Italy’s Falling Down

A day of ordinary madness [that was the italian title for Falling Down: Un Giorno di Ordinaria Follia, ed. note]: in Bari, three young men, aged 17 to 18, were arrested for using a homeless man as a target to test a weapon. In Rome, students staged a flash mob, smearing blood on pictures of government ministers and the Prime Minister. In Turin, students escalated protests by throwing a tear gas device, injuring 15 police officers during clashes. Elsewhere across Italy, protests turned chaotic with scuffles, egg-throwing, and torn photos of Giorgia Meloni. This was the “No Meloni Day,” organized by youth demanding a better education system. Quite the call for change.

Meanwhile, a video emerges from Naples showing a teenager shooting another over a scuffed shoe. In Massa Carrara, a tragic case unfolds as an 18-month-old girl dies after being erroneously discharged from the hospital. Details also surface about a young woman who lost her life undergoing a nose job.

Between politics—or what passes for it—and grim headlines, what is happening to you, Italy? A spiral of violence, unrest, and the erosion of values seems to stretch from North to South, from bustling cities to small towns, like a relentless moral virus. Perhaps it’s just a gloomy journalist’s perspective, a distorted anthology of events, a sweeping, flawed generalization. Perhaps… if only.

Claudio Brachino

Claudio Brachino

Claudio Brachino holds a degree in Letters and Philosophy from Sapienza University of Rome. He is known for his versatile career as an author, journalist, and editorial director. He has written plays and essays, including "La macchina da presa teatrale." In 1987, he began his journalism career with the Fininvest group, contributing to the success of TV programs such as "Verissimo" on Canale 5. He has held key roles within Mediaset, directing flagship programs like "Studio Aperto" and "Mattino Cinque," and also served as the director of Videonews. Currently, in addition to being an editorialist for Il Giornale and a commentator on La7, Brachino is also the director of the weekly Il Settimanale.