Yule Heibel on 2007-12-27
- you can read/ understand Eco's comment as saying that the self-flagellation is "hysteria," is overblown, and is not based in reality (i.e., that he's contradicting the article's premise)
This link has been bookmarked by 2 people . It was first bookmarked on 27 Dec 2007, by Yule Heibel.
- relates to my blog entry Dec.23/07,"High Rents=Mamma's Boys?" Interesting comments thread, with many agreeing w/ article, others saying that it's not so bad. In either case, stagnation seems to be setting in (symptom of what?, political corruption?, more than that?). Sounds like a Donna Leon mystery come to life (as fiction, that's great, but as reality, that's not a compliment...).
One of the comments came from http://www.ilquiquiri.com/ who pointed to (his?) YouTube video of his region festering under the garbage strike (see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6gpnIK-WY0) : very graphic.
Yet, at home, Italians are consumed with a sense of domestic decline. “When an
entire country goes into crisis over the ‘who are we and where are we going’
debate, it means we are reaching new heights of hysteria,” the writer
Umberto Eco said. “This explosion of provincialism is truly painful.
Personally I feel depressed.”
So do many of his fellow countrymen. There is a sense that while the past is
Italy’s glory, it is also its prison, with politics and business dominated
by a gerontocracy and the younger entrepreneurs and politicians held back.
Yule Heibel on 2007-12-27
- you can read/ understand Eco's comment as saying that the self-flagellation is "hysteria," is overblown, and is not based in reality (i.e., that he's contradicting the article's premise)
Vincenzo Cremonini, 44, who has expanded his meat-producing business at Módena
to include railway and motorway catering — including the new Eurostar
service from St Pancras — identifies three other factors holding Italy back:
bureaucracy, the slow judicial system, which is used by protesters to hold
up modernising initiatives such as the Turin to Lyons high-speed railway,
and the “selfperpetuating political elite”.
A book on Italy’s cocooned elite, La Casta (The Caste), a runaway bestseller
this year, pointed out that Italy had the highest number of official
chauffeur-driven cars in Europe, and that the presidential palace, the
Quirinal, cost four times as much to run as Buckingham Palace.
Yule Heibel on 2007-12-27
- more than Buckingham Palace? That's crazy.
Yule Heibel on 2007-12-27
- they live at home b/c they can't afford to move into their own place(s)
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