Friday, September 11, 2009

Aladdin Street Rat Costume

"It's not a dictator? Then it's a sultan"

"delusional explanations", "macho humor," "a leader inappropriate for a serious country "which is embarrassing," attend "to other Presidents and Prime West. Thus, in an editorial in the direction El Pais says the press conference yesterday in which Silvio Berlusconi in Sardinia, near the Prime Minister Spain Zapatero, among other things attacked the most heavily influential English newspaper, in essence, predicting failure. The rest of the international press reacts in a similar way to "show" the Italian prime minister, as defined by various newspapers, and other major foreign newspaper The Wall Street Journal , dedicates an editorial vitriol for its decision to sue the newspapers that criticize him, a paragondandolo "Torero who takes a bunch of lawyers to prevent the bull" to do his job.

The editorial director begins by noting that Berlusconi, admitting that he had received several times at home, a businessman, Gianpaolo Tarantini, investigated for incitement to prostitution and drugs, maintains "raccomdabili little companies." So the article is a list of "delusional explanations" with which the premier replied, or rather not answer, the question of the Pais journalist at the press conference, showing off a "macho humor and ridiculous." Finally, the editorial accusing Berlusconi of being a leader who "confuses the public with the private sector, as demonstrated at the press conference," a leader "Inappropriate for a serious country and a government presentable." El Pais concludes: "Attending Berlusconi is a political difficulty for the additional international relations today, leaving to understand that the English Prime Minister Zapatero, who at one point called it" interesting "that Berlusconi was saying, would rather keep at a distance.

Similar comments from other English newspapers, El Periodico as it considers a press conference yesterday, "a recital based on bad taste and machismo" and Voz de Galicia about a leader "irretrievable."

The bible of capitalism, as it is nicknamed the Wall Street Journal , sports first page and the press conference accompanied by an editorial entitled "Silvio Berlusconi and the silence of the bulls," which vaguely echoes the title of the film "The Silence of the Lambs." The article is not signed, so even this expression of the direction of the world's leading financial newspaper, notes that the number of libel suits launched by the Italian prime minister against the Republic and other foreign newspapers, "to inspire laughter" if it did not represent a real threat to silence the press. The Wall Street Journal reports the recent sentence of Berlusconi that the newspapers "are attacking us like angry bulls, but there is a bullfighter who is not afraid of anything." But then, the Journal says, "we can not remember the last time a matador has unleashed a sqdra of lawyers to prevent the bull to attack.
The daily New York is a hypothesis: that the complaints can be retained by some newspapers to criticize Berlusconi for his stories with young women, but could push the international press to "deal with more issues that are far more damaging to his reputation, as its relations with Tehran and Tripoli, the effects of his economic nationalism, his broken promises to cut taxes." He concluded: " If Berlusconi loves her country so passionately as he says to do, then it should give up the lawsuit and let the press do its job "

Even the British press following the case closely, with coverage of the Guardian and the Times : both emphasize, from the headlines, one aspect of the press conference that could backfire against Berlusconi, that is the fact that the prime minister "to the first time admitted that a suspicious patron has brought women to his house, "as the headline in the Guardian, or that Tarantini," a businessman under investigation for drug and prostitution has led to "beautiful women at parties," the Prime Minister. A crowded which for now has no legal implications, but clearly the two British newspapers considered to be a highly embarrassing political point of view, perhaps imagining what would happen if the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom did things like that.

a relief that also moves the 'Irish Times in Ireland, the headline that a "pimp", a pimp, a pimp, has led women in the private residence of the Italian prime minister, according to some but in the latter Apparently there is nothing scandalous or improper.

Della-story Berlusconi is now another great American newspaper, the Los Angeles Times , which publishes a long interview to the Italian political scientist, long a professor of political science in the United States, Giovanni Sartori. The title of the article, which reflects the words of Sartori (and the theme of her latest book) is this: "It's not a dictator? Then it's a sultan." From The Republic

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