That's interesting. I don't blame them or any other Italian for protesting against their corrupt and incompetent politicians.
I also admire the Sicilians who are sick of the cancer of organised crime and are trying to do something about it. Judges, police officers and local politicians have died when trying to take a stand though they still do. Businessmen and women take their lives in their hands by refusing to pay these parasites for 'protection'.
They are very brave. Especially when you realise that Berlusconi has such links to organised crime. That man is only on the outside of a jail cell because so many Italians inexplicably think he was good for their country.
So I don't know whether the Pitchfork Movement (dodgy name, but maybe it got lost in translation) will be able to do anything about it.
Italy is a very young country and there are local rivalries about everything from politics to food - so it's hard to get enough people to agree on anything.
They are wedded to an appallingly weak system of government and like the idea of a strong man.
Many Italians admire Berlusconi and men like him - strange as it may seem to people from other countries.
Italian politics and society is polluted with some very nasty right wing groups who appear from the You Tube clip to be part of this movement.
The groups find popular support, maybe not for kicking people's heads in, but by tapping into xenophobia and racism which is miles more prevalent and acceptable there than it is in Britain.
Maybe it wasn't in The Guardian claig because that paper and others report on protests in Rome and other major cities and feel that covers the general issue.
Not everything is a dastardly conspiracy by the Left. Or Right, for that matter.