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Marco Annunziata's avatar

Bill, your last paragraph is spot on. No political side in Italy (or anywhere in the 'old' EU for that matter) favors free market economics. Then again, Trump himself also is rather ambivalent on this. So an axis it might be (wicked choice of word, btw), but not quite a free-market one. These are not the Reagan-Thatcher days.

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Philalethes's avatar

Two points:

- concerning US isolationism, it co-existed with the Monroe doctrine considering the Americas as part of the natural sphere of influence of the United States. Therefore claims on Greenland, Canada and the Panama Canal are not incompatible with the American isolationist tradition. (On substance, I agree with you that the US will find impossible not to continue throw its weight around across the world);

- on Italy, I can only agree that free market economics will is not and will not be the inspiration of any Italian government. When it comes to free speech, I should say however that the culture wars have triggered an unprecedented wave of social and in some cases government censorship in many countries previously considered as free speech champions - Britain comes to the mind (I guess that a speaker making statements considered offensive by any ‘protected group’ in the famous corner of Hyde Park (does it still exist?) would be promptly denounced and quite possibly receive a prison sentence). By comparison, Italy begins to look as a liberal country.

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