I’ve only ever been afraid of signs and symbols, never of people and things,” wrote the Romanian novelist Mihail Sebastian at the start of For Two Thousand Years, the marvellous 1934 book that captures his country’s suffocating atmosphere of antisemitism and toxic nationalism between the two world wars. Today in Europe and the US there’s a lot of talk about the 1930s returning, as fears of rising nationalism take hold. But here’s the paradox: several studies show that nationalistic attitudes, particularly anti-migration sentiment, haven’t changed much in the past 20 years. People have always been uncomfortable with the idea of foreigners settling in their country.
ISSO DE PROPAGANDEAREM E SUBSIDIAREM A TRAIÇÃO À NAÇÃO PORTUGUESA DEVE SER PAGA COMO SEMPRE FOI AO LONGO DOS 9 SÉCULOS ...
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