Friday, August 31, 2007

Ailing Alitalia Facing Difficult Options

Alitalia, is now hemorrhaging two million euros a day, a total in net losses of three billion euros between 1999-2006.
Terms of the potential sale came with so many strings attached that, one-by-one, all potential buyers (from US private equity fund Texas Pacific to Russian carrier Aeroflot to upstart Italian airline Air One) ducked out of the bidding.
The two big obstacles are:
(1) to reinstate Rome's Fiumicino airport as the airline's primary transatlantic hub, pulling flights from Milan's Malpensa airport, which will be fought intensely by powerful northern politicians, who a decade ago, considered the construction of the Milan airport a great victory. Both Milanese mayor Letizia Moratti and the Lombardy region governor Roberto Formigoni - both rising stars of the center-right, have vowed to fight the plan to move the hub to Rome.
(2) the reaction from the unions, who in the past have launched repeated strikes at any threat of job cuts or reductions of their generous benefits.

Desperation Grows At Ailing Alitalia

Two million euros a day. That's the amount of money Alitalia, Italy's national airline, is now hemorrhaging. That nice (or, rather, nasty) round figure succinctly quantifies just how dire the carrier's crisis has become. Alitalia's troubles are nothing new, of course, as the government-controlled company tallied some three billion euros in net losses between 1999-2006, becoming a running joke among industry insiders and a mounting burden on Italian taxpayers. Last fall, Prime Minister Romano Prodi declared the situation at Alitalia "out of control," and vowed to personally lead the search for a solution. But when the Italian Treasury eventually put most of its 49.9% share of Alitalia on the market, the terms of the sale came with so many strings attached that, one-by-one, all potential buyers (from US private equity fund Texas Pacific to Russian carrier Aeroflot to upstart Italian airline Air One) ducked out of the bidding.

Now, with that "two-million-euro-a-day" figure (which equals about $2.7 million a day) still buzzing in the ears of government officials, investors and ordinary Italians, Alitalia is making its next move to stave off collapse. On Sep. 7, Alitalia's board is expected to finalize the details of what it is billing as a "survival/transition" plan for 2008-2010. Cynics will liken it to the allotment of a few fire extinguishers for the Hindenburg. Union officials have said that the plan calls for the company to try raise up to 1.5 billion euros in capital, cut some 1,000 of its 18,000 jobs, eliminate several of its more unprofitable routes and retire more than a dozen of its aircraft. Amidst often clashing pressures from the industry, unions and Italy's ever-unstable political climate, it is unclear whether the plan can pass muster either with the market or the ruling coalition.

As a reminder of how every step Alitalia takes comes loaded with political implications, the plan is also expected to reinstate Rome's Fiumicino airport as the airline's primary transatlantic hub, pulling flights from Milan's Malpensa airport. A decade ago, the construction of the airport 30 miles (50 km) northwest of Milan was seen as a great victory for powerful northern politicians. Now both the Milanese mayor Letizia Moratti and the governor of the Lombardy region Roberto Formigoni-both rising stars of the center-right, which is the opposition in the capital-have vowed to fight the plan. Alitalia officials will also be bracing for the reaction from the unions, who in the past have launched repeated strikes at any threat of job cuts or reductions of their generous benefits.

Still, the plan hammered out by Maurizio Prato, Alitalia's third chairman in the past year, may contain a corporate logic that goes beyond all the apparent wheel-spinning. The company, no one doubts, must be sold. The 5,000-pound vulture in the room is named Air France-KLM, which sat out this past year's round of bidding. Alitalia's initial cuts (modest as they are) to both personnel and fleet, its search for some hanging-on cash, and above all its shifting its hub southward all make it a more attractive regional partner for Air France following its merger with Dutch carrier KLM. It may turn out that playing hard-to-get will pay off for the French, as the Italians grow more desperate every day.

The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
Italia USA: http://www.ItaliaUSA.com [Formerly Italy at St Louis] (7 years)
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Annotico Email: annotico@earthlink.net

"Americans are from Mars, and Europeans are from Venus" - IHT

Journalist Paul Kennedy while vacationing in Spello, Umbria, mused about the contrasts between America and Europe with regard to matters of war and peace.
Kennedy felt that different political cultures and historical experiences may account for the two radically opposed attitudes toward conflict in today's world. He surmised that the Europeans, had grown tired of war and wished simply to enjoy the blessings of peace.
By contrast, Americans he felt that so long as evil and threats existed in the world, it was necessary to counter them, even in distant theaters of conflict.
[RAA NOTE: What about the "evils" of poverty, homelessness, and 37th ranking of health care, right here at home????
Re; "Even in distant theaters" But isn't that the best place to have wars, so that our peaceful domesticity is not disrupted????
Besides, This myth of countering evils in the world is perpetuated by the Oligarchy as a "cover" for Imperialistic and Colonialistic adventures to benefit Corporations. How else can you explain our "selective" pursuit of Tyrants?
It would be unwise to ignore the fact that Europe is rather "mature" having been civilized for two millennium, while the US as even a 48 state country is really only a hundred years old. Oklahoma was admitted in 1907 as the 46th state. New Mexico and Arizona were admitted in 1912, as the 47th and 48th. We are literally "new kids" on the block. We still have a sort of "cowboy" mentality.
America has Not had the "benefit" of TWO World Wars pouring destruction and misery across your country, to take the "glamour" out of war. All our Wars after 1812 have been fought "over there" !!!!

Our twin worlds of Mars and Venus
Thursday, August 30, 2007

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut:

I do not think I knew the full meaning of the word "surreal" until I took my family for a vacation in the idyllic Italian hill town of Spello, Umbria, this summer.

We lived inside the medieval walls and spent much of the time just sitting on our balcony or in terraced cafés, planning the next meal. Church bells rang frequently, men sat and played cards, old women hobbled up the street carrying the daily groceries, little kids played under the chestnut trees. It was easy to fit into this unhurried, peaceful way of life.

Every morning, however, when I returned from the store with a copy of the International Herald Tribune and sat under those chestnut trees reading it, the surreal feelings returned.

Photos of bombed-out buses in Baghdad and fenced-in areas of Gaza were joined by reports of Russian posturing under the polar ice cap, the U.S. Congress uncritically rubber-stamping enormous defense expenditures and earnest op-eds about whether the U.S. armed forces were or were not winning their wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Had a Martian joined me in Spello, it would have been difficult to convince him that all this was happening on the same Planet Earth.

But it is. And what really intrigues me are the contrasts across the North Atlantic with regard to matters of war and peace - remarkable differences that cannot be explained (as one explains many things) by economics or social structures. There simply is no great socioeconomic gap between Romano Prodi's Italy and George W. Bush's America.

Instead, as the noted American foreign-affairs commentator Robert Kagan argued a few years ago in his celebrated "Americans are from Mars and Europeans are from Venus" formula, different political cultures and historical experiences may account for the two radically opposed attitudes toward conflict in today's world. The Europeans, Kagan suggested in his 2002 article, had grown tired of war and wished simply to enjoy the blessings of peace. By contrast, Americans felt that so long as evil and threats existed in the world, it was necessary to counter them, even in distant theaters of conflict.

Consequently, Europeans spent little on armaments and could do little militarily, whereas Americans spent lots on their Army, Navy and Air Force and did a lot of fighting.

Of course there are many exceptions to the Venus-Mars thesis. The British Army, with thousands of troops deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan and on UN peacekeeping missions, would resent the characterization; many other EU countries (Poland, France, Germany, Italy) have military forces deployed overseas.

Moreover, tens of millions of Americans are strongly opposed to the Bush administration's "forward" policies in the Middle East and Southwest Asia, and disturbed by the fact that their republic, created in rebellion against unchecked military and imperial power, nowadays spends half of the entire world's defense budget, largely in pursuit of dragons abroad.

Thus the differences between America and Europe in this matter are not starkly black and white, but of various shades of gray. Yet only someone in denial of reality would say that Kagan was completely wrong. In my own view, he is more right than wrong, and Spello reinforced that feeling.

This is a part of the world that has known 2,500 years of bloody, gruesome warfare, right through the 20th century. (Memorials in Spello record the names of 101 men who fell in the First World War, 38 who were killed in World War II and six who died in the 1944 Partisan uprising.)

No doubt the people of Umbria - and Provence, and Saxony - would fight bravely in self-defense. But there is no desire to "stand tall" and pursue missions impossible across the globe.

Kagan's view is that getting upset about this discrepancy is futile: It exists. That may be so, but it is hard not to worry about the possibilities of further long-term "drift," with the trans-Atlantic gap continuing to widen even after George W. Bush.

A world in which Europeans focus on their internal integration while Americans only trust their own resources might be fine if no third parties existed, if they alone inhabited this planet.

In fact, Europe and America contain less than one-fifth of our human population. They also have to share the earth with a cynical Russia, a fast-rising India and China, a penurious Africa, a troubled Latin America, a volatile Middle East, aspiring nuclear states and terrorist organizations bent upon disruption.

As I left Spello, I felt a fondness for its gentler way of life together with a certain unease at returning to the confused, angry American domestic debate about whether and when to get out of Iraq, and about the obsession with the war on terror.

Yet admiration for the Umbrian option does not blind me to the recognition that there exist great challenges to peace-loving peoples, threats we would ignore at our peril. And my dislike of the White House's and Congress' obsessions with military force does not make me despair that future foreign policies will never come along that are more politic and diplomatic, offer a better grand strategy for the West, and thus also help to reduce that Mars-Venus gap.

In sum, it doesn't make sense to deny Kagan's basic point. But it may also be unwise to accept this as an unalterable fact, thus letting the trans-Atlantic drift continue. Policymakers and opinion-formers on both sides have, in my view, a strong secular interest in keeping the North Atlantic alliance vibrant, especially in an era of great international uncertainties.

Despite the many obvious, visual, political and daily-life differences between them, the folks living in Spello and the folks living, say, around the U.S. military base of Fort Bragg in North Carolina still have an awful lot in common. Why walk away from a good thing?

Paul Kennedy is director of International Security Studies at Yale University. Distributed by Tribune Media Services.


The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
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Annotico Email: annotico@earthlink.net

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Britons see US as Obsessed with Fighting over Guns, Gays, and God

Americans see themselves as World Preeminent........ Europeans view us more as Rude Hicks.
Britons are especially bemused by Americans preoccupation and obsession with battling over Guns, Gays and God.
Now they see us as getting sillier. The fight for the right to bear a Moustache without ridicule. Poster Boy. John Bolton :(


Kiss this? British Newspapers take a Look at a Hairy New American Cultural Debate

Atlanta Journal Constitution - GA, USA
By Shelley Emling Monday, August 27, 2007

The United States is viewed by many Britons as a place where people generally fight over guns, gays and God.

But there's a new cultural battle being waged in America, several British newspapers noted this past weekend.

It is the struggle over Americans' right to bear hair on their upper lips. The newspapers highlighted the American Mustache Institute's fight to stop discrimination against those with mustaches.

The articles cited a recent poll showing that more than half of American women would refuse to kiss a man with a mustache.

But the newspapers claim it's tough to rally around a cause in which the poster boy is John Bolton.

Sam Leith, a columnist for London's Daily Telegraph newspaper, said that a more sympathetic world cause would be the one pushed by the Italian Association for the Protection of Animals. That association is fighting to stop the killing of 60,000 black cats a year by superstitious Italians.

"It is definitely bad luck to be a black cat when an ignorant peasant crosses your path," he said.

The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
Italia USA: http://www.ItaliaUSA.com [Formerly Italy at St Louis] (7 years)
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Annotico Email: annotico@earthlink.net

Skype Captures Italy - Where Personal Communication is Key

Italians, as you well know are probably more into inter personal communications than any other peoples. Therefore, it is no surprise that very early on Cell phones were a huge hit in Italy. on the other hand, IPods (listening to music) have not caught on.
But now with the availability of Skype, again facilitating interpersonal communications at extremely reasonable prices, has made great inroads, even with the elderly.
Skype as you must know is an easily downloaded software that permits you to make FREE phone calls within your country with a headphone set through your Computer to another Computer, or a Phone, over the Internet. Foreign calls are pennies per minute.


The Holy Trinity of Italian Gadgetry

Italians are not easily impressed by new technology, but it it helps them flirt, talk or agitate its success is guaranteed

The London Times
From Times Online
Bernhard Warner
August 29, 2007

I don’t believe it’s ever been decreed, but come August, it is obligatory for Italians to holiday with the family. This has a strange effect on the Italian landscape and economy. The biggest cities empty (except for tourists, who never seem to leave – they just get larger and more confused) while little seaside communities and hilltop holiday retreats fill to capacity.

This massive remigration from the cities to the sea or the countryside is what the Italians call le ferie. It is not always a holiday atmosphere. It’s a pastime filled with rigid rules starting with morning coffee (please, stranieri, don’t order a cappuccino after 10am, or this transgression will be the topic of the day) the lunch menu, and how much time must elapse before it is safe to return to the sea after lunch (at least two hours, sometimes three). But the food is sumptuous, and the seaside and mountains are an oasis from the unrelenting city heat, making this one Italian tradition that I have happily adopted since coming to live here.

For me, there’s an added bonus. I get to observe Italians interacting with each other in a more intimate Petri dish than Rome. I am treated to their favourite pop songs (either the Eighties have never gone away, or they’re making a dramatic comeback here), to their debates about the merits of the new Fiat Cinquecento and the technology that now has become an essential part of their lives.

Aside from the Italian love affair with the telefonino, Italy is not a particularly tech-savvy country, and certainly not one of Europe’s early adopter markets. It wasn’t until last year that I began to see iPods around Rome with any degree of frequency. And, I know just three Italians who own one. I’ve gone through three myself since I arrived two years ago.

This doesn’t mean the geek spirit isn’t alive and well. It’s just that Italians, from my observations, are more drawn to technologies that allow them to communicate, express their opinion, flirt or agitate about some social ill. How can they listen to an iPod if they’re always on the telephone?

For this reason, blogs too have become a popular mouthpiece for the Italians of late. In the past year, my friends, spread across the country, have set up a blog (eoltre.blogspot.com) as a type of online meeting place to relive the long evenings of debate they once had at a favourite osteria during their University of Siena days. The eoltre blog posts generate just as much dinner party debate in Rome these days as the Big Three: politics, the Vatican and football.

For Italians, Skype rounds out the trinity. If the mobile phone gives the fretful Italian mamma a reassuring communications lifeline to her loved ones, and if the blog affords a young revolutionary his audience, then Skype is the great liberator from consumer tyranny.

The tyrant, in this case, is Telecom Italia, the plodding former monopoly that Italians bash with vigour. It’s also a firm they mistrust, particularly following accusations of wiretapping levelled at Telecom Italia’s security team. The allegation is that in exchange for an envelope full of cash a rogue band of Telecom Italia employees would spy on businessmen and their girlfriends, footballers and their girlfriends, politicians and their girlfriends. The fear has become that anybody who picks up a telephone in this country runs the risk of being bugged. Bypassing Telecom Italia has become an obvious lure. Throw in free calls, and the country is sold on Skype.

My father-in-law Massimo, an art critic, is a Skype newbie. Test-driving it for the first time about a month ago, he now uses Skype as much as anybody I know, barking “pronto, pronto” into his headset every few minutes. He has even set up a Skype cordless phone so that the family can call each other more often (as if that were possible).

Luckily, the Skype outage two weeks ago occurred during the biggest summer holiday, while most Italians were outside barbequing or at the beach. Still, the news was unsettling. Not buying the Microsoft update explanation for the outage, Italians peppered me with questions about the incident. Could somebody be sabotaging their Skype?, they asked, looking for clues to feed their growing list of conspiracy theories against Telecom Italia.

I tried to assure them it was just a blip, and tucked into the pasta, hoping somebody would change the subject to something more benign like the new Fiat Cinquecento, the Vatican or politics.

The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
Italia USA: http://www.ItaliaUSA.com [Formerly Italy at St Louis] (7 years)
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Annotico Email: annotico@earthlink.net

Catholic Clerical Celibacy; Hypocrisy or Idiocy ?? News Flash: Priest Professes Love for Single Mom

While the Hierarchy of the Catholic Church would want members to believe that one cannot serve two masters ( God and your Spouse), or that one would be distracted by Marriage and Children from their Principle Mission, and therefore Celibacy is Necessary.
Worse, some Church leaders have started to give out the Impression that celibacy was of apostolic origin -- that it had been built in at the beginning.
In Truth, prior to the Middle Ages, it was allowable for Catholic Priests to have Multiple Wives, and Mistresses (Concubines).
Actually, the MAIN REASON Celibacy was introduced by the First Lateran Council (1123 AD) was STRICTLY FINANCIAL !!!!!!!!
With more Decentralized Power at that time, Priests and Bishops were acquiring great PERSONAL WEALTH (from those trying to buy their way into Heaven), and the Churchmen were then passing on this wealth through Inheritance to their Heirs. The Church felt it was being deprived of great Resources, and therefore Outlawed Priestly Inheritance, AND MARRIAGE !!!!!
As Proof of the Total Irrelevance of Celibacy to Dedicated Religious Leaders, one has only to look to the Protestant, and Jewish Religions, who have NOT suffered because of married Priests or Rabbis, but have THRIVED !!!!!!!
Further Sadly, Up until recent times the Best and the Brightest Sons went into the Church. In the Catholic Church, their genes were not propagated, and there was a "Dumbing Down" in the community . In the Protestant and Jewish Faiths with the Best and Brightest encouraged to be married and have children, there was instead a "Smarting Up". Also there were Religious leaders that were more personally "in touch with" the practical problems of marriage, and could therefore provide wiser counsel.
Then again , in the Protestant and Jewish faiths, there are NOT the Widespread Violations of Celibacy, the Convent Scandals, or the Pedophile Scandals.
The Catholic Church because of it's Celibacy stance, becomes particularly vulnerable/attractive to the "wholesale" infiltration of homosexuals, (who the Catholic Church rails against) who would choose the priesthood in an attempt to deny or hide their natural sexual orientation.
Eventually,with celibacy being so unnatural regardless if one is born heterosexual, homosexual or bi, Few can remain celibate, and then only because of some physical problem). Therefore, the consequences with Hetro Sexual Priests are Sex with Female Married/Unmarried Parishioners, Nuns, Prostitutes., And with Homo Sexual Priests, Sex with Fellow Priests and young Male Alter Boys.
And Finally while the Catholic Church is losing priests at an appalling rate, and finding it difficult to recruit new ones, there is No such problem in the Protestant or Jewish Faiths.
The Catholic Church is it's own worst enemy!!!

A Brief History of Celibacy in the Catholic Church

First Century; Peter, the first pope, and the apostles that Jesus chose were, for the most part, married men. Second and Third Century; Age of Gnosticism: A person cannot be married and be perfect. However, most priests were married. Fourth Century 325-Council of Nicea: decreed that after ordination a priest could not marry.
385-Pope Siricius left his wife in order to become pope. Decreed that priests may no longer sleep with their wives. Fifth Century 401-St. Augustine wrote, "Nothing is so powerful in drawing the spirit of a man downwards as the caresses of a woman" Sixth Century 567-2nd Council of Tours: any cleric found in bed with his wife would be excommunicated for a year
580-Pope Pelagius II: Did not bother married priests as long as they did not hand over church property to wives or children.
590-604-Pope Gregory "the Great": All sexual desire is sinful in itself (meaning that sexual desire is intrinsically evil?). Seventh Century; France: documents show that the majority of priest were married. Eighth Century; St. Boniface reported to the pope that in Germany almost no bishop or priest was celibate. Ninth Century; 836-Council of Aix-la-Chapelle: Admitted abortions and infanticide in convents/monasteries to cover up uncelibate clerics.
St. Ulrich, argued that the only way to purify the church from the excesses of .celibacy was to permit priests marry. Eleventh Century 1045-Pope Boniface IX dispensed himself from celibacy and resigned in order to marry.
1074-Pope Gregory VII said anyone to be ordained must first pledge celibacy with their wives.
1095-Pope Urban II had priests’ wives sold into slavery, children were abandoned. Twelfth Century
1123-Pope Calistus II: First Lateran Council decreed that clerical marriages were invalid.
1139-Pope Innocent II: Second Lateran Council confirmed the previous council’s decree. Fifteenth Century; Transition; 50% of priests are married and accepted by the people. Sixteenth Century 1545-63-Council of Trent states that celibacy and virginity are superior to marriage.

See Also: Popes who were Married; Popes who were the Sons of other Popes; Popes who had Illegitimate Children after 1139


PRIEST CONFESSES LOVE FOR SEPARATED MUM


(ANSA) - Padua, August 28, 2007

A Catholic priest in northern Italy has revived the debate about clerical celibacy by confessing to have fallen in love with a separated mother.

Father Sante Sguotti of Monterosso near Padua told reporters on Tuesday that his beloved's name was Laura and that he wanted them to become officially engaged in December. "I have known Laura for more than eight years, but not in the biblical sense. I am in love with this woman and I helped her choose her child's name," the priest said.

But he stressed that their relationship would remain a chaste one because he did not want to jeopardise his job."Canon law does not forbid a priest to fall in love or become engaged in a celibate manner. I want to remain in the Church and so I will obey the celibacy rule," Sguotti said.

He also urged other priests who were in love to "come forward" and break their silence.

Sguotti triggered alarm among his superiors earlier this month by implying that he was the father of his girlfriend's
one-year-old child.The local bishop subsequently told Sguotti he expected him to quit, to the dismay of most of the priest's 800
parishioners, who are understanding of his predicament.

But Sguotti said on Tuesday that he had been joking and had simply wanted to provoke debate about the need for priestly celibacy.

"This is the first time I have been in love since becoming a priest. I believe it's a fundamental stage in life. A person can't be a good priest or nun or anything else in life unless he has experienced love at least once," he said."Life in the seminary, where all contact with women is
forbidden and you are banned from going to bars, swimming pools and movies, is wrong because it warps your
personality," Sguotti continued.

He also argued that the Church's celibacy requirement meant that "only the most closed and narrow-minded priests, the least humane ones, get ahead"."The Church is losing the best part of itself," Sguotti said.

The Vatican has never shown any sign of altering its long tradition of demanding celibacy from priests, despitecalls for a rethink from dissidents in the US and elsewhere.

Late last year Pope Benedict XVI rejected a request from excommunicated Zambian archbishop Emmanuel Milingo to accept married priests into the Catholic Church.

"The value of the choice of priestly celibacy was reaffirmed, in line with Catholic tradition," a Vatican statement said after the pope discussed the issue with top aides.

The statement came after the once-married Milingo wrote an open letter to the pope, urging immediate steps to allow
married priests in the Catholic Church.

He said the Church was in "dire straits" because of a vocation crisis and that allowing priests to marry would help
resolve the shortage.

Milingo has founded an association of like-minded clerics to promote his cause. The organisation - called Married Priests Now! - says about 150,000 Catholic priests have left the Church in order to marry.

Monsignor Milingo was excommunicated last September after he presided over an unauthorised ceremony in Washington to consecrate four married priests as bishops.The elderly churchman came close to excommunication in 2001 by defecting to a sect and marrying a Korean acupuncturist. That time he was persuaded to return to the church and to abandon his wife by the late John Paul II.

The first pope, Saint Peter, as well as many subsequent popes, bishops, and priests during the church's first 270
years were in fact married men and often fathers.

http://www.lifeinitaly.com/news/news-detailed.asp?newsid=6417

The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
Italia USA: http://www.ItaliaUSA.com [Formerly Italy at St Louis] (7 years)
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Annotico Email: annotico@earthlink.net

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Italian American Catholic Festivals - Documentary: 20 Years in Making

The great interest Italians have in Italian American communities and what they are doing to maintain their traditions and cultural ties to Italy prompted this 20 year project.
Paul Porcelli has filmed 277 festivals in the US, from Denver to Brooklyn. In its heyday before World War II, there were nearly 3,000 feasts. Now there are about 315.


A Record of Feast Days Tells Italian-American Story

A Newark teacher's hobby draws interest from RAI producers
The Star-Ledger - NJ.com - Newark,NJ,USA
By Sharon Adarlo
Star-Ledger Staff
Monday, August 27, 2007

As church bells and firecrackers rang through the air yesterday, Paul Porcelli aimed his camcorder at the two dozen men carrying a Saint Sebastian statue through the streets of Montclair.

Right behind him was a cameraman from an Italian TV station who aimed his lens at Porcelli, recording a story about the Belleville man's nearly 20-year odyssey to preserve on film Catholic festivals in the United States.

"It's an Italian affair," said Yair Tropen, a cameraman from Radiotelevisione Italiana or RAI, the Italian public broadcasting company. "They are interested in Italian communities and what they are doing."

Porcelli was filming the Saint Sebastian feast day at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church on Pine Street. It was precisely that festival that inspired him to pick up a camera and start his labor of love in 1988.

All told, he has been to 277 festivals in the country, from Denver to Brooklyn.

Now Italians will be able to see Porcelli in action and get a glimpse of how Italian-Americans honor their saints when the segment airs next month.

Tropen and photojournalist intern Alessandro Antonelli trailed Porcelli as they dodged balloons, a marching band and the throng of people gathered at the church.

Raffaello Siniscallo, a RAI journalist, later will interview Porcelli for the segment, Antonelli said.

"It's a nice story about Italians and Italian tradition," Antonelli said. "Italians don't know how Italian-Americans keep up their traditions."

It's a dwindling tradition, according to Porcelli. In its heyday before World War II, there were nearly 3,000 feasts. Now there are about 315.

He was inspired by his own early memories of the festivals held at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, his home parish. The Porcellis lived across the street from the church and had front-row seats to the pageantry.

"I remember looking out of my window," Porcelli said. "There was the arch of lights that went over the street. There were the money flower baskets."

But his parish weathered lean years as the neighborhood became less Italian and people who started the celebrations died off.

Another factor was the advent of World War II, when many Italian-Americans went overseas, Por celli said. People just began not holding the festivals because the men were not around.

But in pockets around the country, people still are passionate about their patron saints and the festivals they hold.

"I sing. I cry. I dance," said Jo seph Santoro, 24, who participates in two festivals in his native Brooklyn. "It's a presentation of our tradition, our heritage. It's a lot of what people need to know."

Porcelli, a Newark middle school teacher, has become a walking encyclopedia on the esoterica of festivals, from the "flight of angels" in which girls are pinned to pulleys and carried aloft above the crowd to his church's canopy for Saint Se bastian that was made by three Italian craftsman.

He has amassed a room full of digital footage and 3,500 photos from past feast days.

"I didn't think it would grow to be that big," Porcelli said. "It's al most like a collection -- you know how people collect baseball cards."

"It's a very expensive collec tion," joked his mother, Emily Por celli.

Sharon Adarlo may be reached at sadarlo@starledger.com or (732) 404-8081.
The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
Italia USA: http://www.ItaliaUSA.com [Formerly Italy at St Louis] (7 years)
Italia Mia: http://www.ItaliaMia.com (3 years)
Annotico Email: annotico@earthlink.net

Monday, August 27, 2007

Viterbo, Italy's Divine Inferno or Paradiso

Viterbo is 50 miles N. of Rome, and known from the time of the Etruscans for it's therapeutic scorching volcanic sulfur baths
While the Romans built huge complexes around the springs, they are now in ruins and have become so-called wild spas: natural springs that bubble up from the ground and spill into artificial basins in the middle of fields. In most cases, there are no entrance fees, no towel services and no changing rooms.

Journeys | Viterbo, Italy

Wild Spas: The Divine Therapy

New York Times
By David Farley
August 26, 2007

"IT'S an inferno in here," yelled a middle-aged woman as she plunged into a foul-smelling hot spring in central Italy. She wasn't the first to compare these scorching sulfur baths to Hell. In Canto XIV of "Inferno," Dante wanders past a pool oozing with boiling red water and is reminded of these thermal spas about an hour north of Rome "whose waters are shared with prostitutes."

In truth, Bulicame is actually far from Hell. Situated on the outskirts of the Viterbo " a provincial capital where popes once took refuge " the Bulicame sulfur springs bob with pleasure seekers whose only sins may be self-indulgence and a proclivity for smelling like rotten egg.

The countryside around Viterbo is studded with Roman ruins and sprinkled with these so-called wild spas: natural springs that bubble up from the ground and spill into artificial basins in the middle of fields. In most cases, there are no entrance fees, no towel services and no changing rooms. The only things you need are a car and a little geography lesson.

Of the half-dozen wild spas in the region, the best known may be Bulicame, but it's not the most popular. Several are closely guarded secrets, which is why I was glad to be sitting across from Giovanni Faperdue in the Gran Caffи Schenardi in Viterbo (Corso Italia, 11; 39-0761-345-860; www.caffeschenardi.com), a gilded high-ceiling 19th-century cafe in the city's historic center. Mr. Faperdue, a journalist for the local newspaper and the author of six books on Viterbo's history (including one about the sulfur springs), is passionate about the city's mineral-water-rich landscape.

“In a sense, the springs like Bulicame are volcanoes of water," he said, referring to the former volcanic craters that serve as the steamy water's source. "In ancient times, the spas in Rome were heated only by fire," he added. "So when the Romans came to Viterbo in 310 B.C. to conquer the Etruscans, they took notice of the naturally hot springs."

The Romans built huge complexes around the springs. Bulicame may be the easiest to find, just off the main road as you head toward the town of Tuscania. The four pools, of varying temperatures and sizes, are set into a gentle white knoll. Heaps of steam waft from a fenced-off hole atop a hill that channels 140-degree water to the pools.

Couples arrived carrying slippers, bathrobes and water bottles across a field. Perhaps it was my bare feet and boxer shorts that pegged me as a novice, but as I stood on the sidelines wondering which of the four pools I should dip into first, someone in the largest, swimming-pool-size bath offered a tip: "The smaller pools nearest the source are the warmest."

I glanced at a bigger pool, where a man in skimpy bathing trunks was smearing greenish mud across his face and flipping water onto his enormous belly. I walked to a smaller pool, dangled my toe in the steaming hot water and plunged in.

After an hourlong soak " my skin smooth and soft, my mind at ease " I understood the addiction. The sulfurous water gushing from the ground around Viterbo is said to be therapeutic. The locals say it's particularly good for the skin, the respiratory system and aching bones. The Etruscans and Romans also believed in its curative properties. And after several popes in the Middle Ages were believed to have been cured of chronic back pain after a dip, Viterbo's baths became a near-obligatory stop for travelers on the Rome-to-Florence route.

Although the region's numerous sulfur springs draw from a single water source, each spa has its own personality and devotees. Another popular wild spa is Bagnaccio, which sits at the end of a long gravel road a few miles from Bulicame. This three-basin spa is known for its lively social scene, which, for the uninitiated, is a lot like crashing a private pool party. “You see the same people every day," said one of the chatty regulars sitting in chest-high water. "It's like the coffee bar in the morning, but we happen to be sitting in smelly water."

Le Pozze di San Sisto, about five miles south of Viterbo, may be the plushest, thanks to its civic-minded bathers. And Terme dei Papi is the most commercial, with its campuslike structures and spa product line.

The thermal baths around Viterbo weren't always so inviting. Until a few years ago, the pools were littered with trash. Taking advantage of the parasite-killing sulfurous water, farmers would bring their livestock for a dip, sometimes even lowering horses or sheep into the pool as people were bathing.

That began to change after Mr. Faperdue wrote a series of articles about the spas for the local newspaper. "It caused quite a scandal," he said. Local residents, unaware of the state of the spas, were outraged. A volunteer force sprang up to police the springs.

At Bagnaccio, regular bathers now pay voluntary annual dues of 12 to 18 euros (about $16.60 to $25 at $1.38 to the euro) to keep the pools clean. Le Pozze di San Sisto went a step further: it became a members-only cultural association (annual dues of 15 euros, plus a 10-euro initiation fee). Unlike Bagnaccio, San Sisto checks for memberships at the door, which may explain why it may be the cleanest and most family-friendly of the wild spas.

“I liked the spa so much, I bought a house nearby just to be close to it," said Mario Bracci, a resident of Rome who is the president of the San Sisto cultural association. "When the condition of the place was worsening, I decided to do something about it, so that's when we formed the association." With 25,000 members, Le Pozze di San Sisto offers perks other area spas do not: a bar, changing rooms, picnic tables and seminars on yoga, crystal therapy and massage.

For spagoers seeking even more amenities, Terme dei Papi, or Baths of the Popes, a few miles west of Viterbo's historical center, offers up-market comforts in exchange for a more sterile atmosphere. Terme dei Papi now charges 10 euros to float in its sleek 100,000-square-foot pool. Much of the original medieval architecture has been replaced by charmless structures where Swedish massages and mud baths are administered by stern women in medical garb.

That may explain why spas like Bulicame seem to hold more appeal for the locals. In addition to being free, its commercial-free atmosphere and ancient Roman ruins infuse the bath with history. Besides, Dante's journey through “Inferno" and Bulicame eventually led him to "Paradiso."

IF YOU GO

GETTING THERE

Viterbo is about 50 miles north of Rome. The two-hour train ride from Rome's Ostiense railway station departs hourly and costs 4.10 euros, or about $5.65 at $1.38 to the euro (www.trenitalia.com). By car, take the SS2 Cassia Bis straight to Viterbo, about one hour.

SPAS

Bulicame (corner of Strada Provinciale Tuscanese and Strada delle Terme): A 10-minute drive from Viterbo's historical center, it has four baths of varying degrees and a smattering of Roman ruins. Free.

Bagnaccio (from the S2 Cassia north, take the S7 toward Marta and turn left at Via del Garinei, a gravel road): A members-only bath, it has three pools that attract chatty and friendly regulars.

Le Pozze di San Sisto (Cassia south, toward Vetralla; 39-3286-893-884; www.lepozzedisansisto.org): About five miles south of Viterbo, its natural landscape and plush amenities brings spa lovers from all over the area.

Terme dei Papi (Strada Bagni 12, 39-0761-3501, www.termedeipapi.it): A mile or so from Viterbo, this famed spa is the most commercial of the bunch.

HOTELS

The Hotel Niccolo V at Terme dei Papi (Strada Bagni 12, 39-0761-350-555, www.termedeipapi.it) has 23 spacious rooms, some overlooking the thermal pool, starting at 120 euros.

The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
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Michael Moore Unveils 'Sicko' in Italy, Praising Italian System- Warns of Tinkering

Michael Moore, US documentary maker ,of "Sicko" targeting health care in the United States, praised Italy's system as one of the world's best but warned against complacency.

"Please present to me one Italian who has lost their home because they got sick," "Medical bills now in the United States are the number one reason for personal bankruptcy, ... for homelessness."


Michael Moore Unveils 'Sicko' in Rome
ABS-CBN News
From Agence France-Presse
August 24, 2007

ROME - US documentary maker Michael Moore, in Rome on Friday for the release of his latest film "Sicko" targeting health care in the United States, praised Italy's system as one of the world's best but warned against complacency.

"Please present to me one Italian who has lost their home because they got sick," Moore said at a news conference attended by Italian Health Minister Livia Turco. "Medical bills now in the United States are the number one reason for personal bankruptcy, ... for homelessness."

Referring to Turco, he quipped: "She's the minister of health and I'm the minister of un-health."

Noting that 50 million Americans have no health insurance, Moore said: "All health care systems have problems, but at least you have a health care system that covers everyone. That's a human right, isn't it?"

The 53-year-old filmmaker repeatedly slammed Italy's right-wing former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi for slashing spending on health care, urging his centre-left successor Romano Prodi, who narrowly won elections last year, to "clean up the mess that Berlusconi left behind."

Moore jokingly apologized for referring frequently to Italy as number two, behind France, in a 2000 World Health Organization ranking that placed the United States at number 37 in performance despite leading in spending on health care.

He suggested that Italy, which already "beat France on the football field" to win last year's World Cup, could become number one in health care by making pasta from "whole-grain flour instead of processed flour, which turns to sugar in your metabolism."

Moore, who won an Oscar in 2003 for "Bowling for Columbine" and the Palme d'Or at Cannes for "Fahrenheit 9/11" the following year, said "Humor is very necessary when you're living in dark times."

He warned of "dark forces at work backed by US capitalists and US corporations that are not doing much good in the world."

Commenting on new French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Moore said his predecessor Jacques Chirac had intended "to dismantle the social state (but) when he tried to do that, people went out into the streets. So he became realistic. ... The same will happen with Mr. Sarkozy."

He added: "If you try to privatize things more, the more you try and do that, the more you are going to look like the United States.".....

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Italy SECOND Most Favorite Travel Destination - If Money No Object !

Adult Americans were asked in which Foreign country they would most like to spend a vacation if cost was not an issue.
(Canada and Mexico are the current Favorites because of the cost factor.)
For the eleventh year in a row, Australia tops the list as the most popular ideal vacation destination. (Surprising!)
The next most popular countries are Italy (#2), Great Britain (#3), France (#4) and Ireland (#5).
Notice, that three of the top five countries are English speaking.
And, Italy is the favorite for the Youth (Echo Boomers -those aged 18 to 30) and for College Graduates, while Britain is the favorite of the Mature (62+), and those with some college.

Australia Is The Most Popular Country For Vacations - If Cost Is Not An Issue

Italy, Britain, France and Ireland Are The Next Most Popular Destinations

Every year at this time, The Harris Poll asks a representative sample of all adult Americans in which country, outside the United States, they would most like to spend a vacation if cost was not an issue. For the eleventh year in a row, Australia tops the list as the most popular ideal vacation destination. The next most popular countries are Italy (#2), Great Britain (#3), France (#4) and Ireland (#5). It is noteworthy that three of the top five countries are English speaking.

Rounding out the top ten are Germany (#6), Japan (#7), New Zealand (#8), Spain (#9) and Greece (#10).

These are some of the results of a Harris Poll of 2,372 U.S. adults conducted online between June 5 and 11, 2007 by Harris Interactive.

There are some changes in the rank order since last year:

  • France has moved ahead of Ireland into fourth place;
  • Japan moved up from #11 to #7;
  • Spain moved up from #12 to #9;
  • Canada slipped from #7 to #11;
  • Egypt (#14) and China (#15) come onto the list this year, as the Bahamas, Jamaica and Brazil dropped off of it.

Australia is the favorite vacation destination for most demographic groups, but there are some exceptions. Italy is the favorite for Echo Boomers (those aged 18 to 30) and for college graduates without post graduate education. Britain is the favorite of Matures (aged 62 and over) and people with some college education, but not a college degree.

Overall, half of all adults (50%) would choose a European country for a foreign vacation if cost was not an issue (and, of course, Europe is now very expensive for Americans because of the strong Euro and pound and the weak dollar). One-quarter (25%) would choose a country in Asia or the Pacific and one in ten (11%) percent would go to the Caribbean or the Americas.

SEE the 5 Tables: http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_poll/index.asp?PID=780

As an additional Note: According to WordsFinder, the most popular destinations in Italy in order are:
Rome, Venice, Florence, Naples and Milan.
The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
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"American Gangster" Chronicles Black Mobsters Siezing Power from Italians

While the Italians get all the credit for ALL Illlicit activity, fueled by "The Godfather" , ...the reality was that during the 15 year Vietnam War (1959-1975), Harlem revolutionized the heroin trade by importing it directly from Southeast Asia, and siezed power from the Italians, just as the Italians had previously wrested control from the Jews and Irish.


American Gangster
Time Magazine
By Richard Corlis
Friday, Aug. 24, 2007
To Be Released November. 2; directed by Ridley Scott

Gangster movies come in vivid spurts, like machine-gun fire. In the early '30s, hard guys like James Cagney, Paul Muni and Edward G. Robinson paraded the sick dazzle of Prohibition-era thugs. Forty years later, the Corleones ruled, but on the margins was the subgenre of black gangster films: Superfly, Black Caesar and their bloody kin. Beneath the violent fantasies of these films was a historical fact: black mobsters were seizing power from the Italians who had run the underworld.

American Gangster, due out Nov. 2, is the real-life microcosm of that story. Frank Lucas (Denzel Washington) was a Harlem drug lord who, in the Vietnam era, revolutionized the heroin trade by importing the nasty white stuff directly from Southeast Asia, often in the caskets of U.S. soldiers. As Lucas amassed a $50 million fortune, he was pursued by investigator Richie Roberts (Russell Crowe). Their story was told in a 2000 New York magazine article that is the source for this film.

Director Ridley Scott and scriptwriter Steven Zaillian (who last collaborated on Hannibal) aren't your standard shoot-'em-up types, so they'll be painting Lucas as a prototype of white-collar criminals and, even more crucially, highlighting the element of race in the heroin business. The Mafia considered blacks its customers, not its rivals. Lucas and the more notorious Nicky Barnes (played here by Cuba Gooding Jr.) changed all that.

The movie surely has another motive. The three stars and Zaillian are all Academy Award winners, as is producer Brian Grazer (for A Beautiful Mind ), and Scott helmed Gladiator to a Best Picture statuette. So all involved are hoping that Gangster's guns will still be blazing on Oscar night.

The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
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"L'Ora di Punta" Star Praise of Red Brigade Founder Creates Furor in Italy

French actress Fanny Ardant stars in the Italian Film "L'Ora di Punta", that is to be introduced at the Venice Film Festival,
told Italian magazine "A" that she admired Renato Curcio, the jailed founder of the Red Brigade guerrilla group causing a furor in Italy.
The Brigate Rosse 's stated goal was a "concentrated strike against the heart of the State, because the state is an imperialist collection of multinational corporations". It is credited with 14,000 acts of violence, many as kidnappings of Tycoons, Politicians, and Judges.
The Red Brigade's most famous act was the kidnapping and killing of the Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro.

Many suggest that Moro's murder could have been orchestrated by the Italian Masonic lodge, Propaganda Due (also known as P2), or that the Red Brigades (BR), was infiltrated by US intelligence (CIA), or The "Gladio network", directed by NATO, which were adamantly opposed to Moro's intentions to admit the Communists into the Italian government of national unity, the fear on the US side being that Italy thereafter might withdraw from NATO and that the U.S. would have then lost access to vital Mediterranean ports.


Star Upsets Italy over Red 'Hero'
BBC News
Friday, August 24, 2007
French actress Fanny Ardant has drawn the wrath of Italian politicians
after calling the jailed founder of the Red Brigade guerrilla group her "hero".

Ardant, 59, told Italian magazine "A" she admired Renato Curcio, adding she "considered the Red Brigades phenomenon to be very moving and passionate".

The president of Italy's Veneto region, Giancarlo Galan, asked Ardant not to come to the Venice film festival.

The Red Brigades murdered Christian Democrat leader Aldo Moro in 1976.

Ardant is expected at the Venice festival as the lead member of the cast in Italian film "L'Ora di Punta".

Christian Democrat Luca Volonte was also unhappy with the actress's comments.

"Nobody asks an actress to be intelligent or to know about the innumerable tragedies but at least (she should show) respect for the victims' families," he said.

The Marxist Red Brigades group, whose aim was to overthrow capitalist Italy, attacked government and business targets in the 1970s and early 1980s.

It was largely disbanded in the 1980s but an offshoot of the group, which calls itself the Red Brigades-Communist Combatant Party, carried out an assassination of a government advisor in 2002.

A former member of the original Red Brigades was recently arrested in Paris after 20 years on the run.

Marina Petrella, 53, was sentenced to life in absentia by a Rome court in 1992 for murder and kidnapping.

The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
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Friday, August 24, 2007

Italians Avoid Taxes - Good for Them !!!!!!

To Avoid Taxes is Legal. To Evade Taxes is Illegal.
It is a tortuous distinction with a myriad of loopholes written by special interest groups, passed by legislators, awash with lobbyist "contributions". In the US, in Italy, most of the world.
Michele Salvati, an Economic Professor is advocating that Italians meet their civic responsibilities by paying their taxes.
Italians are apparently more cynical and skeptical about politicians motives than naive Americans are, and care not to be
I oppose Prof Salvati's suggestion, and rather suggest that he spend his time more productively by figuring out how to make the Politicians perform HONESTLY.!!!!!!!! not selling the Public's interests down the river, while slurping at the public trough, and being paid off.
Then and only then, should the Italians step up to the plate. Until then, they need not act like mindless sheep!!!!!

Michele Salvati Calls for More Civil Responsibility in Italy
Courrier International - Paris,France
August 23, 2007
The Italian professor of political economy Michele Salvati considers that "Italy is a rich country and has its place among other western countries, but it has always suffered from a distinct lack of civil culture. ...
Nowadays, not only do moralising thinkers regret this absence of civil sensitivity, but so too do economists and sociologists, who have discovered that an adequate 'social capital' is a powerful motor for development.
Indeed, the sense of civil responsibility, faith in institutions and the capacity to cooperate honestly are indispensable. ... The programme of a genuine political class should have as a priority the resolution of this 'old Italian problem'. ..
We therefore need zero tolerance of illegal behaviour. .. With time and rigorous policy, the behaviour of Italians can be changed and the sense of civil responsibility and legality will become an intrinsic part of our mentalities."
The ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
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Sacco and Vanzetti, 80th Anniversary of Execution - NY Times

I spent my early years as most Italian Americans ashamed of Sacco and Vanzetti as Anarchists, ignoring the fact that their prosecution and execution was a giant travesty!!!!!!
Only later, when I was academically educated, more mature and worldly did I realize that Sacco and Vanzetti as Anarchists were in a futile battle vs the Robber Barons, and were fighting for the rights of the oppressed little guy.
Sacco and Vanzetti were part of a movement led by Luigi Galleani (1861-1931) a major 20th century anarchist. Famous among both Italians and Americans, and was a proponent of propaganda by the deed. He was the founder and editor of the Cronaca Sovversiva, a major Italian anarchist periodical which ran for a period of about 15 years before being shut down by the American government. His most remembered act was the bombing of Wall Street offices of JP Morgan in 1920.
Sedition Act of 1918 led to the Palmer Raids that resulted in