[ad_1]
Giuseppe Conte (Here the calligraphy) From the calligraphy of Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte comes a personality with a good vital energy that allows him to face the problems inherent to political office with a firmness that borders on stubbornness. Excessive control, which also emerges from body language, composed of a sober elegance, a measured and convincing linguistic expression, for which nothing is out of place, denotes how he knows how to express his opinions with grace and measure, always trying to appear pleasant and credible. This is your winning weapon that attracts people who like polite behavior and good manners. However, if we analyze the posture, gait, and gaze, elements emerge that I would define as “Napoleonic”: a way of proposing that smells of an unrewarding past. Conte has a logical-damaging intelligence, which can lead him to assume a certain stubbornness for fear that his dictates will not be respected. The signature of the Prime Minister denotes an attempt to recover the father figure that occurred through social advancement, which, however, does not always meet its objectives. Here then he invents some tricks: shoot and then back off, with the same calm and joy.
Matteo renzi (Here the spelling) Renzi, has gifts of will, tenacity and great enthusiasm, passionate character, so he knows how to position himself well in the environment. The enthusiasm and “Florentine” language make him sympathetic, at least at first. In addition, he loves to be surrounded by consents that will strengthen his self-esteem. He has good intellectual gifts, which make the most of his will, but above all his ambition. It will be precisely this modality that will not allow you to reach the top. Certainly there is in him the need to give a new face to politics, which is carried out with fervor and determination (auctions of the letters “p” that exceed the central body). Renzi, in fact, never gives up and that is a peculiarity of his character, which, however, is not known if he will be able to withstand the contrary winds. Calligraphy, in this sense, shows some doubts because, despite the Florentines’ own cunning, there is something naive in Matteo Renzi that could make him make too many mistakes. In fact, the rush to carry out projects and the difficulty in properly weighing the pros and cons, including the risks that political life necessarily entails, are his Achilles heel. He thinks he’s ready to climb Everest, but once he got close to the top, dizziness washed over him and prevented him from continuing. In short: they both love privileged places, but when there is a real confrontation between the two, the current Prime Minister will win because he knows better and more calmly manage his image as a politician, even at the European level. However, both the spelling and the signature denounce insufficient political depth for the current situation, both culturally and experientially. Instead, they share a different but still present way of being narcissistic and centralizing.