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What a bad example. But what civility. But what a virtuous and even enlightened Milan. The lights of San Siro, according to the title of the famous song (…) (…) by Roberto Vecchioni, yesterday emanated primitivism. The spectacle of thousands of Milan and Inter fans outside the derby, crowded, crowded, irresponsibly gathered by thousands, and some jumping on the ground, some in procession with motorcycles and scooters, to greet the two rival teams go to the camp. An inadvertent display of arrogance, a potential accumulation, a possible hotbed of common sense contempt and respect for oneself and others. How many of those Rossoneri and Nerazzurri ultras, crowded together yesterday afternoon, will now go to schools or workplaces carrying with them the viral load that those contacts could have released? And is it possible to recreate the curves outside the stadium, without the police intervening immediately and with rigor because the right to support football cannot go beyond respect for the law and health in general? And in highly civilized Milan this form of civic and national antipatriotism has existed. Crazy. Perhaps comparable to that scene in which, due to the troubles and mistakes of the Lombard authorities, in March, while the confinement was about to take place, many people fled the city going to infest, or at least causing others to run this risk , the rest of Italy. .
Milan derby, crowd of fans outside San Siro: with masks but without distance
The so-called “moral capital”, never such a misplaced label, is distinguished again by the absolute inability to live up to the emergency we are experiencing. And to think that yesterday afternoon also in Naples a super game was played -the Azzurri against the excellent Atalanta reduced with an unexpected 4 to 1- but we have not seen scenes of impudence and arrogance like those of the southern capital. exterior of the Meazza. The lights of San Siro have given off obscurantism. The derby gathered in the city (and province) that while the fans mixed breaths and moods reached 1,388 new infections (and 2,664 throughout Lombardy) deserves a slap in the face for all of Italy. He is Milanese, I do what I think does not take into account the suffering that our country suffers in all latitudes. This devastating message seems to haunt that sense of superiority and selfish separation that Milan has not stopped practicing and exhibiting in many ways and in many sectors in recent years and even in the penultimate years. Philippe Daverio, a recently deceased great Milanese, said that “Milan is a land of forays for the greedy who, taken together, do not produce anything good.” Annoying Daverio by a few thousand rioters might seem exorbitant, however, looking at the revolt of pro-Covid fanatics gathered around San Siro it is said that the lack of interest in the common good, understood in a broad Italian sense, does not It harbors only in the undergrowth of football fans, but rises even higher.
And in any case, it is also from these behaviors, these intolerable actions, that the possibility arises – but we hope not – that a new blockade could fall on the Peninsula or in some of its parts. With all the consequences, economic and social, that we know. And precisely for this reason, what happened in Milan is very serious. Even if we want to stay on the strictly soccer field, what happened in the Inter Milan derby runs the risk of precipitating the soccer championship into a lockout. Causing damage to fans all over Italy. But what this story of a Milanese Saturday teaches is that when in those parts there is talk of (presumed) excellence or (unproven) virtuosity of the “locomotive of Italy” city, an imposture is being put into practice. Perhaps this is the famous Milanese pragmatism.
Last updated: 07:39
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