@SalisIlaria@rsta All’anno? Ma vi rendete conto che potrebbero essere patrimoni immobiliari con rendita zero e con una tassa annuale dall’1 al 3% lo stato praticamente li espropria
@fawollo13 Ma di quali patrimoni parliamo, finanziari o immobiliari? Sui primi c’è già il famoso “bollo” e sui secondi c’è l’imu, sono entrambi imposte patrimoniali e ricorrenti non una tantum, si pagano ogni anno. E dovrebbero essere costituiti da redditi già tassati.
90% of the soldiers on the first boats to hit the beach didn't live to see the end of the day. Look at those faces. Some of them never made it to 18.
Never forget that they paid the ultimate price for our freedom. We live our lives the way we do because of them.
This is real first-hand footage of D-Day.
On a single morning, on a fifty-mile stretch of French coast, the largest invasion in human history began...
It was the 6th of June, 1944. By the end of that one day, around 160,000 Allied soldiers had crossed the English Channel and landed in Normandy.
They were carried by more than 5,000 ships and supported by some 13,000 aircraft, a fleet so vast that, to the men who saw it from the water, the horizon itself seemed to be made of steel.
The plan was almost insane in its ambition...
In the darkness after midnight, 23,400 paratroopers were dropped behind enemy lines to seize bridges and roads. At dawn, after a bombardment from sea and air, the infantry went in across five beaches, code-named Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno, and Sword.
What you are watching was filmed in those hours.
It is worth remembering what it actually shows. Each of those small landing craft held a few dozen men. When the ramps dropped, they stepped out into water and onto open sand, into machine-gun fire from concrete bunkers that had been built and ranged for exactly this.
On Omaha Beach, the worst of the five, the fighting was so severe that American forces alone suffered around 2,400 casualties in that single sector.
By the end of the day, at least 4,400 Allied soldiers were confirmed dead. Most of them were very young. Many had never been in combat before that morning, and would never see another.
What makes the day almost impossible to comprehend is not only its scale but its uncertainty. No one watching the boats go in knew it would work. Eisenhower had written a short note the night before, to be released if the invasion failed, taking the entire blame upon himself. He kept it folded in his wallet but he never had to use it...
Within a year, the war was over.
Il nostro “giornalismo d’inchiesta” si fonda sul protervo rifiuto di una regola elementare: le notizie non verificate non si possono e non si debbono pubblicare. Non basta che “una fonte” abbia detto che Tizia reclutava prostitute, o che il Ministro Caio frequentava Sempronio. Bisogna verificarne l’attendibilità soggettiva, l’assenza di interessi a dire il falso o a manipolare il vero, e soprattutto occorre acquisire riscontri “esterni” alle dichiarazioni della fonte. Il che costa molta fatica, e autentica capacità investigativa. Tutto qui
GENERALI DA OPERETTA.
E’ stato pagato per decenni da un esercito appartenente alla NATO ma fa il tifo per i russi.
Ha giurato di difendere al Repubblica ma ne tradisce tutti i valori fondamentali, disonorando la divisa.
Parla di pensioni minime ma è andato in pensione a 56 anni con 5.000 euro netti.
Sputa sull’Europa ma prende lo stipendio da eurodeputato.
Non è un fascista, e’ un qualunquista paraculo e per questo raccatta voti. Chiacchiere e distintivo.
Russian strike on an ambulance in Kherson today.
Russia is systematically tearing Kherson apart, committing one war crime after another. The city is in a desperate, critical situation‼️‼️
@SandroRossi_x@pinapic Bah, ormai votare turandosi il naso è un atto del tutto inutile e se devo votare solo per battere la Meloni, preferisco andare al mare
@sscnapoli Credo che ormai il Napoli debba richiedere la registrazione del Guinness del primato del cambio allenatore: ne passano talmente tanti e così in fretta che ormai nessuno si ricorda come si chiamano