The former European locomotive allocates hundreds of billions to reconstitute its arsenals making debt; Maria Rosaria Boccia launches a podcast with Rita De Crescenzo; The end of the Wake. This and much more in the issue on newsstands from 9 April
The editorial of the director
“Do you know Article 3 of the Constitution, what states:” All citizens have equal social dignity and are equal before the law, without distinction of sex, race, language, religion, political opinions, personal and social conditions “? Well, forget it: even if it is written in every courtroom, the principle that ensures poor and rich, Catholics and Muslims, white and blacks the same treatment in the face of justice could soon be canceled. Although the equality of each citizen in the face of the law is the foundation of every rule of law, a key element of any democracy, soon it may not be so. Indeed, in some country, such as the civilian Great Britain, he already risks being abolished … “
Achtung, called to arms
Germany has allocated hundreds of billions of euros to reconstitute their arsenals, making debt and denying completely 80 years of antimilitarism. It is the new global doctrine imposed by the choices of Donald Trump. And Berlin is now in a hurry to return a fearsome war giant (which the continent knows well).
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Driven out of the ministry? Return with a podcast
Maria Rosaria Boccia, at the limelight of the chronicles for the tormented affair with Gennaro Sangiuliano, changes strategy
communicative. On the web launches the “Pasta” program. And involves a Neapolitan super influencer.
The end of the Wake
For years, companies and majors have adapted (like everyone else) to the dictatorship of the politically correct, to the exaggerated representation of the LGBT+world, to the genuflection towards the most sparrowing minorities. Now we change. And whoever has not understood are putting us back.
The song of the wandering shepherd
Put to hard proof by floods and famines, hurricanes and droughts, shepherds, farmers and fishermen from Mongolia to Kenya, from Bangladesh to Haiti, are traveling in search of better territories and lives. To tell their stories of hope the photographer Alessandro Grassani who for years documents the consequences of climate change in the most remote places on Earth. Forty of his shots “on the borders of the world” are exhibited (until April 27) in the spaces of the Diocesan Museum of Milan, in a suggestive exhibition curated by Denis Curti.
Between the curves of the Nile
From the temple of Luxor to the dams of Assuan, with a stop in the ancient Menfi and Thebes, up to the new wonders of Cairo. An itinerary following the course of a river that has become legend.