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Politicians as Athletes

Davide's picture

One of the reasons why I left Italy was that Italians talk and argue about politics constantly, as if all you had to do was to cast a vote to some mythical "right party" to fix all the problems at once.

Recently I've been reading the Italian news again, between the plain ansa.it and the opinionated beppegrillo.it, the blog of Beppe Grillo, a controversial standup comedian banned by TV for his political jokes and that later on gained some serious creed by predicting one of the biggest corporate scandals in Europe.
Mr. Grillo's blog is one of the most frequented in the World, now being translated in English and Japanese. But I doubt that many people outside Italy actually follow it as only the Italian version gets between 3000 and 4000 comments per post.. too many to make any sense of them, and frankly most of those comments are just random venting.

With Naples drowning in its own trash for almost half a year now, there is definitely a lot to talk about.
It seems that Italy managed to stop funds to one of our few Nobel Prize scientists, Carlo Rubbia, which is famous for nuclear research, and that has been working on using solar energy. The research was first founded in Italy, but then he had to move to Spain... while the Italian politicians are pushing for Nuclear energy (banned by a referendum 20 years ago) and at the same time burning trash with cancer-facilitating incinerators, that for the occasion have been renamed as "thermo-valuers".

At the root of all this there is culture. Italians are not altruistic at all and are relatively ignorant on how things go about in the rest of the World.
One could argue that the United States of America is also a fairly closed country where news feeds are rather limited (see Anna Miller's 2008 talk on TED).
USA however is a country with so much active research and development. It gathers the brightest minds from all over the World and to some extent it can afford to have the general population not being too concerned or too educated about what happens outside (there goes the Iraq war..).

Back to the Italian situation. I believe the country needs people to simply go to school, study a lot, study scientific matters, develop logical skills and also study abroad.
We need more and more people to stick their necks outside and see on a practical level how things work in the rest of the World. You can't improve much if you have no practical experience of what other countries are doing right.
In the short term however, before the average cultural level grows, we need to start making sure that people that end up with political power are not your "average Luigi".
People need to face that for a special job one needs special people.
A person with power to govern should have, first of all, a basic moral integrity. A stable personality, great intelligence and motivation (aside from getting rich and powerful !).
Not everyone needs to be a physics Nobel Prize, but that would be ideal.

Most of all, politicians mental abilities and economic activities should be constantly monitored. There should be periodical reviews in which politicians' goals and achievements are being shown to the greater population (leaving some room for national security, but not too much).

Basically, I want to know that whoever is taking decisions for me is actually more fit than me, if not, then I should be doing his job !
Politics shouldn't be a career, it should be a service. Granted that experience is a key factor in everything, but experience is also an excuse for people to get lazy and to make huge mistakes on the behalf of millions and millions of people.
Being a politicians is a job of great responsibilities, it ought to employ the brightest minds and put them constantly under scrutiny !

..in the meantime, Italian parliament and senate includes convicted criminals and shady individuals.
Get those out first !

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Hey Davide, you are talking

Hey Davide, you are talking like a real opinionist... do you want to enter in the field? (scendere in campo?) :-)

The Opinion

Davide's picture

That's a dangerous thing to do.. it would end up taking so much of my time, and it's also a lost battle.
Things can't possibly change in such little time.. it's the culture that is wrong.
I can either ruin my days thinking about how broken things are in Italy, or I can just enjoy my life in Japan and use my time for coding 8)

Many times people need to reach the bottom before they realize that things must change. See how it went with USA and Bush, elected and re-elected again..
I used to talk about that BS before the Iraq war started.. then I gave up because I realized that Americans needed to go on and do their stupid thing..

Same with Italians now.. but Italians don't need an election, they (we ?) need a popular revolution !
Good luck with that 8)

For one thing, I think that Italians need role models. So, I really hope Italy will lose the European World Cup, and that they start looking at those like us that use their brain to improve their lives. Fack kicking a ball and arguing on which political ideology is best.. get busy with thinking instead !
Italians need to move their asses.. go abroad, start a business, create something.. code !

wooo

European World Cup? Italy

European World Cup?

Italy contributed a lot to the world in terms of arts and culture and also commercial products like shoes, clothes, cars....

Japan on the other hand hasn't really invented anything new as far as I know. I dont recall ever seeing a good research paper that originated in Japan, but it is just very good at improving and building on other peoples ideas.

The World Club !

Davide's picture

eheh.. I guess I'm not a big soccer fan 8P

I don't think that history matters. Actually, it does, history is Italy's problem. Because one can go on forever remembering the great minds that were.. but now there really is nothing left.

What matters now is what countries are great now..

The argument about Japan not inventing anything: while it's true that American universities and English speaking countries tend to gather a big portion of great minds, it's also true that Japan is famous for creativity as well.
If Japanese were only good at copying and perfecting, then Japanese videogames would be more famous for technical realization rather than creativity.
Instead it seems that Japan game dev is lagging behind technologically while excelling on the creativity level.. Nintendo being the obvious example, but on a more artistic level, companies like the one I work for ;)
I see how people other countries that take inspiration form Japanese games.. and decide to become programmers, learn Japanese, or whatever else..
Japanese = copycat robots is a rather old view of things. Japanese are certainly more willing to embrace things from outside.. I wish Italy would do the same.. become humble for once, forget history and learn from other countries, change as it becomes necessary.

Not one country is best in everything.. Japan needs to learn form the USA and USA needs to learn from Japan... but as things are right now, nobody needs to learn from Italy.. or maybe learn how not to do things.

To end this comment, here is a nice video with English subtitles.. A Telecom Italia's manager pseudo-motivational monologue in which he suggests that the company will do well (currently a 35 billion Euro debt created by predatory management).
He tries to make an historical point, but ends up really just swearing and demonstrating profound ignorance by claiming that Napoleon won in Waterloo (I'm no history fan myself, but at least I don't go around trying to teach it on public TV ;)

Akihabara

Davide, did you went to Akihabara today?

I hope no!

Nope.. I'm safe ! 8) I

Davide's picture

Nope.. I'm safe ! 8)

I hardly ever go to Akihabara.. sad event anyway 8(

Hi my friend

Hi Davide,
I'm ur old friend Marco we were in the same class (in Rome, via nazionale) i really like to have a chance to say hello to you so pls if you have time just send me an email with ur skype or msn contact.
For work i have to move near ur area so perhaps u can give me some advise :)

bye

Cool !!

Davide's picture

Cool !!

ciao Davide!

piacere di conoscerti, Davide!
sto anche io a Tokyo da un po', in tutto sono in Giappone da 5 anni.
Trovo i tuoi post pieni di buon senso. Sono su Linkedin, se ti va di aggiungermi ai tuoi contatti mi farebbe molto piacere!
a presto,

Luca

Ciao Luca.. post pieni di

Davide's picture

Ciao Luca.. post pieni di buon senso ? Ummm non ci credo tanto ma non posso che condividere ;)

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