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Un modulo russo stava per mettere fuori orbita la stazione spaziale


Russian Module Knocked International Space Station Out of Control for Almost an Hour

By Hazel Southwell, 

NASA held a press conference Thursday with an ominous topic. The International Space Station had, for nearly an hour, pitched out of its regular orbit and announced a state of station emergency, which is exactly the scenario you do not want when you're about 250 miles above the Earth.

© Provided by The Drive

The incident happened when a new part of the space station was added on. The Russian-built (as a lot of the ISS is) module was a new docking lab, flown up to replace the old Pirs docking system, which had been jettisoned and safely escorted back to Earth earlier this week. Unfortunately, something caused the Nauka module's thrusters to fire up after it had joined onto the space station, and roughly 45 minutes of what feels like a pretty scary science fiction movie ensued.
© NASA

Here's a video of Nauka successfully docking to the station, just a few hours before the near-disaster:

Video player from: YouTube (Privacy Policy, Terms)

That all went exactly as it was supposed to, so it came as a shock to the astronauts and cosmonauts onboard the station when things started getting dramatic. Reuters reports NASA told journalists on Thursday that about three hours after Nauka docked onto the station, scientists in Moscow were completing some alignment checks, and the thrusters designed to get the module to lock onto the station mistakenly fired.

Obviously, there's not a lot of resistance in the vacuum of space, so although Nauka's thrusters aren't particularly heavy-duty for a rocket, it was able to push the entire ISS about 45 degrees off-attitude. NASA explained to reporters that at the worst point, the ISS was twisting in its orbit by about half a degree per second, which doesn't sound like very much until you're being slowly flung through space by an out-of-control rocket that's locked onto your ship.

In the end, the situation was resolved by using one of the ISS's other modules' thrusters to push back at Nauka and then correct the orbit once the misfire had been stopped. Everything was later righted and full communications had been restored--although scarily, NASA lost touch with the crew for several minutes twice during the incident.

Roscosmos, who made the Nauka module and was in control of the systems that caused it to misfire, blamed the incident on a software failure. NASA was keen to emphasize that the crew of the ISS was never in any immediate danger.

Got a story about things going wr

Trump al ministro della giustizia: "Devi dire solo che le elezioni erano corrotte. Al resto penso io..."






Trump to DOJ: 'Just say that the election was corrupt + leave the rest to me'
By Jeremy Herb, CNN 

Former President Donald Trump pressured acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen to declare that the election was corrupt in an attempt to help Republican members of Congress try to overturn the election result, according to notes of a December 2020 call Trump held with Rosen and acting deputy attorney general Richard Donoghue.



© ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images US President Donald Trump raises his fist at the end of a rally to support Republican Senate candidates at Valdosta Regional Airport in Valdosta, Georgia on December 5, 2020. - President Donald Trump ventures out of Washington on Saturday for his first political appearance since his election defeat to Joe Biden, campaigning in Georgia where two run-off races will decide the fate of the US Senate. (Photo by Andrew CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP) (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

During the December 27, 2020, call, Trump pressured Rosen and Donoghue to falsely declare the election "illegal" and "corrupt" even after the Justice Department had not uncovered evidence of widespread voter fraud.

"Just say that the election was corrupt + leave the rest to me and the R. Congressmen," Trump said on the call, according to Donoghue's notes.

Donoghue's contemporaneous notes were provided to the House Oversight Committee from call the Trump held with Rosen and Donoghue, who took over the top spots at DOJ in the final weeks of Trump's presidency following the resignation of Attorney General William Barr.

The notes are the latest evidence of Trump's efforts to pressure the Justice Department to support his false claims of election fraud as he tried to overturn his November loss to Joe Biden. Those efforts are now the subject of a new House select committee that's investigating the January 6 attack on the Capitol carried out by pro-Trump supporters to try to stop the certification of Biden's election win, in addition to the House Oversight Committee's investigation into Trump's baseless election fraud claims.


© SAUL LOEB/AFP/AFP via Getty Images US President Donald Trump arrives for the Operation Warp Speed Vaccine Summit in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House in Washington, DC on December 8, 2020. - US President Donald Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order "to ensure that American citizens have first priority to receive American vaccines." It is unclear how the order would be enforced, as vaccine makers have already inked in deals with other countries. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

"These handwritten notes show that President Trump directly instructed our nation's top law enforcement agency to take steps to overturn a free and fair election in the final days of his presidency," House Oversight Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney said in a statement.

Potential testimony

Trump's suggestion that he and Republican lawmakers would be able to intervene in the election result is the latest evidence that Trump believed he could overturn the election through the January 6 congressional certification of the Electoral College results, in which Trump's allies attempted to throw out the election results of several states.

Trump also pressured then-Vice President Mike Pence to ignore the Constitution to prevent certification, criticizing Pence on Twitter at the same time that rioters had forced the vice president and lawmakers to evacuate the House and Senate chambers.

Both Rosen and Donoghue could end up testifying before Congress about their interactions with Trump after the election, after the Justice Department this week told the House Oversight and Senate Judiciary Committees it was not asserting executive privilege over DOJ officials' January 6 communications with Trump.

That guidance could also apply to the select committee, which has been in touch with Rosen, according to a source familiar with the discussions.

The documents were first reported by The New York Times.

'You guys may not be following the internet the way I do'

Donoghue's notes show how Trump continued to push false claims of voter fraud in several states. Trump said that "people are angry" and blaming the Justice Department for inaction, suggesting that -- blaming DOJ + for inaction."

"We have an obligation to tell people that this was an illegal, corrupt election," Trump said, according to the notes.

Rosen and Donoghue's pushed back, telling Trump "We are doing our job. Much of the info you're getting is false," according to Donoghue's notes. The notes included a reference to Trump's false claim that the error rate of ballot counting in Michigan was 68%, when in fact it was 0.0063%, or one-in-15,000.

"You guys may not be following the internet the way I do," Trump said, according to the notes.

At another point, according to Donoghue's notes, Rosen told Trump to understand that the Justice Department "can't + won't snap its fingers + change the outcome of the election," adding that it "doesn't work that way."

Trump floated firing more DOJ officials

Trump suggested during the call that he might replace Rosen with then-Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey Clark, who had who reportedly urged Trump to make him acting attorney general instead of Rosen.

"People tell me Jeff Clark is great, I should put him in," Trump said, according to Rosen's notes. "People want me to replace DOJ leadership."

Clark had pushed Trump to remove Rosen and use the Justice Department to try to undo Georgia's election results, according to a New York Times report. Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows asked Rosen to have Clark look into the alleged signature issues in Georgia, according to emails released last month, ahead of an Oval Office meeting on January 3 in which Trump heard directly from Clark and Rosen before ultimately choosing not to remove Rosen.

This story has been updated with additional details.

Everything you need to know about traveling to Italy this summer


By 

Until this week, it had been about a year and a half since Simone Amorico, CEO of the private tour operator Access Italy, had last stepped inside Rome’s Colosseum. Visiting the world wonder had for years been a regular occurrence for Amorico, who lives nearby. Passing by it during the pandemic, closed and empty, was always unsettling.

This summer, when he finally returned, “of course it was emotional,” Amorico said. “Seeing it more alive gives a sense that things are slowly coming back.”

Like the travelers on Amorico’s tours, more and more Americans are returning to Italy. But even tourism behemoths like the Colosseum and the Vatican are not nearly as crowded as they were pre-covid.

“It’s actually a great time to come back [to Italy] because it’s not filled with tourists,” said Marina Cacciapuoti, founder of Italy Segreta, an Italian lifestyle magazine and popular Instagram account. “It’s a bit like last summer, but it feels even better now that there’s a vaccine and people are back to semi-normal — like everything’s open, nobody’s wearing masks outside.”

If you’re one of those lucky Americans contemplating a late-summer trip to Italy, here’s essential advice from Italian travel experts to help get you prepared.

How to get there

Italy is allowing U.S. visitors to enter without quarantining if they can provide proof that they are fully vaccinated, have recovered from covid-19 recently, or received a negative rapid molecular or antigenic test result in the past 48 hours. Americans can also enter Italy quarantine-free by taking a government-approved covid-tested flight from the United States, via carriers such as Delta and United.

A visitor poses in front of the newly restored lower level of the Colosseum last month. (Andrew Medichini/AP)

“The best source of information is usually the website of your airline carrier,” said Elizabeth Minchilli, an author and food tour operator who lives in Rome and has a vacation home in Umbria. “Really make sure that you’ve read everything and done everything correctly.”

Minchilli’s other tip is for travelers to fill out their passenger locator form, a document required for contact tracing, ahead of the flight. “A lot of people show up at the airport thinking you do it there, but try to do everything ahead of time,” she said.

How to show your vaccination status

Italy implemented its version of the European Union’s vaccine passport, the “certificazione verde,” or green pass, on June 17 to facilitate safer travel within Europe and allow access to large gatherings. On Aug. 6, its use will become more widespread, and either that passport or another proof of health will be required for most things travelers love — including going to restaurants, museums, bars, spas, pools, gelato shops, gyms, concerts and sporting events.

In lieu of having an Italian green pass, American travelers should carry around their CDC vaccine cards, covid test results or proof of recent recovery from covid and have them ready to present throughout their visit to Italy. (Those who aren’t vaccinated will have to keep getting coronavirus tests every 48 hours of their trip to meet the green-passport requirements.)

“Really what they’re saying is ‘Come to Italy, but you really should be vaccinated,’” Minchilli said. “You could travel here without being vaccinated, but you should for everybody’s sake.”

In addition to the national regulations, some tour operators, including Minchilli, are asking customers to be vaccinated before being allowed to join group excursions.

How to dine and explore

While there are fewer tourists in Italy this summer, keep in mind that August is when most Europeans go on vacation. In addition, some hotels, restaurants and other tourism-related businesses are not yet back at full capacity. That means you may have competition finding a seat, room, ticket or beach chair, particularly in destinations popular with European tourists, such as coastal cities and lakes.

In Rome, even though the city itself isn’t crowded, “you need to book a table in advance, because all restaurants are full,” said Flavio Scannavino, hotel manager at the city’s boutique Hotel De’ Ricci. “Trust me: It’s incredible.”

Consider which museums, events, restaurants or tours you would like to include in your trip agenda, and make reservations ahead of time whenever possible to avoid disappointment.

Those who want to dine out in Italy should make a reservation. (Remo Casilli/Reuters)

As you head to your reservations or stumble into local trattorias, Cacciapuoti encourages travelers to be patient and respectful to employees. Because of the pandemic, you may find smaller menus, fewer tables and longer wait times than in the past. Like in the United States, “a lot of places have less staff” right now, she said. “I mean, we’re not the quickest in service in general, but now it’s a little bit slower sometimes.”

What to know about restrictions

Aside from capacity limits and an outdoor mask mandate, travelers to Italy will not be hamstrung by pandemic rules at this time. Still, “it’s a slightly different experience compared to the years before,” said Aldo Melpignano, co-founder of the luxury hotel Borgo Egnazia in Puglia.

Melpignano’s hotel, for instance, has transformed its traditional parties in the piazza into dinner parties, with spaced-out tables under the stars accompanied by local music performances to comply with the country’s large-gathering restrictions.

As the world battles the spread of covid variants, though, remember that mandates and restrictions may change at any time.

No matter what protections are in place when you arrive in Italy, “I think it’s just more of a form of respect to follow the rules that we have,” Cacciapuoti said. “There are not that many.”

Where to get a coronavirus test before returning home

Before you return to the United States, you will need to get a covid test — regardless of whether you’re vaccinated. All travelers entering the country must show their airline a negative test result taken within three days of departure or show proof they have recovered from covid-19 in the past 90 days.

Melpignano — who is also vice president of the Altagamma, a foundation that represents high-end Italian cultural and creative companies — says most upscale hotels will arrange tests for guests to make life easy. For those not staying at a hotel with such options, workarounds are “doable,” he said.

Amorico said test-seeking travelers can find them at Italian pharmacies, where the prices for tests are capped to keep them affordable. Rapid tests should cost about 22 euros and PCR tests about 60. Otherwise, instead of finding a test locally, travelers can pack an at-home test, such as the Abbott BinaxNOW kit, to take themselves within that three-day window.

In case you do test positive for coronavirus while you’re in Italy, Melpignano, Minchilli and Amorico all recommend getting covid-specific travel insurance. You should see whether your health-insurance plan covers issues abroad, too.

“Play it safe and get insurance, but don’t let that prevent you from traveling,” Melpignano said. “It really is a good time to enjoy Italy, so I would encourage everyone to come and visit us.”

"Bibit hera, Bibi Herus" Latin Rock&Roll (English)


I was 19 years old (a century ago) and I was a freshman in the faculty of law in Florence.

With my band (obviously titled The Oscar's Five) we played in the Interfacoltà club with some success.

Just to try to distinguish myself from the other ensembles that performed in the various Florentine dancing clubs, since even in Italy the passion for rock'n'roll was spreading, I decided to give life to a strange rock'n'roll.

So it was that I started to 'brush' the songs of the 'clerici vagantes' of the ancient University of Bologna who had then been found, centuries later, called Carmina Burana.

The attempt was quite successful to the point that RAI (Italian Radio Television) decided to dedicate an episode to this rock'n'roll in Latin which, clearly, had some good connotations of originality.

Below is the Latin text, together with the famous declaration of Cicero in his Catilinaries and the always valid motto of Cato the Censor.


__________________________________________________________________


Bibit hera, bibit herus,The mistress drinks, the master drinks,
bibit miles, bibit clerus,the soldier drinks, the priest drinks,
bibit ille, bibit illa,the man drinks, the woman drinks,
bibit servis cum ancilla,the servant drinks with the maid,
bibit velox, bibit piger,the swift man drinks, the lazy man drinks,
bibit albus, bibit niger,the white man drinks, the black man drinks,
bibit constans, bibit vagus,the settled man drinks, the wanderer drinks,
bibit rudis, bibit magnus.the stupid man drinks, the wise man drinks,
Bibit pauper et egrotus,The poor man drinks, the sick man drinks,
bibit exul et ignotus,the exile drinks, and the stranger,
bibit puer, bibit canus,the boy drinks, the old man drinks,
bibit presul et decanus,the bishop drinks, and the deacon,
bibit soror, bibit frater,the sister drinks, the brother drinks,
bibit anus, bibit mater,the old lady drinks, the mother drinks,
bibit ista, bibit ille,

this man drinks, that man drinks,
bibunt centum, bibunt mille.a hundred drink, a thousand drink.
How long Catiline will you abuse our patience?


Quo usque tandem abutere, Catilina, patientia nostra?

(Cicero)


How long Catiline will you abuse our patience?



Est unusquisque faber ipsae suae fortunae. 

(Catone il Censore)


 Each and every person is the maker of his own luck.





"Bibit hera, Bibi Herus" Latin Rock&Roll

Avevo 19 anni (un secolo fa) ed ero matricola nella facoltà di giurisprudenza a Firenze che stava ancora in via Laura.

Con la mia band (ovviamente intitolata The Oscar's Five) suonavamo nel circolo dell'Interfacoltà con un certo successo.

Tanto per cercare di distinguermi dagli altri complessini che si esibivano nei vari circoli fiorentini, visto che anche in Italia stava dilagando la passione per il rock'n'roll, decisi di dare vita ad un rock'n'roll originale.

Fu così che mi misi a 'spazzolare' i canti dei 'clerici vagantes' dell'antica Università di Bologna che poi erano stati ritrovati, secoli dopo, e chiamati Carmina Burana.

Il tentativo ebbe un discreto successo al punto che la RAI decise di dedicare una puntata a questo rock'n'roll in latino che, chiaramente, aveva qualche buona connotazione di originalità.

Qui di seguito il testo latino, insieme alla famosa dichiarazione di Cicerone nelle sue Catilinarie e il sempre valido motto di Catone il censore.

Bibit hera, bibit herus,
bibit miles, bibit clerus,
bibit ille, bibit illa,
bibit servus cum ancilla,
bibit velox, bibit piger,
bibit albus, bibit niger,
bibit constans, bibit vagus,
bibit rudis, bibit magus.

Bibit pauper et egrotus,
bibit exul et ignotus,
bibit puer, bibit canus,
bibit presul et decanus,
bibit soror, bibit frater,
bibit anus, bibit mater,
bibit ista, bibit ille,
bibunt centum, bibunt mille.


Faber est unusquisque ipsius suae fortune (Ognuno e' artefice del proprio destino -Catone il Censore)


Carino!
Ho fatto sentire il brano Rock a mia moglie e le è piaciuto. 
Per l'esame di latino medioevale, lei si era specializzata nei Carmina Burana e ancor oggi me li declama.
Una volta mi ha anche portato a sentire la versione di Orff eseguita da un coro piuttosto importante.
Orff però non conosceva il Rock e la sua versione è tutta cupa e medioevale. L'opposto della tua.
Rodolfo S.

Il KKK e' tra noi e infiltrato tra le forze dell'ordine


By JASON DEAREN

PALATKA, Fla. (AP) — Joseph Moore breathed heavily, his face slick with nervous sweat. He held a cellphone with a photo of a man splayed on the floor; the man appeared dead, his shirt torn apart and his pants wet.

Puffy dark clouds blocked the sun as Moore greeted another man, who’d pulled up in a metallic blue sedan. They met behind an old fried chicken shack in rural north Florida.

“KIGY, my brother,” Moore said. It was shorthand for “klansman I greet you.”

Birds chirped in a tree overhead and traffic whooshed by on a nearby road, muddling the sound of their voices, which were being recorded secretly.

Moore brought the phone to David “Sarge” Moran, who wore a camouflage-print baseball hat emblazoned with a Confederate flag patch and a metal cross. His arms and hands were covered in tattoos.

A nervous, giddy chuckle escaped Moran’s mouth.

“Oh, shit. I love it,” he said. “Motherf----- pissed on himself. Good job.”

“Is that what y’all wanted?”

“Yes, hell yeah,” Moran said, his voice pitched high.

It was 11:30 a.m. on March 19, 2015, and the klansmen were celebrating what they thought was a successful murder in Florida.

But the FBI had gotten wind of the murder plot. A confidential informant had infiltrated the group, and his recordings provide a rare, detailed look at the inner workings of a modern klan cell and a domestic terrorism probe.

That investigation would unearth another secret: An unknown number of klansmen were working inside the Florida Department of Corrections, with significant power over inmates, Black and white.

Thomas Driver took a pull off a cigarette, and exhaled the smoke at Warren Williams. Driver, a white prison guard, and Williams, a Black inmate, faced each other.

It was a humid August day in 2013, about a year and a half before the clandestine murder photo reveal.

The two men stood in a sweltering prison dorm room in rural north Florida’s Reception and Medical Center, a barbed wire-encircled complex built among farmland an hour south of the Georgia state line. The RMC is the state’s prison hospital where new inmates are processed.

A guard tower stands behind the entrance to the Reception and Medical Center, the state's prison hospital where new inmates are processed, in Lake Butler, Fla., Friday, April 16, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Williams, a quiet, 6-foot-1, 210-pound inmate, suffered from severe anxiety and depression. He was serving a year, records show, for striking a police officer. Williams agreed to plead no contest in exchange for a reduced sentence, and an order to receive a mental health evaluation and treatment under county supervision.

He found himself in front of Driver after he lost his identification badge, a prison infraction.

Williams told Driver to stop blowing smoke at him, he’d report later. Driver blew more, and Williams told him to stop again.

When Driver continued, Williams jumped him and they hit the ground. As they struggled, Williams bit Driver and gained an advantage, according to both men’s accounts of the fight.

A group of guards responded, and beat Williams so badly that he required hospitalization, his mother and lawyer said.

Driver, in turn, needed a battery of precautionary tests for HIV and hepatitis C because of the bite. They would all be negative, but the ordeal enraged him.

He wanted revenge.

More than a year later, in December 2014, a wooden cross ignited in a field hidden by tall trees.

Dozens of hooded klansmen gathered around for a “klonklave,” a meeting of the Florida Traditionalist American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Members of a biker club were being “naturalized” as citizens into the Invisible Empire of the Klan.

Security was tight. The bikers were worried about recording devices, and were checking people.

Driver, known by his fellow klansmen as “Brother Thomas,” was there with Sarge Moran, who was also a prison guard. Moran had worked for the Florida Department of Corrections for decades; he’d also been a klansman for years. He had been disciplined more than once by the corrections department for violent incidents, according to records obtained by The AP. Despite this, Moran had been kept in a position of power over inmates.

Moran and Driver wanted to discuss an urgent matter with Joseph Moore, the group’s “Grand Night Hawk,” in charge of security.

Moore was a U.S. Army veteran. When not in his klan “helmet,” he often wore a baseball hat pinned with military medals, including a Purple Heart. He commanded respect and fear from his klan brothers, and often regaled them with stories of his work killing targets overseas as part of an elite U.S. military squad.

The three men moved away for a private talk, and had another klansman keep watch nearby so they weren’t overheard.

The guards gave Moore a paper with a picture of Williams, his name and other information. Driver described the fight, and how he and his family had worried for weeks about a false positive test for hepatitis C.

“Do you want him six feet under?” Moore asked.

Driver and Moran looked at each other, then said yes.

___

A Confederate statue stands outside the Putnam County Courthouse in Palatka, Fla., Tuesday, April 13, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

The very existence of a plot to murder a Black man by Ku Klux Klan members working in law enforcement evokes past tragedies like the 1964 ”Mississippi Burning″ case, where three civil rights workers were slain by klansmen. Sheriff’s deputy Cecil Price Sr. was implicated in the deaths and was convicted of violating the young men’s civil rights.

Today, researchers believe that tens of thousands of Americans belong to groups identified with white supremacist extremism, the klan being just one. These groups’ efforts to infiltrate law enforcement have been documented repeatedly in recent years and called an “epidemic” by legal scholars.

FBI Director Christopher Wray said at a March Senate hearing that “racially motivated violent extremism,” mostly by white supremacists, accounts for the most rapidly rising share of domestic terrorism cases.

“That same group of people ... have been responsible for the most lethal attacks over the last, say, decade,” Wray added.

During the Jan. 6 insurrection in the U.S. Capitol, “Thin Blue Line” flags flew alongside white supremacist signs and banners, and more than 30 current and former police officers from a number of departments around the nation were identified as attendees.

“White supremacist groups have historically engaged in strategic efforts to infiltrate and recruit from law enforcement,” said an FBI document released by a congressional committee in September, about four months before the Capitol riots. In the intelligence assessment, written in 2006, the FBI said some in law enforcement were volunteering “professional resources to white supremacist causes with which they sympathize.”

While the FBI would not confirm if it had produced a more recent assessment of the ongoing threat, recent cases have confirmed that the problem the agency described in 2006 continues.

In November, a Georgia deputy was caught on an FBI wiretap boasting about targeting Black people for felony arrests so they couldn’t vote, and recruiting colleagues into a group called “Shadow Moses.” In 2017, an interim police chief in Oklahoma was found to have ties to an international neo-Nazi group. In 2014, two officers in Fruitland Park, Florida, were outed as klansmen and forced to quit.

Despite repeated examples, white supremacists who are fired from law enforcement jobs after being discovered can often find jobs with other agencies. There is no database officials can check to see if someone’s been identified as an extremist.

In 2020, an officer in Anniston, Alabama, was hired by a county sheriff’s department just a few years after the Southern Poverty Law Center posted a video of him speaking at a white nationalist League of the South meeting.

“There’s no trail that follows them even if they’re fired. It’s spreading the problem around,” said Greg Ehrie, former chief of the FBI’s New York domestic terrorism squad, who now works with the Anti-Defamation League.

Domestic terrorism experts have been calling for better screening to help identify extremists before they’re hired. Some states, such as California and Minnesota, have tried to pass new screening laws, only to be prevented by police unions, whose legal challenges argued successfully that such queries violate free speech rights.

Without screening, white supremacists who get inside can operate with impunity, targeting Black and other people of color, and recruiting others who share their views.

“Unless your name ends up in an FBI wiretap” an officer will go undetected, said Fred Burton, a former special agent with the U.S. Diplomatic Security Service. “There are loopholes in the background investigative process.”

Warren Williams got out of prison a few months after his fight with Driver, the prison guard. It was just before Christmas, and he arrived at his mother’s single-story brick house in Palatka, a small town in north Florida. It was cramped with his three little sisters.

The street dead-ended at some railroad tracks, beyond which flowed the St. Johns River. The wide, rushing waterway runs through town on its way back out to sea to the northeast, near Jacksonville.

After months in a prison cell, Williams longed to fish the St. Johns again. He looked forward to spending days outdoors in his landscaping job, and to writing poems and music in his free time.

Palatka, with a population split almost equally between Black and white, had been devastated by the 2008 Great Recession. Many of its prized murals were fading, and there were more shuttered shops in the old downtown than open ones. A coal-fired power plant on the river is Palatka’s largest employer, as well as a paper mill that fills the air with a sour stench.

Williams struggled with anxiety, and sometimes had violent outbursts. His mother called these episodes his “protective mode.” But he was home, where she could watch him. He’d been adhering to his probation requirements, and made his mandated meetings.

And in the 21st Century, the klan was not among Williams’ list of worries. Images of burning crosses and klansmen targeting Black people for violence seemed anachronistic.

But the symbols of the group’s reign in Palatka endure. Each time Williams met with his probation officer, he passed the statue of a Confederate soldier in front of the Putnam County courthouse in downtown Palatka, the county seat. The gangly live oak trees in the court square are mesmerizing to some observers, but to others they’re a painful reminder of past lynchings.

Jim Crow Florida was one of the most dangerous places in the South to be Black. In that era, a Black man in Florida was more at risk of being lynched — an execution without trial, often by gun or hanging — than in any other state, according to a University of Georgia study of lynching records.

In 1925, the KKK controlled Putnam County. A klansman named R.J. Hancock was elected sheriff and he helped unleash a reign of terror, where lynch mobs dominated civic life. To stop it, Florida’s governor threatened to declare martial law in 1926.

But the klan and its ilk have endured. Today it’s just one group in a modern, decentralized white supremacy movement.

“It’s surprising that we’re even having a conversation about something that was prevalent in the 1920s, taking place 100 years later,” said Terrill Hill, Williams’ attorney and Palatka’s mayor. “It’s frustrating. It’s angering.”

Worshippers leave a church service in Palatka, Fla., Wednesday, April 14, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

An evening gown is displayed in a store window next to a mural titled "Harlem Nights in Palatka," featuring musicians from the town that formed a 1920s jazz band, as a pedestrian walks by in downtown Palatka, Fla., on Tuesday, April 13, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

A mural titled "Bygone Days" decorates a downtown building as a child rushes to cross a street in Palatka, Fla., Tuesday, April 13, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

It was a chilly and overcast January day when Joseph Moore, the klan’s Grand Night Hawk, arrived at a small house tucked behind tall trees. The air smelled like pine.

It was the home of Charles Newcomb, a stone-faced, chain-smoking former prison guard who was the klan’s Exalted Cyclops, a local chief. Newcomb had left his job at the prison, but he remained close to “Sarge” Moran. He wanted to discuss the “Brother Thomas issue” with Moore.

“I look at it this way brother. That was a direct ... attempted murder on him,” Newcomb said, referring to Williams’ biting Driver. “I don’t care how you look at it.”

“We just need to do our deed, and where it falls, it falls,” Newcomb said. “Because he’s a piece of trash anyway.”

Because of Moore’s professed background as an elite government assassin, Newcomb trusted him to help execute the plan.

“I’d like to see things done in a professional manner,” Moore said, with the tone of an experienced hitman. “There are skills and techniques and things that survive the test of time. If you bury somebody in, say, an open field or whatever ... it is going to be dug up.”

“But if you bury somebody in a graveyard over top of somebody that’s already been buried, it’s never going to be uncovered for a septic tank.”

Both agreed they should take a trip to Palatka to scope out Williams’ neighborhood.

“One night we find him out there and I can walk right up, put him out of his misery,” Newcomb said.

Newcomb wanted to ensure Driver had an alibi.

“What we need is Brother Thomas (Driver) to be at work,” Newcomb said. “And when we do it when Thomas is at work, (he) has an alibi.”

Joseph Moore was a husband and father, a veteran and klansman. He was also a confidential informant being paid to provide information to the FBI.

It’s life-threatening work. If his klan brothers found out, Moore had no doubt how it would end.

The relationship carried considerable risk for the FBI, too. Moore had suffered a mental breakdown and was hospitalized following an honorable discharge from the U.S. Army in 2002, where he’d been trained as a sniper.

He’d walked into a hospital in New Jersey, drunk, wearing a tactical vest. His pockets were stuffed with a few thousand dollars in cash. He was carrying a plane ticket to Jordan, and told police he’d planned to fight with the Peshmerga in the Kurdish region of Iraq. He would spend four months under medical observation.

The FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, or ATF, have long relied upon informants to investigate domestic extremist groups, with mixed results. Federal investigators have on occasion been fooled and manipulated by informants. And the effort is expensive. Informants often work in secret for years, and if they’re found out, placed into protective custody.

In 2008, Moore appeared at the FBI’s Gainesville office because he wanted them to investigate the local sheriff’s office. His brother-in-law had been arrested on a drug-related charge, and Moore thought that a crooked deputy had planted the drugs. An FBI agent met with Moore, and eventually recruited him to join an investigation into a member of a different Florida klan group suspected of planning a murder.

During that investigation, Moore’s wife had grown suspicious of his activities. She demanded answers. Eventually, he told her — and her family — about his FBI work. It was a basic violation of the rules and the FBI fired him.

A few years later, Moore’s cellphone lit up with an unknown number. The voice, however, was familiar. It was an agent who’d known him from his previous work with the FBI, asking to meet about a new investigation into another violent klan cell. Because of Moore’s success infiltrating the klan before, the agency recruited him again.

The FBI bought him a computer and phone so he could make contact online with the new klan group. Within a few weeks, Moore had scheduled a meeting with the Grand Dragon and second-in-command at a Dollar General parking lot in Bronson, Florida.

The klansmen checked Moore’s drivers license and tested him in an exchange of klan jargon.

Moore told them that he’d killed people before, including a hit in China in 2005. He was lying. He’d never seen a battlefield and the medals he wore were fakes.

But the leaders were impressed. They invited Moore to be “naturalized.” He filled out an application, paid a $20 fee along with $35 in annual dues.

A KKK "blood oath" signed by Joseph Moore is photographed at the Columbia County Courthouse in Lake City, Fla., Friday, April 16, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

He also signed a “blood oath,” part of which read, “I swear ... to be Klannish in all things, to accept the life of the Brotherhood of Service, to regenerate our country and to the white race and maintain the white blood and natural superiority with which God has enabled it.”

The Grand Dragon told him that a violation of his blood oath was punishable by death.

On January 30, 2015, less than two years after Moore had signed his klan oath, the murder plot was in motion.

Moore’s tires crunched on Newcomb’s driveway as he pulled his SUV past a weathered sign on a fence post. It featured a pistol barrel pointed at would-be trespassers. WARNING: There is Nothing Here Worth Dying For.

Moore found Newcomb excited about a new idea he’d had for how to kill Williams.

“I have several bottles of insulin in here if you wanted to do it that way,” Newcomb said.

“Do we do it fast and get the hell out? Or do we want to grab him up and take him somewhere and shoot him with insulin?” Newcomb asked.

Moore masked his surprise. He’d thought they were just doing reconnaissance, and now Newcomb was planning to strike.

“It’d be quieter,” Newcomb said, “if we can grab him up, throw his ass in the car and take off with him somewhere. And we’ll just inject his happy ass with a bunch of insulin and let him start doing his floppin’.”

An insulin overdose is an excruciating death marked by uncontrollable tremors. For a medical examiner, it’s difficult to detect. A person’s blood sugar declines naturally when they die, whether the person is diabetic or not. And syringe pricks are so small that, unless you’re looking for them specifically, they’re nearly undetectable.

“I’ve got two full needles ready, and then I got two other bottles with us,” Newcomb said.

“Is that your wife’s meds?” Moore asked.

A sign featuring a pistol barrel pointed at would-be trespassers warns, "There is Nothing Here Worth Dying For" at the former home of Charles Newcomb, in Hawthorne, Fla., Thursday, April 15, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Newcomb said they were, but that she had plenty extra.

He went into his garage and returned with a child’s fishing pole, decorated with images of the cartoon character “Dora the Explorer.”

“If we was gonna grab him up and take him down towards the river he’ll need a fishing pole like he’s been fishin’ right?” Newcomb asked, rhetorically. “I wanna make it look realistic.”

They were looking at the fishing pole when “Sarge” Moran pulled into the driveway. He apologized for being late.

“Sarge. I brought some insulin. Me and Brother Joe (Moore) was talking, and if we can just kinda grab his ass up,” Newcomb said before Moran interrupted.

“Are we going to grab him now?”

“I mean, we’re going down to look at some things right now and see if a chance presents itself,” Newcomb said.

“I’m following y’all’s orders. Whatever orders are given,” Moran responded eagerly. “I’m here to serve. I’m at the will and pleasure of.”

The three klansmen piled into Moore’s SUV and pulled onto a two-lane highway, driving under Spanish-moss-draped tree branches.

They had the cooler of syringes, the Dora the Explorer fishing rod, and Newcomb’s handgun, which he rested between his legs.

They fell silent as they drove past dirt roads that led back into dense Florida brush.

Then Newcomb’s cell phone rang. His young daughter’s voice was at the other end of the line.

“Y’all don’t need to bother me today unless it’s very, very important. OK?” he scolded. His voice softened. “All right. I love you. Bye bye.”

Without missing a beat, Newcomb returned to his plans. A gun sat between his legs as he spoke.

“What I was thinking, though, is if we could grab that package up and take him to the river, which is not that far from him,” Newcomb said. “Put his ass face down and give him a couple of shots, because I’ve got two completely full and they’re already ready to go.

“If I set that fishing pole like he’s been fishin’, and give him a couple shots and we sit there and wait on him, then we can kind of lay him like he’s kind of tipping over into the water and he’s breathed in just a little bit.”

Moran had other logistical issues on his mind. What would they do with the body?

“If we’re going to do a complete disposal. If we’re going to chop up the body,” he said, before being cut off.

Newcomb said they had lots of options.

“I mean, if we have to do pow pow, we will,” he said, referring to shooting Williams.

Whatever they decided, Moran said, they needed to protect themselves. They’d brought face shields and coats to cover their skin in case things got messy.

After his initiation into the klan, the FBI had authorized Moore to start recording the group’s two main leaders. Initially, they did not know the klansmen included active law enforcement personnel.

After the klansmen brought Moore into the murder plot, however, the FBI widened the scope of the people he could record. The FBI had outfitted Moore’s SUV with recording devices that broadcast live to agents as they drove to Palatka.

Also, the FBI had made a number of moves to keep Williams safe. They held him in a safe house. They placed police vehicles around his neighborhood so when the klansmen arrived, the FBI agents, Florida Highway Patrol and Palatka police were clearly visible.

When the klansmen drove into Williams’ neighborhood, the sight of police patrol cars unnerved them. “Can’t make too many rounds with him sitting there,” Newcomb said, eyeing a squad car.

Moore tried to play it cool as he turned the car to head back to Newcomb’s house.

“I just hate that we didn’t get to achieve our goal today,” Newcomb said.

“We’ll catch that fish,” Moran reassured him.

Later Moore dialed his FBI contact, and described breathlessly what he’d recorded. “He actually loaded up a couple of insulin syringes and he was ready to grab him,” he said, panting. “It’s all on the recording.”

Spanish moss hangs from a tree along the St. Johns River in Palatka, Fla., Thursday, April 15, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Williams lay on the floor of his mother’s house, pretending to be dead. The prior day he’d received a strange phone call from his probation officer, asking him to come to the office the next day.

Williams was confused. He’d met with the officer that very day, and hadn’t been in any trouble in the hours since.

He told his mother about the call, and she told him to go.

“If you didn’t do anything wrong, just head on down there and talk to him,” she said.

When he’d arrived at the mystery meeting there were unfamiliar faces in the room. They were federal domestic terrorism investigators.

They told him his life was in danger. He’d need to go into protective custody.

But first, they wanted to go to his house and take a photograph.

On the way, Williams saw his mother, Latonya Crowley, in a car at a stoplight on her way out of town for the weekend. The agents waved her down and she turned around and tailed their dark blue van back to her home.

Inside, the agents poured water on Williams’ pants. They’d torn his shirt to appear as if he’d been shot.

When they were done, the FBI placed Williams in a safe house. Not even his mother knew where he was. They would only speak by phone until the men who wanted to kill Williams were in custody.

A few weeks later, Moore waited for Driver outside a Starbucks in a strip mall parking lot.

He’d already shown Moran the staged murder photo of Williams lying on the floor, video recording his gleeful response. The day before, he’d done the same with Newcomb, who told Moore “good job” and hugged him.

Driver was his last assignment. In their last discussion about Williams, Driver had said he’d stomp Williams’ “larynx closed” if he had the chance. Moore had said either he or someone he contracted with would finish the job.

They greeted each other, and Moore told Driver to sit in his car.

“We remembered how emotional this was for you and wanted — thought you might want some closure.”

Moore handed Driver the phone with the photo of Williams’ supposedly lifeless body.

“Let us know what you think,” Moore said.

“That works,” Driver said curtly.

“That what you wanted?”

“Oh, yes,” Driver said, relaxing into a chuckle.

Sarge Moran was at home when a prison colleague called: Could he come in on his day off to get fitted for new uniforms? Authorities arrested him when he arrived, and held him in the prison where he’d spent decades as a guard.

Driver and Newcomb were arrested at their homes.

In August, 2017, Newcomb and Moran stood trial at the Columbia County Courthouse in Lake City. Joseph Moore was the state’s star witness, testifying against the men he’d spent years befriending. For a time, the government protected Moore’s family; his current whereabouts are unknown.

In the end, a jury convicted Moran and Newcomb of conspiracy to commit murder. They were each sentenced to 12 years. Driver received four years after pleading guilty, and is due out this year.

Because of threats in Florida prisons, Driver was moved secretly to another state to serve his time, according to a source with knowledge of the case. Even though they are in prison, neither Newcomb nor Moran were in Florida’s inmate locator system and could not be reached for comment.

Even though three current and former Florida prison guards were exposed as klansmen, the state’s Department of Corrections says it found no reason to investigate whether other white supremacists were employed in its prisons.

There were no other “investigative leads,” Michelle Glady, the department’s director of public relations, said in a statement to The AP. “However, any allegation of a staff member belonging to a group such as those mentioned, would be investigated on an individual basis.”

Those in violation of a “willful breach” of the department’s core values can be fired or face arrest.

On a recent visit to the prison where the three klansmen worked, numerous cars and trucks in the employee and volunteer parking lots were decorated with symbols associated with white supremacy: Confederate flags, QAnon symbols and Thin Blue Line flag decals.

A pickup truck with a Confederate flag-themed decal is parked outside the Reception and Medical Center, the state's prison hospital where new inmates are processed, in Lake Butler, Fla., Friday, April 16, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Williams and his family live today with uncertainty and paranoia.

“My fears? That maybe some of the other klan members could come around, and try to find us and harm us,” his mother, Latonya Crowley, told The AP in her first interview about the ordeal.

Looking back, Crowley remembers weird occurrences around the house before the FBI got involved.

In one instance, a neighbor said they saw two white men — they looked like police — in Crowley’s yard at daybreak. “No police came to my house,” Crowley remembered replying to the news, dismissively.

A bag of her trash full of her empty insulin containers — she’s diabetic - also disappeared. She wonders if that’s why Newcomb thought to use insulin.

But Williams and Crowley are thankful, too. The FBI saved his life, and the state of Florida prosecuted the men who threatened him.

Latonya Crowley, mother of Warren Williams, stands for a portrait in Palatka, Fla., Thursday, April 22, 2021. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Williams has filed a lawsuit against the klansmen and the Florida Department of Corrections.

Williams’ attorney is frustrated that Florida hasn’t investigated more thoroughly to see if there are more white supremacists working for the state prisons, and wants them to take responsibility. Florida, for its part, has sought to have the case dismissed and declined further comment on it.

Williams is haunted by Driver’s imminent release and the specter of other klansmen have made it impossible for him to move on.

“In the state of mind that he’s in today, I don’t see him getting better,” Crowley said.

Eric Tucker in Washington and Randy Herschaft in New York contributed to this story.

Follow Jason Dearen on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/@JHDearen

 "DRAGHI DEVE RESTARE AL GOVERNO FINO AL 2023 È UNA GARANZIA PER LA STABILITÀ DELL'ITALIA" - LO SCHEMA DI ROMANO PRODI: "QUALSIASI SCOSSONE NEI PROSSIMI MESI METTEREBBE IN ALLARME IL SISTEMA INTERNAZIONALE. CONOSCENDO BENE BRUXELLES, È POSSIBILISSIMO CHE AD UN CERTO PUNTO POSSANO INTERROMPERSI I FINANZIAMENTI. LE CONDIZIONI SONO ANALITICHE E DETTAGLIATE: SONO STATE SCRITTE PERCHÉ UN DOMANI LE RISORSE POSSANO ESSERE SOSPESE, ANCHE PER L'ITALIA. IL GOVERNO DRAGHI È NATO PROPRIO PER EVITARE QUESTO SCENARIO - I CORTEI NO-VAX? IN OGNI SOCIETÀ C'È UNA QUOTA DI IRRAZIONALITÀ, QUELLA CHE GLI ANGLOSASSONI CHIAMAVANO UN TEMPO, LUNATIC FRINGE, LA FRANGIA LUNATICA"


Fabio Martini per "la Stampa" (Dagospia)

 

romano prodi on the beachROMANO PRODI ON THE BEACH

Fra otto giorni ha inizio il semestre bianco e dunque l'impossibilità di sciogliere le Camere consentirà ai partiti di tirare ancor di più la corda senza spezzarla, ma Romano Prodi, che ha conosciuto sulla sua pelle l'egoismo delle forze politiche, sdrammatizza con humour padano: «Ma noi è un bel po' che siamo dentro il semestre bianco! A me pare che i partiti abbiano capito da tempo che, in emergenza, è tutto congelato. Direi che il semestre è iniziato non appena è nato il governo Draghi!».

 

Sempre in connessione con le principali personalità politiche italiane e con un vasto network internazionale, il Professore sorride disincantato a chi prova a riproporre per lui il tema del Quirinale? «Ma no! Credo che oramai lo abbiano capito bene proprio tutti: pur non essendo mai stato fazioso, mi sono sempre battuto per le mie idee, non le ho mai cambiate e quindi difficilmente posso rappresentare tutto il Paese».

 

romano prodiROMANO PRODI

Alla fine del semestre bianco Draghi potrebbe essere "indotto" a salire al Colle e questo significa che fra 20 settimane questo governo si congeda: un lusso che l'Italia può concedersi? «Gli scenari di questo tipo non sono mai prevedibili in modo "matematico". Per almeno due ragioni preliminari. Primo: bisogna capire cosa vuole fare Mario Draghi. Molto dipenderà da quello che lui deciderà come orizzonte per la sua vita. Secondo: come reagiranno i partiti ad una sua candidatura o ad una sua non-candidatura? Fare previsioni è difficile. L'unica cosa indispensabile è che il passaggio del Quirinale non sia conflittuale. Che non rompa il Paese».

 

mario draghi marta cartabia 1MARIO DRAGHI MARTA CARTABIA 1

Ma al netto delle legittime ambizioni di Draghi, a suo avviso per gli italiani quale sarebbe lo scenario migliore?

«Sarebbe importante che Draghi e la sua maggioranza potessero governare sino alla fine della legislatura: qualsiasi scossone nei prossimi mesi metterebbe in allarme il sistema internazionale. Dunque una permanenza del governo sarebbe una garanzia per tutti. Ma occorre dire che Draghi anche come Capo dello Stato - con un passaggio guidato e non traumatico - sarebbe una garanzia importante. Tra l'altro anche una garanzia di durata».

mario draghi in conferenza stampaMARIO DRAGHI IN CONFERENZA STAMPA

 

C'è chi dice: dal Quirinale Draghi potrebbe indicare il ministro dell'Economia e col suo carisma potrebbe "governare" transizione e rapporti con l'Europa, come e più che a palazzo Chigi. Ma davvero è così?

«Governare dal Quirinale? No, perché per definizione è il governo a governare. Ma indirizzare sicuramente sì. Anche se ovviamente tra governare e indirizzare c'è differenza. Ma attenzione: nel passaggio del Quirinale c'è un aspetto strategico: è indispensabile che non sia conflittuale. Perché un passaggio turbolento, questo sì, sarebbe molto pericoloso».

 

Si dimentica spesso che la fetta più cospicua di risorse europee non è prevista per il Paese con più popolazione ma quello crescita più bassa. Lei conosce Bruxelles: è ipotesi di scuola la sospensione dei fondi davanti ad inadempienze italiane?

mario draghi all accademia dei linceiMARIO DRAGHI ALL ACCADEMIA DEI LINCEI

«Conoscendo bene Bruxelles, è possibilissimo che ad un certo punto possano interrompersi i finanziamenti. Le condizioni sono estremamente analitiche e dettagliate. Di una precisione al limite della pignoleria: sono state scritte perché un domani le risorse possano essere sospese per qualsiasi Paese e quindi anche per l'Italia. Il governo Draghi è nato proprio per evitare questo scenario. Occorre il passaggio decisivo: tradurre queste importanti premesse in realtà concrete. Trasformando il sistema produttivo e facendo tutte le riforme strutturali».

 

Periodicamente si sente ripetere: «Ãˆ l'ultima occasione per l'Italia». Stavolta un refrain retorico più vero di altre volte? O sfruttiamo la leva europea o rischiamo di non rimetterci in piedi?

PRODI MERKELPRODI MERKEL

«Ãˆ così! Non ci vuole la matematica, basta. l'aritmetica! Se arrivi ad un debito di 160 rispetto al Pil, dovrai mettere nel contro sul lungo periodo una ripresa di aggressività dei Fondi internazionali che sul breve si è attenuata. Io ero arrivato a 100, non perché volessi battere un record ma perché alla lunga i conti li devi aggiustare. E d'altra parte se non te li aggiusta una guerra o un'inflazione galoppante, e speriamo che il cielo non ce le dia, li devi aggiustare tu!».

 

Chiunque guidi il governo, cosa deve fare per mantenere le risorse promesse dall'Europa?

«Dopo aver presentato un Piano credibile, un cronoprogramma e l'impegno a realizzare alcune riforme strutturali, occorre il passaggio decisivo: tradurre queste importanti premesse in realtà concrete. Trasformando il sistema produttivo e facendo le riforme istituzionali. Per l'Italia, la vera leva che può attivare il Next Generation Eu sta nei cambiamenti che noi al nostro interno sapremo fare: è la fase più complicata».

 

romano prodi dimartedi 2ROMANO PRODI DIMARTEDI 2

Vigilia delle elezioni tedesche: che traccia lascia Angela Merkel nella storia europea?

«Ho sempre avuto un giudizio complessivamente positivo dell'azione di Angela Merkel. Certo, a suo tempo ho espresso un giudizio estremamente duro sul suo atteggiamento verso la Grecia e soprattutto sulla politica dell'austerità: uno sbaglio che è costato. Ma più di recente abbiamo avuto una Germania ben diversa, che ha sostenuto la solidarietà europea. Un atteggiamento che un anno e mezzo fa, non pensavamo neppure come ipotesi lontana».

 

Senza la sua "mutti", non sarà più la stessa Germania e la stessa Europa?

«Guardate: quando arrivò Kohl tutti dissero che era una personalità di secondo piano e lo stesso si ripeté con Angela Merkel! Ricordiamoci che in Germania prevalgono sempre la continuità e la chiarezza degli orizzonti. Persino in un Paese che impiega sette mesi per comporre un governo. Poi, una volta fatto il governo, quello tiene per un'intera legislatura. La solidità delle strutture politiche è decisiva».

ENRICO LETTA ROMANO PRODIENRICO LETTA ROMANO PRODI

 

Le piace il "nuovo" Letta, che scommette su risposte nette, talora anche a costo di rifiutare il confronto parlamentare?

«Se leggo le ultime intenzioni di voto vedo che passettino dopo passettino, Letta sta ricomponendo la forza del partito, che oramai è pari a quella della Lega. Ora, dopo la ricuciture, le Agorà: il tentativo di ricostituire un partito popolare, a larga base. Che Letta riesca o meno, ha una potenzialità: lui appartiene al partito e non alle correnti».

 

Un Pd "bideniano"? Leader moderato e proposte molto profilate?

«Noi stiamo sottovalutando l'innovativa politica economica e sociale di Biden. Non siamo più in un contesto di liberismo dominante, col quale ho dovuto confrontarmi io e in Italia il Pd è l'unico che almeno teoricamente sta interpretando quella linea. Se continuerà a farlo, credo che lo spazio sia destinato a crescere».

ENRICO LETTA ROMANO PRODI 1ENRICO LETTA ROMANO PRODI 1

 

I cortei no-vax degli ultimi giorni preludono a movimenti "eversivi"?

«In ogni società c'è una quota di irrazionalità, quella che gli anglosassoni chiamavano un tempo, lunatic fringe, la frangia lunatica. Si tratta di minoranze che purtroppo fanno parte della "normalità" delle società moderne nelle quali alcuni individui si rifugiano in sé stessi anziché condividere i valori di convivenza col resto della collettività. Dobbiamo riconoscere che da noi questi movimenti sono meno rilevanti che in Francia o negli Stati Uniti».

Migranti: riformare la Convenzione di Dublino e creare un coordinamento fra Europa, USA e Russia


Il dialogo che serve – I nuovi flussi di migranti: un problema per tutta la Ue

Articolo di Romano Prodi su Il Messaggero del 25 luglio 2021

Da oltre vent’anni le migrazioni costituiscono uno dei problemi più importanti, se non il più importante, della politica interna di ogni paese europeo. La così detta convenzione di Dublino, che affronta la realtà migratoria, è stata firmata quando il diritto d’asilo e la protezione internazionale non erano così prioritari. Essa si limita quindi a imporre solo sulle spalle del paese di arrivo l’obbligo dell’assistenza dei migranti sul suolo europeo. Da allora nulla è cambiato nella legislazione, mentre tutto è cambiato nella realtà delle cose.

Il flusso dei migranti dal sud è progressivamente cresciuto e le guerre di Iraq e Siria ne hanno moltiplicato l’arrivo sulle coste italiane, greche e spagnole, mentre la sciagurata guerra di Libia ha aumentato il numero di trafficanti che lucrano sul commercio umano, con le autorità libiche che si dimostrano impotenti a controllare il fenomeno, quando addirittura non hanno partecipato a favorirlo.

Da qui la continua crescita dei flussi migratori, il perpetuarsi delle quotidiane tragedie umane, il crescente ruolo dei trafficanti e l’impotenza della politica.

Solo la Germania, dopo una drammatica emergenza, ha potuto arginare i siriani e gli iracheni in fuga dal loro paese, ottenendo che essi fossero, e tuttora siano, bloccati dalla Turchia in cambio di cospicui versamenti di denaro.

Questa asimmetria di situazioni fra paesi del sud e paesi del nord Europa ha sempre impedito la necessaria revisione della convenzione di Dublino, moltiplicando i problemi politici, economici e sociali di tutte le nazioni del Mediterraneo e minando profondamente il concetto di solidarietà europea.

In questo campo così delicato non si è assistito, almeno fino ad ora, ad alcun sostanziale miglioramento, nonostante le ripetute proposte della Commissione e del Parlamento Europeo.

Mentre la situazione libica rimane ancora piena di incertezze, la crescita demografica, le difficoltà economiche e l’avanzata del terrorismo in tutto il Sahel (con prospettive davvero drammatiche) spingono ad un progressivo aumento del numero di disperati in fuga verso l’Europa.

Disperati che non arrivano solo dai paesi a Sud del Sahara, perché ad essi si sono aggiunti, e si aggiungono ancora, rifugiati provenienti dal Corno d’Africa, da diversi paesi asiatici, oltre che, naturalmente, dalla Siria e dall’Iraq.

Il quadro si sta ulteriormente complicando da quando il governo americano ha deciso il ritiro delle sue truppe dall’Afghanistan, dove i talebani stanno riprendendo il possesso del territorio con una rapidità fulminea, dichiarando addirittura di controllare il 90% delle frontiere del paese.

Il ministro afgano Noor Rahman Akhlaqi ha messo in allarme l’opinione pubblica mondiale affermando che il numero di rifugiati supera già i due milioni, mentre le feroci vendette dei talebani contro coloro che in modo diretto o indiretto hanno collaborato con gli americani o con le altre truppe presenti nel territorio, stanno obbligando alla fuga immediata altre migliaia di persone.

In questo marasma si inserisce la tensione fra la Bielorussia e l’Unione Europea, approfittando della quale il dittatore Lukashenko ha spinto verso i paesi baltici europei centinaia di profughi mediorientali e asiatici, dopo avere incoraggiato il loro arrivo con voli diretti da Bagdad e Istambul, sembra dietro il modesto pagamento di 15 mila euro a testa.

Siamo arrivati al punto in cui il governo della Lituania ha stanziato 41 milioni di Euro per costruire una barriera di filo spinato lungo i 687 chilometri di confine con la Bielorussia.

Dopo Ungheria e Bulgaria, l’Europa sembra essere in grado di affrontare i problemi delle migrazioni solo con i muri e le barriere materiali. Il fatto che il problema delle migrazioni tocchi anche i paesi del nord Europa e, in qualche modo, anche gli Stati Uniti e un paese strettamente legato alla Russia come la Bielorussia, non può non cambiare il quadro.

Dal punto di vista umanitario non cambia nulla: il problema semplicemente si aggrava. Dal punto di vista politico siamo invece di fronte a un salto di qualità. In teoria dovrebbero essere le Nazioni Unite a prendersi carico di una regolamentazione globale di un problema che coinvolge così profondamente la comunità mondiale.

Nella realtà dei fatti questo è reso impossibile dalla natura stessa del Consiglio di Sicurezza dell’ONU. Dobbiamo quindi accontentarci del prezioso e insostituibile lavoro dell’Alto Commissariato delle Nazioni Unite per i Rifugiati (UNHCR) nella sua elevata missione di alleviare drammi e sofferenze.

Un più concreto realismo dovrebbe invece spingere a trarre le conclusioni di questi ultimi avvenimenti con una doppia decisione. In primo luogo sarebbe utile aprire un colloquio fra Unione Europea, Stati Uniti e Russia sullo specifico e limitato problema delle migrazioni collegate all’instabilità del Medio Oriente, soprattutto in conseguenza della fine della guerra in Afghanistan.

Nonostante tutte le tensioni in corso non è infatti interesse di nessuno accrescere i conflitti esistenti creandone uno aggiuntivo su un tema che porta solo danni a tutti i contendenti.

In secondo luogo i nuovi flussi di migranti dimostrano ai paesi del nord Europa che il problema migratorio non interessa solo il Mediterraneo ma, pur con modalità e caratteristiche diverse, è un dramma che danneggia e destabilizza tutti e che va quindi risolto in modo concordato.

La realtà dei fatti obbliga cioè a riconoscere che una revisione della convenzione di Dublino non interessa solo noi meridionali, ma tutti i membri dell’Unione.

Anche se non riguarda solo il problema migratorio, sarebbe infine doveroso riesaminare le modalità con le quali si è finora svolta la lotta contro il terrorismo: le azioni prevalentemente militari, come quelle che sono state messe in atto fino ad ora, hanno sostanzialmente fallito.