Insane Italian Politics

@OrthodoxWanderer

She has good energy, but still the problem lies with the error of her birth. A man needs to lead each nation. A woman needs to support the man leading it, like the women need to support the men of each nation in the home and being solid mothers to children. It's such a jewish tactic to disarm men by putting a woman in the spot who speaks their talking points, then let more gutter filth waltz in unopposed under her "watch".

Orban does a somewhat decent job but Hungary is not without its depravities. If the menorah extinguisher gets elected in Poland, provided he does not cuck, there is a chance for serious awakening and push back, but until the first part of Europe figures out how to break free of US hegemony (no they will not immediately fall under support of Russia or China) and also learn how to be independent from the east, nothing will change long-term. Europe will continue to be a piece of the chessboard between West and East in this jewish dialectic. Laws must be enacted, enforced, and prevented from jewish generational erosion, and since these anti-invader laws cannot seem to take a foothold in occupied Europe, it will have to be forced on it by the brave men who do rise up.

Are you gonna marry her piano? I bet you can show her a few new tunes.
 
Last time she tried this the Italian judiciary (both judges and courts) blocked her....what makes it any different now ?
She was at Trump's Inauguration last month. We'll see if they had any private discussion over Europe's mass migrants problem, which Trump openly talked about in the past.

Also, PM Matteo Salvino was found not guilty over bogus charges in an Italian Court last December.

Sooner or later, Trump will likely call out the EU leaders on the mass migration issues in Europe. And he likley will slap tariffs at the EU leaders in Brussels - i.e., either deport the migrants or else...enjoy the tariffs.

We'll see if Trump and Secretary of State Rubio send a message to Europe like what they did to South Africa.
 
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Italy will hold a referendum on June 8-9 to decide whether to halve the waiting period for foreigners applying for Italian nationality, the government announced on Thursday.



If approved, the reform would reduce the required residency period to five years, potentially granting citizenship to around 2.5 million foreign nationals.

The referendum was triggered after opposition parties and pro-migrant organizations, including Oxfam Italia, collected more than 500,000 signatures last September, meeting the legal threshold for a public vote.

Despite strong opposition from the ruling Brothers of Italy (FdI) party, led by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, the government was obligated to set a date for the vote after a ruling from the Constitutional Court in January approved its admissibility.

Currently, foreigners must reside in Italy for at least 10 years before applying for citizenship through naturalization. Children born in Italy to foreign parents are also unable to obtain citizenship until they turn 18.

Proponents of the reform argue that the existing system is restrictive and out of step with other European countries such as Germany, the U.K., Spain, and Portugal, where the naturalization process typically takes five years.

If this referendum passes then Italy will become Islamic like France and England.
 
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