
What if there really is a conspiracy?
By Antonio Polito
There is a conspiracy against Giorgia Meloni, against her ministers, her family members and, for some time, this sentence has been circulating more and more often in Italian political debates.
The opposition often accuses the prime minister of a paranoid obsession with conspiracies, as in the case of the four policemen who were apparently removed from the first floor of the Palazzo Chigi to avoid leaks. A circumstance later denied by the prime minister.
While other times, it is Giorgia Meloni's friends who report about media comps against her sister, Arianna. But they were never verified, anyway.
Even in the case of Maria Rosaria Boçia, former advisor to Minister Sangiuliano, all mechanisms were set in motion to discover who was the hand that moved her.
And the scandal, this very serious truth, of the theft by a financial worker of thousands of personal data of politicians and cardinals, sports figures and showbiz, was quickly attributed to a conspiracy against the center right.
In short, a paranoid style seems to be developing in Italian politics.
The opponent, the critic, must definitely be an enemy of democracy.
What if there really is a conspiracy?
Italians don't seem to care much actually, it doesn't even serve as a 'weapon' to distract the crowds. All these happened, the polls have not changed 'one comma', neither positively nor negatively.
Apparently, Italians don't believe in conspiracies. / Adapted 'Pamphlet', taken from 'Corriere'
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