There is so much symbolism couched in the attack on Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi yesterday, I do not know where to begin my analysis. The one word which keeps coming to my head is basta, Italian for enough. Clearly that is just what the Italian people have had.
Let us recap with actual footage of the attack:
The Italian Prime Minister had cultivated an image of himself as an untouchable and unbeatable force. He not only runs his country, but he practically owns everything in it!
A few years ago when I still lived in Italy, Berlusconi was getting some new hair implants put in. The whole day, every single major Italian news channel ran the entire procedure. There was nothing else on TV. It was a testament to Berlusconi's hold over Italy, whether she wanted it or not.
Yesterday, seeing him battered and bleeding on my television screen was like discovering the mortality of a supposedly immortal character in Greek mythology.
But it was only a matter of time before someone let Berlusconi know how people really feel about him. Of course attacking the Prime Minister with a metal statue of Milan's Duomo is a tad bit dramatic, but we could not have expected anything less spectacular from the Italians!
We are talking about a man who is currently embroiled in a sex scandal involving prostitutes and cocaine dealing businessmen, an ongoing divorce with his wife of twenty-plus years, a criminal trial for corruption, and who has recently been accused of having ties to what else? The Italian mafia. Go figure.
I have often pondered what the Italians think of their leader. I always found the Italians to be a very proud people who take the concept of respect very seriously. They have taught the world about that concept. Though we all know better than to judge a population by their President or Prime Minister, the fact of the matter is that is who, for better or for worse, represents you on the international stage. Just look at the extent of the damage done to the global perception of Americans under George W. Bush.
I rest my case.
Despite the obvious security questions which naturally surface with the assault on Berlusconi, (who would have thought it would be so easy?!), the attack symbolizes something deeper: Italians have had enough. For the past few years, but especially in recent months, Berlusconi's reckless and pompous behavior have made a mockery of both Italy and the Italians.
Furthermore, his repulsive infatuation with women is so offensive and derogatory it takes sexism to a whole new level because it is being conducted by a head of state. Stacking his Parliament with attractive, but unqualified former beauty queens and actresses in countless and meaningless positions is an insult to women the world over. Berlusconi objectifies and exploits women with impunity. It is no wonder that earlier this month, thousands of Italians marched in the streets of Rome demanding he resign.
The era of Berlusconi has just received a massive blow. Silvio's seemingly unbreakable image has been broken, and in the process the people of Italy have reclaimed their self-respect from their buffoon Prime Minister.
Watch the footage above. And feel free to hit repeat all you want.


Salon.com
Comments
Any right-wing politician with that much power, that much ego, and that little ethics, is a huge danger to the Republic. This creep has been looking more and more like a silk-suited Mussolini by the day.
Will this be the beginning of the end for Italy's billionaire tyrant?
Bravo!
The psychological barrier that has been breached which I had in mind, is Berlusconi's belief in his own omnipotence. That's a good thing, I believe.
And don't forget the famous shoe slinger of Iraqi fame, who zinged one at George W. Bush.
It's what people will sometimes do when they feel utterly powerless to stop a very powerful person, when the democratic system has broken down, when nothing else seems to work.
Didn't Sarah Palin almost get a tomato on the noggin? Pies in the face are often employed as well.
Even so, I think that calling these things "dangerous" overstates matters a bit. But that's an opinion, not a fact, as was yours.
Either way, I think we've got an interesting phenomena at work here in the Youtube Age: where to separate the spectacle from the event, the reality from the image, the act from the description of the act, the interpretation of the event from the event itself.
A little too post-modern and philosophical for my tastes, but very insteresting nonetheless....
I guess it's just an illustration of how annoyed/angry the Italians are with Berlusconi. It's too bad the institutions designed to handle misbehavior (i.e. the courts, the rule of law) don't seem to be working, and that people have resorted to a pop in the mouth.
You're right that it's not a pretty sight, though--in a number of ways.
I agree that the Italians have had it "up to here."
What is dissapointing is that the political opposition has been weak and so factionalized. So many Italians believe the Left is not capable of running the counry.
Will we be able to accept Mr. Fini, the number 2, as his replacement. Mr. Fini has a past that can only be characterized as neo-Fascist. Some have argued that he has moved beyond this political background and acquired democratic and statesman-like attributes. More coverage of Mr. Fini would be useful.
I don't want to hit the reply button. As much as I am fed up with Burlusconi and his distasteful governance, it is time to put "hatefullness" in its place.
Can we begin to focus our Italian media coverage on the alternatives to Berlusconi ? It is time we took Italian politics and news more seriously in the US.