Ancient history teaches us that where there is continuity there is prosperity and civilization and the reflection of this simple concept extends from antiquity to today, when we think for example of the rock carvings of Valcamonica, Italy (about 5000 BC) which predates 2000 years the construction of the first Egyptian tombs, they do not arouse the same interest as the tombs of the Egyptian Pharaohs. The Pharaohs of Egypt have not only left their history to posterity but also a long period of continuity of the Monarchy. The republics do not have a true continuity, instead they have a perennial struggle of the factions for internal power and therefore do not work for the future but for the immediate and for the next day, for the armchair, consequently they will never leave a legacy aimed at the constructiveness for those who come after but only the accumulation of unresolved problems they generate.
Matteo Cornelius Sullivan
Ultimi Articoli
Gerry Scotti apre il Festival della TV di Dogliani — quindicesima edizione dal 29 al 31 maggio 2026
Triennale Milano — una settimana di performance, laboratori e incontri dal 13 al 19 aprile
NIST legge Project Hail Mary con l’occhio del laboratorio
Fausto Lama — “Giovani Bukowski” racconta una generazione tra eccesso e consapevolezza
Rosa Teruzzi premiata al Ceresio in Giallo 2026: una vita tra cronaca nera e detective “fuori dagli schemi”
Florence Road — la band irlandese che porta “Spring Forward” sui palchi del 2026
Levante — Dieci tappe live per l’estate 2026 tra arene e rassegne sotto le stelle
Ravyn Lenae pubblica due nuovi singoli — “Reputation” e “Bobby” aprono una nuova fase
Don Bronstein a Milano — lo sguardo sul jazz arriva in Triennale