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It's
the same old, same old. Thirty eight people die in a bus crash.
Corporate English media names none of them. Of the 38 lives, there isn't
one human interest story to report. There is the stony wall of silence.
Even in Italian media not all the victims are named. In a random
sample I choose one that appeals to me Biagio Vallefuoco.
It's not like it's hard with search engines to get some poignant
details in a few seconds. An investigative reporter would surely do that
if there were a few left.
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The corporate media practice the code of silence OmertĂ
in its original Italian. You would assume the finding of a
controversial name in the invisible list would change the whole fabric
of the investigation from 'accident' to homicide. That would be the mark
of a reporter par excellence. The reason they refuse to publish the
list is that possession of even one name searched will lead you to the
rest. An inquisitive mind might do what I do look.
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Biagio Vallefuoco
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In an earlier day a man named Biagio Vallefuoco was headlined in a financial scandal. Too bad he's hiding his face.
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The above Biagio Vallefuoco was a lawyer implicated in a €200 thousand to Italy Telecom. The Chairman and CEO of Italy Telecom is Franco Bernabè.
That probably means nothing to most of you. Franco sits on many boards
including Petro China. He is a member of the Council on Foreign
Relations. He is the Vice Chairman of Rothschild Europe. So you can clearly see how much damage can be done with only one name.
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An aerial view showing the overturned bus.
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So what was the price paid in pain and suffering to get one man? What were the all for one?
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The
world moves at the speed of the predator not the prey. Although few
really consider themselves the prey they are so far removed from reality
which is veiled levels of conspiracy that can rise infinitely higher.
With one quick search we touched the sky. Who is the point of the sword?
MOI!
http://www.france24.com/en/20130730-italy-mass-funeral-38-victims-bus-plunge-accident
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jul/29/italy-bus-crash-killed-avellino
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