Comments by "SpaniardsR Moors" (@spaniardsrmoors6817) on "Inside Rome's Most Dangerous Hood 🇮🇹" video.
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@ramoncastaneda8432 Ferrari, Lamborghini, Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Fiat (most European Car of the Year Awards), Lancia, Pagani, Bugatti (founder Italian) and MORE. Ferrari, most powerful brand in the world and along with Alfa, Lancia, MOST world chamoinships in their class.
Ducati...14 World Superbike FIM Titles, more than all other manufacturers COMBINED, Moto Guzzi, MV Agusta, Aprilia, Benelli, Piaggio(Vespa, most succesful scooter brand), Lambretta, Bimota and MANY MORE.
Italy produces 40% of the world's super yachts.
Italy by far #1 in fashion brands...Gucci, Armani, Dolce&Gabbana, Prada, Versace, Fendi, Valentino, and at least 3 dozen more.
(helicopters (Agusta), energy (Enel), shipyards (Fincantieri), just to name a few) Space technology, Appliances, etc etc.
Industrial production by country Germany recorded the highest value of sold production, equivalent to 29 % of the EU total, followed by Italy (18 %), France (12 %), Spain (9 %), Poland (5 %) and the Netherlands (3%). I could go on and on
🤣😂😝🤪
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Naw, nothing, just the Renaissance that saved Europe invented Capitalism, Banks, Universities, 3 Italians that discovered, gave it's name, brought the English to America or there would be no America(s), #1 history, inventions, made western civilization, that's all.
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This from a guy who wrote an article that had nothing but bad things to say about it:
"But compared to the South Bronx, Chicago’s South Side, the projects of New Orleans? Please. According to the Rome police department and ANSA, the Italian news agency, in 2014, Rome, a city of 2.6 million people, had 27 murders. Chicago, which has 2.7 million people, had 407, according to the FBI. St. Louis (pop. 318,000) had 158. Italy, with 60 million people, had all of 468 murders in 2014. That’s one in every 130,000 people, an all-time low. The U.S. (pop. 319 million) in 2013 had 12,253 homicides (11,208 from guns) or one in every 26,000, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime."
Tell me again how "dangerous" it is BUD. @Momo_Kawashima
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@ramoncastaneda8432 What are the poorest areas in Chicago?
Southern areas of Chicago, including South Shore, Hyde Park, Woodlawn, Grand Boulevard, and Douglas, have the city's lowest median net worth ($4,439). And in some western areas, including Humboldt Park; North and South Lawndale; and East and West Garfield Park, median net worth isn't much higher ($4,452).Feb 1, 2022
BWHAHAHAHA
🤣😂🙂
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@ramoncastaneda8432 Search YT videos for "What have the Romans ever done for us" and see what Brits say about who taught who.
"Britain’s Roman Legacy...
by Britain Magazine"
They came, they conquered and their lasting effect on Britain is still visible to this day. From ancient forts, roads and walls, to villas, palaces and spas, discover Britain’s Roman legacy. By Penelope Rance
Technology, architecture, language, government, town planning – even a sense of national identity. The depth of the Roman influence on the British Isles was such that it survives to this day, seemingly unmatched by that of any of the invading forces that followed them. But then, the majority of those invaders, and the subsequent ruling elites, wanted nothing better than to be Roman themselves.
🤣😂😝
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@ramoncastaneda8432 Italy is a founding and leading member of the European Union and a member of numerous international institutions, including the United Nations, NATO, the OECD, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the World Trade Organization, the Group of Seven, the G20, the Union for the Mediterranean, the Latin Union, the Council of Europe, Uniting for Consensus, the Schengen Area, and many more.
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@ramoncastaneda8432 The source of many inventions and discoveries, the country has long been a global centre of art, music, literature, philosophy, science and technology, and fashion and has greatly influenced and contributed to diverse fields including cinema, cuisine, sports, jurisprudence, banking, and business.[42] As a reflection of its cultural wealth, Italy has the world's largest number of World Heritage Sites (58), and is the fifth-most visited country.
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@ramoncastaneda8432 WIKI: Italy is considered the birthplace of Western civilization and a cultural superpower. Italy has been the starting point of phenomena of international impact such as the Magna Graecia, the Roman Empire, the Roman Catholic Church, the Renaissance, the Risorgimento and the European integration. During its history, the nation gave birth to an enormous number of notable people. Both the internal and external faces of Western culture were born on the Italian peninsula, whether one looks at the history of the Christian faith, civil institutions (such as the Senate), philosophy, law, art, science, or social customs and culture. Italy was home to many well known and influential civilizations, including the Etruscans, Samnites and the Romans,
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@ramoncastaneda8432 “This revisionist history convincingly argues that the Regia Marina Italiana (the Royal Italian Navy) has been neglected and maligned in assessments of its contributions to the Axis effort in World War II. After all, Italy was the major Axis player in the Mediterranean, and it was the Italian navy and air force, with only sporadic help from their German ally, that stymied the British navy and air force for most of the thirty-nine months that Italy was a belligerent. It was the Royal Italian Navy that provided the many convoys that kept the Axis war effort in Africa alive by repeatedly braving attack by aircraft, submarine, and surface vessels. If doomed by its own technical weaknesses and Ultra (the top-secret British decoding device), the Italian navy still fought a tenacious and gallant war; and if it did not win that war, it avoided defeat for thirty-nine, long, frustrating months.”
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@ramoncastaneda8432 “Others among the German leadership were less critical, most notably Adolf Hitler. In his address to the Reichstag following the conclusion of the Balkan Campaign, Hitler was complimentary to the Greeks for their "extremely brave resistance", but stated that given the Greek logistical situation, German involvement was not decisive in the Greco-Italian conflict: "The Duce... was convinced that a quick decision would be arrived at one way or another in the forthcoming season. I was of the same opinion." He stated that he had no quarrel with Greece (which he had acknowledged as part of the Italian sphere anyway) and that his intervention was aimed solely at the British as he suspected that they planned to set up a threat to his rear in the vein of the Salonika Front
of the First World War: "the German forces, therefore, represented no assistance to Italy against Greece, but a preventive measure against the British." He further noted that by the beginning of April the Albanian campaign against the Italians "had so weakened [Greece] that its collapse had already become inevitable", and credited the Italians with having "engaged the greater part of the Greek Army."
[251]
In his private correspondence in April 1942, Hitler said: "It is equally impossible to imagine what might have happened if the Italian front had not been stabilized in Albania, thanks to Mussolini; the whole of the Balkans would have been set alight at a moment when our advance towards the southeast was still in its early stages."
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@ramoncastaneda8432 "Not only should Tunisia have exploded the myth of Hitler's military acumen, it should have discredited the idea that Germans fought better than the Italians, since Messe's 1st Italian Army held out longer than Arnim's 5th German Army and the DAK, even both groups had about six divisions and faced roughly equal Anglo-American forces. Indeed, Hermann Goring division was the first to be scattered on 7 May, DAK the next to break and surrender on 9 May, with the Italian Spezia division closing the gap created by the German collapse and watching still combat-efficient German units march off into captivity on 11 May. Whether it is significant that the German 90th Light division was the first to collapse in Messe's 'Italian' Army, there is no doubt that the Italians fought well and held out longest in Tunisia." (The Second World War: The German War 1939-1942, Jeremy Black, Page 265, Ashgate, 2007)”
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@olrait2336 Enjoy these stats also:
The crime rate for homicides PER 1000 people: USA, 4.96, Italy, 0.57 Serious Assault USA 246.84, Italy, 109.44 That homicide rate is up to 50% BELOW countries like France, Germany, Finland, Sweden Serious Assault, LESS... than 1/3 of France, New Zealand, Belgium 5X MORE, Germany. Incarceration rate PER 100,000: USA, 629, Italy, 91 Below several European countries, Czechs, 2X as much, only 20-30% above north Western Europeans, New Zealand almost DOUBLE...
🤣😝
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@amg9878 OGNI paese è colpevole di "omerta" quando si tratta di criminalità e OGNI paese ha una mafia, bande, sindacati o TUTTI E TRE. L'America ha TUTTI E TRE, ed è il numero 1 in quasi tutte le statistiche sul crimine, più gli esseri invasi dal crimine delle bande dei centri urbani, non solo dei cartelli.
E tu dici che gli altri parlano ****, e tu? Hai controllato le statistiche sulla criminalità?? Sapete che l'Italia ha MENO DELLA META' dei crimini denunciati dalla Germania? L'Italia ha un tasso di omicidi più basso della Corea del Sud, di alcuni paesi scandinavi e più basso in molte altre categorie, uno dei tassi più bassi del MONDO??
La Corea ha una mafia, suppongo che siano tutti impegnati a tacere, e i mafiosi giapponesi? Mafie dell'Europa dell'Est, mafie balcaniche, cinesi, africane, sudamericane, ecc ecc, quindi devi dire OGNI paese ha un caso di "omerta". E amico, questi non sono gli anni '90, la mafia italiana ha molta meno influenza in Italia, il suo potere principale e le entrate provengono dalla droga. Smettila di diffondere questo scenario da incubo sulla mafia e la criminalità italiana, non è vero nella misura in cui affermi.
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You don't get there are mafias everywhere?u also don't get around mucch do u? Just a few of the mafias...Russian, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Jewish, Greek, Albanian, Montenegro, Mexico, there are "mafia states (countries) Mexico, Syria, Venezuela, etc etc., this not counting countries with Syndicates, Gangs, Terrorist, etc etc. @DG_Keys19
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@ramoncastaneda8432 Hey bud, w/o Italy there would be NO America or the West...Inventions?
WIKI: Italy is considered the birthplace of Western civilization and a cultural superpower. Italy has been the starting point of phenomena of international impact such as the Magna Graecia, the Roman Empire, the Roman Catholic Church, the Renaissance, the Risorgimento and the European integration. During its history, the nation gave birth to an enormous number of notable people. Both the internal and external faces of Western culture were born on the Italian peninsula, whether one looks at the history of the Christian faith, civil institutions (such as the Senate), philosophy, law, art, science, or social customs and culture. Italy was home to many well known and influential civilizations, including the Etruscans, Samnites and the Romans,
America discovered by Italian, Columbus, named after an Italian, Amerigo Vespucci, . brought English exploration of the Americas, John Cabot (Giovanni Caboto)
"No other country in Europe can claim the continuity of civilization achieved in Italy"... Harry Hearder - Italy a Short History.
Like that, buttercup?🤣😂😝
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@ramoncastaneda8432 "and Italy owes their existence to Africa, all nations do"
AHHHHHHAHAHA..cough*cough* can't catch my breath*AHHHHHHHAHAHA...WUT??
2000+ years later, Africa is still in 0 AD!!!...
Search YT videos for "What have the Romans ever done for us" and see what Brits say about who taught who.
"Britain’s Roman Legacy...
by Britain Magazine"
They came, they conquered and their lasting effect on Britain is still visible to this day. From ancient forts, roads and walls, to villas, palaces and spas, discover Britain’s Roman legacy. By Penelope Rance
Technology, architecture, language, government, town planning – even a sense of national identity. The depth of the Roman influence on the British Isles was such that it survives to this day, seemingly unmatched by that of any of the invading forces that followed them. But then, the majority of those invaders, and the subsequent ruling elites, wanted nothing better than to be Roman themselves.
🤣😂😝
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@ramoncastaneda8432 Atomic bomb was made possible by a coalition of people, countries...German scientist, Enrico Fermi called the father of.. creator of the world's first nuclear reactor, the Chicago Pile-1.Italian, and many others
Air plane- again drawings by DaVinci over 500 years ago
Radio..."These developments allowed Guglielmo Marconi to turn radio waves into a wireless communication system." Italian, & Tesla...
Submarines were first built by Dutch inventor Cornelius van Drebel in the early 17th century, but it was not until 150 years later that they were first used in naval combat.
Telephone-Antonio Meucci, an Italian immigrant, began developing the design of a talking telegraph or telephone in 1849. In 1871, he filed a caveat (an announcement of an invention) for his design of a talking telegraph. Due to hardships, Meucci could not renew his caveat. His role in the invention of the telephone was overlooked until the United States House of Representatives passed a Resolution on June 11, 2002,
On and on...getting the picture dude, many Italians are involved? Most everything you listed was invented or designed by Europeans, improved by Americans later, I'm not discounting America AT ALL, but don't tell me they were the first.
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