There are spaces that must remain empty and spaces that are required.
An area that is to keep the living space, meaning the opportunity for everyone to express themselves, dress, relate to life, to love our consciousness as we should.
The freedom to return home, for example, at four in the morning, with the certainty of completely fall.
is a space to fill the cultural space.
If left as a fallow field, there is no cure and no good is enriched with nutrients, it becomes a field of weeds, where the latter can arise if not opposed, to stifle the good herbs.
The lack of investment in social education, the provision of spaces where the free, but civil, will be able to find space, develop into a cancer that consumes a variety of ways in our community from within.
Saturday's event is, for me, the attempt to respond to a theft.
theft of our life and the freedom to experience our environment in the long and wide.
A person who suffers such violence, it bears the marks on the body for days, but in my head for years, perhaps forever. Begin to reject their environment stifled by the memory and can create a gap that may have significant effects on the person.
The news of the attack a few days ago has been implemented by the common people as yet another episode of discrimination, the youngest of a large number, even for the worrying features cowardly act.
In life we \u200b\u200bmeet, we scorntra, you may have opposing ideas, but when it comes to a more physical confrontation, at least rules of engagement are met by real men.
Four people who attack one, too fine in the physical, speaks for itself.
There should be a civilized city in shadow areas, territories left in the events of fascist, citizenship has to recover their own space and to get its assessment of these alleged executioners do not know what.
Saturday morning we start to do just that. I ask anyone
should respond to fascist and discriminatory attitudes of some people to meet you screaming with us.
Freedom of Association of citizens "Mo, enough!"
photo: Ezio Marinoni - Parade in memory of the Shoah.
2004 Oil on canvas - 115x100
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