Editoria, sintetizzatori a tempo perso e anticapitalismo.

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  • 72 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: May 25th, 2022

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  • We didn’t have Hitler in our history though. You can’t compare roman salute with wolf gesture

    Turks committed genocide towards Armenians (and are still perpetrating one against Kurds).

    Europeans are uncomfortable with the fact that we just exist.

    It’s not about existence, it’s about extremism and authocracy making its way into Europe. I don’t think any European looks at Hungary with respect, either.

    Italy also symbolizes wolfs.

    Wolves are not correlated, at least in Italy, to paramilitary fascist organisation responsible for war crimes. And, of course, there’s always a degree of interpretation: a wolf is a wolf, a wolf salute is a reminder of the violent recent history of Turkey and its accommodation into the reality of “the normal”.

    I believe Turkey is a wonderful country, but there’s definitely better ways to show patriotism than to resort to extremist political affiliation for doing it. Like, I don’t know, a Turkish flag?


  • the fact that “80% of Turkish people use it for pure Turkish symbol”, when it is clearly associated with a paramilitary fascist group, should really make you think about why Turkey isn’t looked upon nicely by the EU in general. And I’m frankly surprised that even as a “non right wing Turkish”, you still think it’s fine to use the symbols that are now widely associated with that political group. I can’t think of a world where I, an Italian, would use the Roman salute because it’s a “patriotic” salute and because “everyone does it here” (even if a large majority of Italians don’t, thank god).




  • taught me once and for all that while death might be always near, a fear that’s constantly devouring our lives and paralysing them to the point where it feels like our deepest, inner self is a husk shell of what we once were, we can still find the reason of our existence in the joys of living a life that’s devoted in equal part to mystery, sensuality, knowledge and wonder. And it says this in the most democratic way you could think: everyone is entitled and deserving of the complexity of life. Oh, and also: it’s an absolutely hilarious book to read through.


  • never found Joyce to be pretentious (the man knew what he was doing, and definitely succeeded in doing so) or obtuse (I mean, how many writers you can think of that could pull out the mastery of language and human sensibility out of nowhere like he does). I might be biased because I believe Ulysses saved my life: it’s definitely one of the funniest, most touching, humane books I have ever had the pleasure to read. I’d push Ogre to keep up with the good work.