Saturday, June 11, 2005

Italian comedy

UPDATE: A victory for the Catholic church. Despite the intentions of the Internationalist cabal to override Italian votes with, among others, Canadians voting as Italians, the referendum failed to get 50 percent turnout. The turnout was 26 percent.

The hopes and aspirations of the Internationalists who would like to destroy national sovereignty and thereby eliminate another balance and check on their power are riding in an Italian election this weekend.

Under an Italian law passed in 2002, Italians abroad "descended from male Italian immigrants" - no matter how long ago - have full Italian citizenship and voting rights. This weekend's election is a referendum on artificial insemination that appears to be a test of the influence of non-residing "“Italians in the world" many of whom have never even been to Italy. While the Catholic church is asking the faithful to avoid the election in order to defeat it with a low turnout (50 percent is required,) the vote of the "Italians of the world" may change the dynamic. But the real crisis may be later, rather than sooner.
That law, which will soon create deputies and senators in the Italian parliament who are elected by people with Italian blood in foreign countries, has sparked a crisis in the Canadian government. Never before in modern history has a foreign nation tried to elect representatives on foreign soil.
Whole voting districts were established in Italy for the "Italians in the world" and Canadian voters have been implored to vote as "most of the 130,000 Canadians who have received Italian dual citizenship or passports were mailed ballot forms and were required to mail ballots to their consulate by Thursday night for the vote."

This just might turn out to be the solution to a demographic disaster for Europeans whose own populations are woefully outnumbered by immigrant invaders imported to disguise a serious decline in reproductive stability. Why any of this should create a crisis for Canadian officials is anyone's guess and the writer never explains the supposed angst. It isn't as if the voting was reciprocal. Maybe they are worrying that Italians will be angered by the Canadian contingent intrusion into their politics.

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