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Joined: Apr 12 2013 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 67 |
![]() Topic: discount toms shoes APPosted: Apr 29 2013 at 10:42am |
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he fight in West Africa. Moderate Muslims express concern that such sweeps against a radical fringe risk stigmatizing France's 5-million-strong Muslim community. _____ AP writer Jamey Keaten contributed to this report. Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. An insider's guide to politics and policy, available on the iPad or as a PDF download.[标签:标题]
By VICTOR L. SIMPSON,discount toms shoes, Associated Press ROME (AP) These are crazy days in Rome, where limbo reigns in parliament and papacy. Italy is usually a pretty anarchic place, with people bucking rules on everything from crossing the street to paying taxes. But the anarchy's going a bit far: Who's running the country? Who's running the church? For now, at least, nobody really knows. We Romans are living truly surreal times when a bearded comedian is now one of the nation's most powerful leaders, and aging cardinals from around the world are mobbed by paparazzi as if they were Hollywood starlets. Then there are the eerie silences in a normally raucous city. With no ruling pope, St. Peter's Square was strangely quiet as the Vatican saw its first Sunday without a papal window blessing,toms kids shoes, a weekly appointment that will normally draw thousands of pilgrims and tourists. With no government after inconclusive elections, downtown streets are blessedly free of the crush of lawmakers in dark blue official cars that speed through congested Rome with legislative impunity and are one of the notorious perks of being a parliamentarian. Since Italians recently voted in national elections, it's no surprise to see the walls of Rome still plastered with campaign posters. But Mamma Mia a poster urging votes for a cardinal in the upcoming papal conclave? That's precisely the sight that Romans are seeing near several Rome basilicas with the campaign-style image of Africa's strongest papal contender looking up to the heavens against a slogan reading: "AT THE CONCLAVE VOTE PETER KODWO APPIAH TURKSON." Nobody knows who's behind it, but it's widely regarded as a spoof campaign ahead of the solemn meetings in the Sistine Chapel to elect the next pope Other papal posters point to Italians' cantankerous mood. The day Benedict XVI went into retirement, the city of Rome plastered walls with posters of the pontiff thanking him for his service. "YOU WILL ALWAYS BE WITH US. THANK YOU!," the posters read. Romans woke up the next morning to the sight of many of them torn, defaced or simply gone. And in a time when Rome is busy filling important vacancies,toms shoes sale, it's perhaps only natural that there are gatecrashers. Despite all the security at the Vatican as cardinals meet to organize the conclave, a prankster in bishop's garb, an impressive cross across his chest and decidedly un-clerical black sneakers, managed to sneak into the congregation of cardinals this week and mingle. Photographers snapped him shaking hands with Cardinal Velasio De Paolis, the Italian prelate named to clean up the disgraced Legion of Christ order.
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