Issue 285 is necessarily dominated by the threat to
us all posed by bellicose Bush & co. Carlo Oliva
discusses the truth that there may be in the comparison
of Bush with Hitler made by German government minister
Herta Daeubler-Gmelin, which cost her her job. Antonio
Cardella is concerned about a single superpower that
does not tolerate dissent, in the sense that if
youre not with us, youre against us.
Maria Matteo considers the growing war fever fomented
by Bush, and his Italian cohorts, and the parallel growth
in anti-militarism. An in-depth article by Francesco
Robustelli affirms that violence is not in our DNA,
even if our leaders would have us believe otherwise.
In pleasant contrast to the drums of war, an article
on the antidote to hectic pace of life - slowness.
Cosimo Scarinzi looks at libertarian trade unionism
and the crisis of Italys major trade union federation,
the CGIL. Felice Accame discusses the way new names
are used to conceal the old tricks that politicians
use.
Several articles devoted to music and associated themes
this month. In his music page, Stefano Starace reviews
4 new Cds, by Têtes de Bois, Davide Van De Sfroos,
Andrea Mazzacavallo and Elvira and Giovanni Lo Cascio.
Again on a musical theme, an article by Alessio Lega
on Spanish singer-songwriter Paco Ibañez. In
an article that first appeared in Temporale
magazine, Ute Tischler and Rana Brentjes interview artist
Andrea Crociani on the links between music, art and
Malatesta. Also, in his usual music column, Marco Pandin
reviews falls in love with the album Bandiera
Genovese by Rosa Tatuata.
The memory of Fabrizio De André is kept alive
in many ways in A, and the article by Mauro
Macario is another example of this: he reports on the
poetry competition organised at Parma prison by the
Fabrizio De André Foundation. The
book Di sconfitta in sconfitta by Vincenzo
Guagliardo is reviewed by Riccardo Meloni.
An eye-opening article by Paul Benkimoun, who has recently
published a book on the way health is now a commodity,
entitled Morti senza Ricetta (Dead without
a prescription), tells of how pharmaceutical research
is not interested in the victims of disease on the south
of the world.
There is also a contribution from Latin America: a
report by Stefano B. on the campaign resisting payment
of electricity bills (light resistance movement) in
Chiapas.
In the Fatti & misfatti column: a short
contribution by Elena Barbieri and Gianni Sartori of
the Movimento U.N.A. responding to criticisms of animal
rights campaigners by Pedro Almodovar. Also by Gianni
Sartori, this time in his guise as representative of
the Lega per i diritti e la liberazione dei popoli,
a reminder that the view that the behaviour of the Italians
in Africa during the colonial period was not that
bad and almost paternal is overly
rosy and revisionist.
This months Ritratti in Piedi, by Massimo
Ortalli, looks at Carolina Invernizio, the anarchist
writer of serial stories of the late 19th century.
Finally, the letters page, and a letter of thanks from
Alice to A for its courage and commitment,
and considerations from Pietro Acquistapace on the relationship
between anarchists and the movement.
by Leslie Ray
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