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Entrepreneurship, High-Speed and Rail Travel

July 17th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Blog
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In the United States we get the last one. Europe generally has the last two. Now it seems Italy is getting all three, a welcome move from those of us who decry the socialistic rail systems in most countries. Nuovo Trasporto Viaggiatori, a private company, has announced plans to open competition with the state-owned monopoly starting in 2011. The $1.4 billion project will link Rome, Milan, Turin, Venice, Florence, Bologna, Naples, Bari and Salerno. From Gulliver (hat tip):

The trains—the new Automotrice Grande Vitesse designed by Alstom, a French company—will travel at 190mph, cutting the four-hour Rome-Milan journey to three hours.

Perhaps, if Amtrak were to be deregulated and privatized, we would be seeing similar things in America. In any case, the trains are quite spiffy:

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The Italian language police

July 14th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in News
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Silvio Berlusconi, the intractable, obstinate and stupid Italian prime minister, has thrown a tantrum over the fact that EU meetings use the languages that most Europeans speak, not Italian. He has “advised his ministers to walk out of EU meetings in which they are forced to speak another language, and boycott those for which there is no documentation available in Italian,” writes Certain Ideas of Europe (hat tip).

He is protesting the use of “working” or “procedural” languages, i.e., English, French and German, although the idea makes a lot of sense. Wikipedia tells me that English speaking countries (the UK and Ireland) make up 13% of the EU’s population; French speaking countries (France, Luxembourg and the Wallonia region of Belgium) make up 14%; and German speaking countries (Germany and Austria) make up 18%. Thus countries speaking the working languages make up almost half (45%) of the EU population, plus the fact that English is huge as a second language, so that it’s safe to venture that a majority of Europeans have command of at least one of the working languages. Thus in an area with 27 different nations, and 23 official languages (really 22, since Gaelic’s just for show) it makes sense to use a limited set of core languages that most people know, so that EU politicians and bureaucrats don’t have to know 22 languages, many of which (Bulgarian? Latvian? Finnish?) are only useful in one country, as opposed to several.

What I would prefer to see, as a Eurosceptic from afar of sorts, is a disbandment of the Union entirely so that everyone can get back to free trade in whatever language they’d like. That’s highly unlikely, though, so I’m not counting on it.

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Berlusconi endorses McCain

June 13th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in 2008 US Elections, News
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The Italian prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, aged 71 years 8 months, has endorsed John McCain, aged 71 years 9 months. “I suppose I could express my own personal preference for one of the candidates, the Republican candidate,” Berlusconi said. “And this is for a very selfish reason, and that is that I would no longer be the oldest person at the upcoming G-8 because McCain is a month older than me.”

It’s amazing that the Italians elect such morons.

Hat tip to Democracy in America

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