Ok, this sounds shockingly familiar. And it’s not good:
An extreme-right political party’s violent exploitation of anger over Italy’s coronavirus restrictions is forcing authorities to wrestle with the country’s fascist legacy and fueling fears there could be a replay of last week’s mobs trying to force their way toward Parliament.
Starting Friday, anyone entering workplaces in Italy must have received at least one vaccine dose, or recovered from COVID-19 recently or tested negative with two days, using the country’s Green Pass to prove their status. Italians already use the pass to enter restaurants, theaters, gyms and other indoor entertainment, or to take long-distance buses, trains or domestic flights.
But 10,000 opponents of that government decree turned out in Rome’s vast Piazza del Popolo last Saturday in a protest that degenerated into alarming violence.
It’s the mixing and overlap of the extreme right and those against Italy’s vaccine mandates thatare causing worries, even though the opposition to vaccines is still a distinct minority in a country where 80% of people 12 and older are fully vaccinated.
Incited by the political extreme right at the rally, hundreds on Saturday marched through the Italian capital and rampaged their way through the national headquarters of the left-leaning CGIL labor confederation. Police foiled their repeated attempts to reach the offices of Italy’s premier and the seat of Parliament.
The protesters smashed union computers, ripped out phone lines and trashed offices after first trying to batter their way in through CGIL’s front door with metal bars, then breaking in through a window. Unions have backed the Green Pass as a way to make Italy’s workplaces safer for employees.
CGIL leader Maurizio Landini immediately drew parallels to attacks a century ago by Benito Mussolini’s newly minted Fascists against labor organizers as he consolidated his dictatorship’s grip on Italy.
To some watching the violence unfold, the attack also evoked images of the Jan. 6 assault by angry mob of the U.S. Capitol building as part of protests over Donald Trump’s failed bid to be re-elected as the U.S. president.
The US used to be an inspiration to sme people around the world (not hat we always deserved it.) But inspiring fascistic political riots is a new one as far as I know.
Yikes.