Starting from the recent intention of the Italian Prime Minister to include the environmental protection in the Italian Constitution, the article speaks about the lack of environmental protection in the Italian Constitution and analyzes the articles 2, 9 and 32 that – with an extensive interpretation – have guaranteed and guarantee an indirect constitutional protection to the environmental theme. An overview is given of the environmental safeguards present in more recent constitutions than the Italian one and in reformed constitutions of different geographical areas (South America, Africa, India, main European Countries), more in the European Treaties. At the end the text presents an author’s proposal to reform the Italian Constitution to insert the environmental protection both in the Fundamental Principles (art. 9) and in the First Part concerning Rights and Duties of citizens (art. 32 and 54).
Mario Anzevino
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The way the Internet is talking about this teaser, it's like a
company has never lied to you before. Sure, Netflix has
said this is not a legitimate teaser for its "A Series of Unfortunate Events"
(ASOUE) series.
But this is bunk, and the biggest reason why is Lemony Snicket is Daniel Handler.
If you know nothing about this decades-long farce, then that
may sound like a terribly ridiculous statement
for me to make and claim as reasoning enough. But for years,
Handler maintained the facade that Snicket -- the pen name Handler used to write the ASOUE series -- is a separate
persona. Each denial of their connection was proof enough that Handler
was the writer behind the writer.
Now, Netflix's denial should be proof enough that this is not only an official
teaser but that it was released with its full knowledge.
Not enough for you? Fine, but instead of dissecting the teaser itself, let's first look at the YouTube
uploader: Eleanora Poe. In the book series, Poe was the editor in chief
of the newspaper, The Daily Punctilio. She had, in fact, fired Lemony Snicket for
a review he wrote of her brother's play -- giving her ample cause to
release a sneak peek at Snicket's life work. Plus, what better way to
disavow any knowledge of the teaser trailer than by having Poe release it?
Next, look at (and listen to) the music. Take The Gothic Archies record you see playing on the Gramfonola, as the player says on the front.
When the original ASOUE books were released on audiobook, this
band provided the theme music for the series. Check out
their album The Tragic Treasury (iTunes | Spotify) and then tell me this isn't
a gargantuan Easter egg, a new, grown-up phrase which here means "an obvious sign of realness."
The Gothic Archies rise again.
Screenshot by Caitlin Petrakovitz/CNET
The Gothic Archies also lent their sound to Neil Gaiman's "Coraline"
audiobook -- today's teaser trailer soundtrack featured "Missed Me" by The Dresden Dolls, whose lead singer is Amanda Palmer...who is
married to Gaiman. OK, sure, it seems like a tenuous connection, but when you think of how long they've all known each other,
you have to admit it seems less and less like a coincidence and more like elaborate planning.
(And anyway, there's no such thing as a coincidence.)
Elaborate planning has always been a hallmark of ASOUE.
For 13 books the series taught readers to always question authority, to never take
an answer at face value just because it came
from an adult, and to always seek to ask the right questions.
So I have some big questions to ask: If this was
simply a fan-made trailer, why aren't there more VFD markings?
In the books, those who are a part of the group VFD come together
under markings which look like the title of the first book under the pair of glasses here:
VFD spotted!
Screenshot by Caitlin Petrakovitz/CNET
This is the evil "eye" a fan of the books would recognize immediately.
Made up of the three letters of the group, this is
the sign a fan would plaster over numerous things in a teaser such as this.
Next question: Where are the shots of said fan's dream cast?
Every picture we presumably see of the Baudelaire children is sans faces -- why?
Could it be that the fan didn't want to sully our dreams with visions
of their casting decisions? No, fans always want you to know who would play their perfect Count Olaf and we can't resist telling you
(ahem, Adrien Brody or Matthew Gray Gubler). Instead, I think this is a deliberate move by Netflix to keep its casting decisions under
wraps for the time being.
All in all, I do think this is a fan-made trailer -- in so much
as Daniel Handler is a huge fan of Lemony Snicket.
It bleeds authenticity and feels exactly like a teaser should, full of promise, with enough Easter eggs to keep fans intrigued and the ability to get even non-readers excited for the series.
Heck, maybe Netflix is being straightforward. But something about that Netflix rep's comment
to Variety just reads as vague and open-ended: "This was not released from Netflix." Well of course not,
it was released by Ms Poe. And at the end of the day, the trailer is missing the classic Netflix
tags, like "An Original Series" or even a
release year, making it plausible this is truly just a
very, very well made fan edit.
But wouldn't it be great if it wasn't? Wouldn't it be terribly delightful to think that Netflix is simply playing with us in the same
vein as Snicket and Co.? So, what'd you think:
real or fake -- or does it even matter?
Enlarge Image
Here comes Count Olaf.
Screenshot by Caitlin Petrakovitz/CNET
law2.wlu.edu
https://campusgroups.rit.edu/click?r=https://asiaporntube.pro
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