Showing posts with label the Italian general election of 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the Italian general election of 2013. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Everway Fortune Deck and the Italian election

A disclaimer: I don't actually believe in cartomancy. It's just a funny game to me.

Last night, everybody was (understandably) upset here in Italy, as ballots where being counted, etc. Because, you know, general election. Widespread fear of a gridlock (opposing sides prevailing in the two chambers, albeit by a narrow margin) dominated conversations.
I was moving a bunch of books around, and found myself toying with my Fortune Deck from Jonathan Tweet's Everway role-playing game boxed set — which as a teenager I routinely used as a "divination" tool. In jest, then, I interrogated the cards about the next Italian government! Here's what I got:


Fate: the Satyr (indulgence vs. moderation)

Virtue: the Dragon (cunning)
Fault: Spring (new growth)

Past: the Creator (nurture)
Present: Fearing Shadows (unnecessary fear)
Future: the King (authority)

An interesting - and very poignant - spread! Starting from the bottom, I read the Present/Future set as meaning that there will be no gridlock and the new government will hold together. How long? I don't know, for a full five years would be rare and unusual in Italy, but I felt confident enough to bet pizza with a friend that it would last longer than a year and a day.
I read the Creator as meaning that the present state of things was deliberately crafted, and is not the result of random events: just some staple, everyday conspiracy business.
The Dragon as a Virtue means that our elected representatives aren't stupid — not all of them, at least. If they're smart enough, they could occasionally take the right decision instead of surely damning all of us. But Spring as a Fault means that the newcomers, being inexperienced in politics, may act to our general disadvantage as often as for our good — that their overall unpredictability could prove more of a liability than anything else.
In the end, there's only a gray hint of hope in our Fate: politically, this is going to be an inconclusive government. The risk is it will slowly dilapidate Italy, wasting resources over near-sighted gains. But this doesn't need happen: with just enough cunning (an ill-fitting substitute for the actual wisdom we want for) they could as well preserve the current - grim but not hopeless - state of things, for somebody else to tackle in the future.