In short, on Facebook and Instagram we can celebrate death. The death of Putin and that of the Russian soldiers engaged in the invasion of Ukraine. An internal document from Meta, the head company of Mark Zuckerberg’s group says it: “Temporarily it can be done.” And you can’t help but feel a sense of dizziness. land in a clash, and the stadium shouts it in chorus “you must die”, according to a macabre but harmless theatrical script. But we are not in a stadium, this is not a game it is a war.
Zelensky’s sense for Twitter
by Riccardo Luna
One of the possible effects of violence is to make us violent, just as intolerance can make us intolerant. I’m not here to do petty philosophy but the risk in cases like these is to become like our opponents. Losing the principles we believe in, and therefore ourselves. When university courses on Dostoevsky stop or when Paralympic athletes are banned from participating in a competition they have been waiting for for years, there is something that goes beyond solidarity with Ukraine and the desire to bring help even by punishing the invaders.
Why Apple “returns” Crimea to Ukraine
by Riccardo Luna
As well as when the European Commission prohibits the dissemination of Russian media content in Europe and asks Google to make it invisible in searches. I, on the other hand, believe that we should know what they think about the Kremlin and what they read in Russia. Don’t be afraid of words. Don’t stop trying to understand. We are still an open, liberal, democratic society that must not be afraid of opposing propaganda because we know, in fact, that it is propaganda. In these days we are witnessing authentic heroisms and infinite gestures of solidarity. We remain ourselves, to fight Putin we do not become like Putin.