Mobilization of the precarious movement in Italy this Sunday, June 19th

Our correspondent Bertram Niessen informs us of the mobilization of Italian precarious workers on Sunday 19th, as a response to infamous remarks by the Italian minister of the Berlusconi government:

“After the infamous declarations of the Minister for Public Administration and Innovation Renato Brunetta against precarious workers, bottom-up social movements are meeting in Rome, near the parliament, next Sunday. If you want to follow the story on social networks (and to help spreading) hashtags are: #indignazioneprecaria #J19 #19Giugno and #Brunetta . This is one of the web pages related to the event: here.

Here is some additional background from the Journolinguist blog:

“On June 14th the web on this shore of the big world was invaded by a viral video where the Minister for Public Administration and Innovation Renato Brunetta calls precarious workers “the worse part of Italy”. Within minutes a Facebook page requesting the resignation of the Minister was created and within an afternoon it collected more than 10 thousand subscriptions (the number this minute is 37,508 and growing). Brunetta readily replied from his webcam claiming he was attacked by a bunch of drag-precari that were in fact brigadists exploiting the dramatic situation of so many young Italians, in order to push through their own agenda. These people who savaged and insulted him, he said, “are not the victims of precariat(1), they are the victims of their own failures”.

Apparently in Italy there are about 4 million losers, victim of their own failures.

They used to call them “flexible”, flexible is good isn’t it: it bends it doesn’t break, it folds you can carry it everywhere, it’s soft it doesn’t hurt.

It doesn’t hurt, but they get hurt, another name for them is “casualised workers”, doesn’t it recall “casualty” = someone or something that is damaged or suffers as a result of something else. Then you have “intermittent workers”, as if you could live intermittently, intermittently pay rent, intermittently eat. “Temporary workers”, hey don’t look at me everything is ephimerous, just go and “hold eternity in an hour”.

Then the word “precarious” arrived. Unsteady, unbalanced, unstable, DANGEROUS. The people at the top planned it to be dangerous for us, and indeed it is, but it turned out it is dangerous for them too. Precariat will become the new proletariat. Then it is a post Communist Party story!

So the new communicative strategy is making the “precarious worker” disappear. A conservative politician won’t be caught dead saying the words. “Precarious worker” is a political label not a socio-economic category. Let’s just refer to “project worker” (it makes it nearly sound as if they have a plan), “freelance workers” (it makes it sound as if it was their choice), or “self-employed” (that is empowering!). But those “precarious workers”, those bogus precarious workers I mean, they are just the worse part of Italy.

Recently ISTAT (the National Institute of Statistics) revealed that there are 2 million young Italians who don’t do anything. They don’t count as unemployed, because they are not even looking for a job, they don’t study, they live with their parents, relying on the family as lifejacket. They are called the idle “lost generation”, though the Italian term used to describe them is much more revealing. They are “rassegnati”, they are hopeless. About 1/5 of Italian youth, between 18 and 34, is hopeless; after that we become plain useless.

HOPELESS is an interesting lexical choice. It suggests that it’s our responsibility having lost hope, rather than conveying the idea that somebody stripped us of our future.

According to senator Giorgio Clelio Starcquadanio (PDL), Berlusconi’s party lost the regional elections and the referendum, because on the other side there is an army of 4 million slackers “who have fuckin’ nothing to do and spend all day fiddling on the web” and making a hell of a rack.

Hopeless, losers, failures, the worse part of Italy, slackers, squadrists, web-jerkers… I told you it was a post politically correct story.

The FB page requesting Brunetta’s resignation has in the meantime reached: 37,749 attending.”

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