Pierpaolo Capezzera
few days ago, exactly on February 3, fell the twentieth anniversary of the dissolution of the Italian Communist Party and at the same time, has mourned the death of the Italian left. In fact, after two years of cogitation that arose from the fall of the Berlin Wall, the so-called "Turn of Bolognina" took place, creating the first great Italian red wing division of recent times: the birth of the PDS and the Movement Rifondazione Comunista. The story, from the 1992 elections, then teaches us how this action has led to a decline of growing consensus, due to the abandonment of the peculiar characteristics of the then CPI (remember that as the largest communist party in Europe and among the largest in the world), in conjunction with the degradation of the political class. Besides, I think it's clear the vast difference between a figure such as Berlinguer and D'Alema. Personally, then, last Thursday I mourned the death of the dream of a free country, especially in a tragic political moment like this, among whores and international jokes. The world is entering a war with oppression, from nations in crisis, we fight for a crust of bread. And Italy is dormant, no longer has a reference point in the fight against tyranny: the heirs of the Italian Communist thinking, the descendants of Gramsci, is more interested in discrediting a political opponent than to do what his "avi "have always done. Nothing in this anachronistic, I do not mean the struggle of the proletariat, but the real thrust of the PCI: star closely, to be the reference point for those who do not have the means or skills to handle situations on your own that go beyond of a single man. But then, the party in recent elections has been expressed in a solemn manner: "We are not the Party of workers. " Considering that Italy is a Republic founded on work, I would say that is not something to brag about.
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