“Gridodallarme dall’università” contro le frasi di Berlusconi: “E’ così esperto dei principi delle famiglie?”. La Cavalli: “Berluscones riempiono di sgomento, mai più un Presidente del consiglio ricco”
di Raffaele Castagno Il grido questa volta è a difesa della scuola pubblica, attaccata the past few weeks by the Prime Minister, guilty, in his opinion, to "inculcate values \u200b\u200bcontrary to those families." Words that Ezio Ferrari, group Gridodallarme university there to judge "out of tune, a real punch in the stomach. The school is inherently pluralistic, it is the freedom of professors who are critical to the spirit and freedom which the children of the people. " A wound those statements the prime minister: "I always went to class with the intent to educate for life, I never fucked" claims Giammarioni Mauro, a life among the desks to teach Latin and greek in public and private schools in Milan.
"Maybe - More - if I had taught contempt for the Constitution, the Judiciary, praised the tax evasion for the prime minister would have been a good teacher? ". Not only defends the public school professor, but also to "private confessional, where I never had any tax." Closes with the words of Calamandrei - among the most cited - risks weakening the public school and an exhortation: "I would like to see more outrage."
There is also the teacher who aspires to do, like Catherine Bonetti, now working on a doctorate, "because young people who want to teach are difficult times." La missione della scuola è chiara: “Trasmette libertà di pensiero, coscienza critica”. Le fa eco Carlo Quintelli: “Lo spirito critico è il propellente più interessante”. E poi i tagli dietro i quali si celerebbe “un’opera di destrutturazione della scuola e dell’università”. Il docente fa riferimento al pensiero liberale di Obama: “Taglia 110 miliardi alla spesa pubblica, ma incrementa del 20% i fondi all’istruzione, perché – richiamando le stesse parole del presidente americano – non si smonta il motore dell’aereo”.
BERLUSCONI E BERLUSCONES – Appassionato e duro l’intervento di Anna Maria Cavalli: "The words are not enough and do not need. Italy is evil, is deeply sick, people feel the problem, but there is a sense of powerlessness. " The teacher gets angry with the singers of Berlusconi's power: "The sick Berlusconi's worse than him, berluscones filled with dismay, these pseudo baciapile Catholics are without ethics." The last thrust touches the prime minister: "No more a head of government who has money - he says, referring to the" horse trading "of MPs - a poor man it takes."
"Maybe - More - if I had taught contempt for the Constitution, the Judiciary, praised the tax evasion for the prime minister would have been a good teacher? ". Not only defends the public school professor, but also to "private confessional, where I never had any tax." Closes with the words of Calamandrei - among the most cited - risks weakening the public school and an exhortation: "I would like to see more outrage."
There is also the teacher who aspires to do, like Catherine Bonetti, now working on a doctorate, "because young people who want to teach are difficult times." La missione della scuola è chiara: “Trasmette libertà di pensiero, coscienza critica”. Le fa eco Carlo Quintelli: “Lo spirito critico è il propellente più interessante”. E poi i tagli dietro i quali si celerebbe “un’opera di destrutturazione della scuola e dell’università”. Il docente fa riferimento al pensiero liberale di Obama: “Taglia 110 miliardi alla spesa pubblica, ma incrementa del 20% i fondi all’istruzione, perché – richiamando le stesse parole del presidente americano – non si smonta il motore dell’aereo”.
BERLUSCONI E BERLUSCONES – Appassionato e duro l’intervento di Anna Maria Cavalli: "The words are not enough and do not need. Italy is evil, is deeply sick, people feel the problem, but there is a sense of powerlessness. " The teacher gets angry with the singers of Berlusconi's power: "The sick Berlusconi's worse than him, berluscones filled with dismay, these pseudo baciapile Catholics are without ethics." The last thrust touches the prime minister: "No more a head of government who has money - he says, referring to the" horse trading "of MPs - a poor man it takes."
(March 10, 2011)
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