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Lazio
built 213 days ago
Located between the Apennines and the Tyrrhenian Sea, Lazio is an area with a variegated landscape, characterized by volcanic lakes, mountains, vineyards, and olive orchards. Rome dominates the region, separating the forested hills of the north from the southern area with its famous beach localities, including Gaeta and Sabaudia, located near the National Park of the Circeo. The immense cultural and artistic patrimony offered by Rome exists alongside that of Vatican City, the destination of many of the faithful. Besides splendid archaeological sites like Cerveteri and Tarquinia, Latium offers the opportunity to practice aquatic sports, both in the sea and in the lakes of Bolsena, Albano and Bracciano. Among the thermal towns, Fiuggi is famous. You should ... consider tours of Rome.
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Lazio Lazio's most carefully qualified position is on abortion. He walks a fine line that has allowed him to call himself pro-choice but to vote with Republicans on many bills restricting access to abortions. In a break with GOP leadership and presidential nominee George W. Bush, Lazio supports the abortion pill RU-486. However he opposes using Medicaid to pay for it, making the pill an unlikely option for poor women. He supports a ban on partial birth abortions, and has voted to restrict access to abortions under some circumstances. Neither side of this divisive issue considers him a friend.
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Before the House passed the H-1B doubling bill (H.R.3736), Rep. Lazio had an opportunity to vote for a Watt Substitute bill that would have forbidden U.S. firms from using temporary foreign workers to replace Americans. Rep. Lazio opposed that protection. The substitute ... would have required U.S. firms to check a box on a form attesting that they had first sought an American worker for the job. Rep. Lazio voted against that. The protections for American workers fell 33 votes short of passing.
Lazio has always had unsavory connections and a spot on the brownshirts' end of the political spectrum. Mussolini adored the team, frequently appearing in the stands. Il Duce even built Lazio's current stadium, replacing the old Stadio del Partito Nazionale Fascista. In part, Mussolini was drawn to Silvio Piola, the team's unstoppable striker. But the fascists had a deeper attraction to the club. Founded in 1900 by Italian army officers, the club shrouded itself in a martial ethos.
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Rep. Lazio voted IN FAVOR of the Pombo Amendment to H.R.2202. He was voting for a massive new program that would have allowed agri-business to import up to 250,000 foreign farm workers each year for a period of service of less than a year. A bi-partisan congressional commission working with the Bush Administration (1989-93) had concluded that there were at least 190,000 farm workers already in America who were out of work at any given time. The federal commission said the oversupply of farmworkers was a major reason why farm workers’ real incomes had fallen by almost half over the previous two decades. Rep. Lazio rejected the recommendations of the commission and took the side of growers who asked for a larger labor supply. The amendment -- which had no provisions for ensuring that the temporary workers did not stay in the U.S. as illegal aliens -- failed by a 180-242 vote.
Slate Magazine As the memory of Mussolini has grown distant, Lazio's affection for fascism has increased. Rightist parties like the old Alleanza Nazionale treated the team's stadium as their recruiting grounds. In the '80s, the ultras' politics acquired a racist, xenophobic bent as Italy attracted immigrants and Italian soccer attracted Brazilian and African players. New venomous slogans and banners began appearing in the Curva Nord, the ultra section of Lazio's stadium. Before one game last year, police seized 60 different racist and anti-Semitic banners but missed several large ones, including a 50-meter-long banner that taunted fans from a cross-town rival by declaring that they had a "Black Squad, Jewish Home End." At another match against Roma, the opponents were greeted with a sign that told them, "Auschwitz is your town, the ovens your houses."
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