese) e non voglia sentire gli allarmi disperati.
E' vero, sta cosa fa davvero paura.
PERO', almeno per oggi, sticazzi, vado.
Un sogno che si avvera.
oggi papà ha comprato L'Unità, pubblicano Doonesbury :o
poi, a proposito di sbattezzarsi, parlavano di questo fumetto becco giallo
http://www.uaar.it/images/Sbattezzo_Copertina_DEF1.JPG
http://www.beccogiallo.it/?pagina=pa...ica.php&id=148
che quasi quasi mi procuro :uhm:
e della uaar, unione atei e agnostici razionalisti, a cui quasi quasi si nun s'pav mi iscrivo :uhm:
http://www.uaar.it/ateismo/opere/qua...sbattezzo.html
questa è particolarmente vera, mi ci scontro ogni giorno, mannaggia o'pa ta taurk (fixed but still not correct, I guess :uhm: )Citazione:
Then there are the much more numerous information have-nots who still take their news from TV bulletins controlled directly or indirectly by Berlusconi. This is a bizarre and alarming situation in a western European democracy, and all the more so because the have-nots are convinced they are just as well-informed as the others. They become quite indignant, even angry, if you suggest otherwise.
patatAurc è puzzulan :rotfl: così lo direbbero a Pozzuoli :asd:
è facile, pataturc
:asd::asd::asd:
anzi no
:bua::bua::bua:
:rotfl:
:chebotta: la fascia protetta :rotfl: