last moon

Visualizzazione post con etichetta china. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta china. Mostra tutti i post

giovedì 9 marzo 2023

But I still write poems

 


 


 https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0165T61NE

I saw my brother

tired

Under the scorching sun

And I passed straight away

Without a gesture

Without a word

Just with  a thought

To share his pain.

But I still write poems!

mercoledì 8 marzo 2023

And I’m still lonely like a stone

 



 https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0165T61NE

And I’m still lonely

Like a stone.

When you are alone at your birth

You will live alone

Forever.

Only God

Makes me feel good!

martedì 7 marzo 2023

All in one time

 

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0165T61NE


 

People are starving to death

people are banned off from  web

widows are burned down somewhere

women are hit everywhere in the world

All in this same time

while I’m sitting here

in front of my PC

All in one time

 

And you,

somewhere else in the east,

you’re going to enjoy yourself

with your friends

in your free country

while someone else

in the west 

is still sleeping

may be dreaming of his best;

I can’t believe

 in this same time

that I feel free, if not happy,

other people

feel captive in their heart.

sabato 11 luglio 2015

Short History of Chess



Nobody knows were chess come from. Some say from India, others from China.
What seems for sure is that chess spread in  Europe through the Muslim's conquest of south territories. Among the first best players, in modern times,  are remembered the italian Gioacchino Greco, the french Philidor and the spanish churchman De Lucena.
The current rules are the result af a complex evolution made overall for quicking the game.
The first official tournament was held in England in the second half of the 19th century.
Generally speaking the strongest palyers seem to be Indians and Chinese players, though in the last fifty years the world's championship has been won by northamericans and russian players (Bobby Fisher and Gary Kasparov are may be the best known players in the public opinion).
There are millions of players all lver the world and the world champion on charge come s from Norway.
May be Chess will be included in the Olympic games since the next edition.
Wherever it comes from thanks to our ancestrors, whoever they might be, who grand manhood with a great, clever and enjoyable game. 

lunedì 13 febbraio 2012

Tibet free



Twenty three buddist monks
have burnt themselves
to protest against the chinese soldiers
occupying Tibet
taking them their land
their faith 
their freedom.

I would like to live in a world
where people went on the road
in every town, in every place,
asking chinese power
to free tibetan people
hanging giant posters
bearing on capital letters
"China go home"
"Go out of Tibet"
"Chinese go home".

domenica 17 luglio 2011

Free Tibet

Thank you Mr Obama for meeting the Dalai Lama though the chinese governement keeps on protesting, claiming that Tibet it's a domestic affair.
Sorry Mr Premier Tchatch Weng or whatever you're named, but Tibet is not a chinese affair.
Tibet will never be chinese.
I don't have anything special against China and chinese people but I don't like communism and above all I don't people who go to foreign countries imposing their customs and their laws against the traditions and the local habits.
Furthermore I think that every man has the right to believe in his God, supposing is a God of love and peace.
I'm Christian but I want everybody free of worshipping any God and even to don't believe at all.
Commerce and financial power cannot kill freedom.
Please America keep on fighting for freedom. Don't let materialism win against spiritualism.
Don't let communism win against liberalism.
Don't let liberty fall in front of slavery.

venerdì 1 luglio 2011

Almost a bridge to heaven!

The New world's longest  record belongs now to The Jiaozhou Bay bridge.
It covers more than the distance between Dover and Calais actually measuring more than 24 miles.
It took 4 years to build it up and costs almost 1£billion.
If it were built toward the sky it could be ... a bridge to heaven!


To know more about
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2009748/emailArticle.html

domenica 27 giugno 2010

Sweet Duty


- I'm really very sleepy....my friend....
- Ok! Take your nap! I'm on charge for the first sentry-duty......

Picture from dailymail.co.uk

giovedì 18 febbraio 2010

Thanks Mr Obama


Thank you Mr Obama for receiving the Dalai Lama at The White House (though at a low profile, as papers say).


I'm not talking for political reasons. I know reasons are never all at on side only.


Nevertheless I can't help observing the U.S.A., also in this event, have given an example of democracy.


Nobody is perfect in the world but we have to be able to distinguish(and sometimes choose) between good and evil; between freedom and oppression; between democracy and dictatorship.


Every people in the world have the right to self governement, basically according to their own culture, traditions and beliefs.


To know more By Mail Foreign Service on DM on line


The Dalai Lama and U.S president Barack Obama met for the first time at the White House today, defying furious protests from China.
The two Nobel Peace Prize winners seemed intent on keeping the meeting low-key, in order avoid worsening tensions between the two countries.
The Tibetan spiritual leader, who was also denied a meeting in the Oval office, left via a side entrance where rubbish bags were piled up and The White House didn't release photos of the meeting until several hours afterwards.

Men of peace meet: The Dalai Lama and Barack Obama during their meeting at The White House
Wearing sandals and burgundy robes, he said he had expressed to Mr Obama his admiration for the U.S. as a 'champion of democracy, freedom, human values'.
The Dalai Lama also pictured touching snow heaps shovelled to the side of White House paths following recent blizzards in Washington.

Not-so-grand exit: The Dalai Lama leaves the White House via an exit where rubbish bags are kept on the ground following his meeting with Barack Obama
China, which is increasingly at odds with the U.S. over currency exchanges, Taiwan arms sales and internet censorship, said the meeting would further damage ties.
But, by going ahead, Mr Obama may be trying to show his resolve against increasingly assertive Chinese leaders after facing criticism for being too soft on them during his trip to China in November.
Earlier, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said dismissively of the visit: ‘Chinese officials have known about this and their reaction is their reaction.’

His meeting with Mr Obama was delibately low profile because of China's outrage
Although admired by millions around the world as a man of peace, the Dalai Lama is accused by Beijing of being a dangerous separatist who foments unrest in Tibet.
The White House insisted America and China - the world’s largest and third-biggest economies respectively - have a ‘mature relationship’ capable of withstanding disagreements.
But mindful of Chinese sensitivities, the White House sought to strike a balance in the Dalai Lama’s visit.

The Dalai Lama said he admired America's stance on freedom
The President is also currently attempting to secure China's help in settling North Korean and Iranian nuclear standoffs.
So, seeking to avoid alienating Beijing, Mr Obama had delayed meeting the Dalai Lama until after first seeing Chinese leaders during his Asia trip last year.


During today’s visit, Mr Obama - like his White House predecessors - denied the Dalai Lama the symbolism of meeting in the Oval Office.
Instead, they met in the lesser-known Map Room. Such distinctions signalled to China that the Tibetan monk was not being received as a political leader.
The Dalai Lama entered the White House out of sight of journalists, and the talks were closed to media coverage.
The White House planned to release a photograph later.
But honouring the Dalai Lama could still help Obama burnish his administration’s credentials among human rights activists.
They accuse him of focusing on global issues with Beijing at the expense of promoting Chinese democratic reforms.
Ahead of the talks, Tibetans living near the Dalai Lama’s birthplace welcomed the White House meeting with a defiant show of fireworks.
The midnight display along a valley dotted with Tibetan Buddhist monasteries was a reminder that the Dalai Lama remains a potent figure in his homeland.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1251888/Dalai-Lama-meet-Barack-Obama-U-S-defies-protests-China.html#ixzz0eddaTmcn