A few comments here and there while we gear up for the usual article writing and news observing. There’s lots of titbits being thrown up in the news that deserve at least a fleeting bit of attention.
Exhausted Parliament
For those who missed the farce that calls itself parliamentary representation yesterday there was much to hear and see. On the PN side most members faffed on about how nothing had been proven and hence the administrative decision is sound. BWSC contract apart we are still left in limbo as to whether the administrative and procedural shortcomings will be seen to. Franco Debono yelled “transparency law and regulation of political party funding” to an audience too distracted (tired) to listen.
Joseph and Anglu tried hard to emulate the PN coup of 1998. They’ve been at it for some time now – instead of concentrating in building a strong and valid alternative to this tired and exhausted government they still pin their hopes on what? On a lapsus, a renegade MP or on their dramatising a problematic democracy in what they hope would be a reversal of 1981. He even got his walk out. Who knows? Maybe a long sabbatical out of parliament might do the Labour party good – enough time to get it’s ideas right.
Lawyers Without Restrictions
An Egyptian group calling itself “Lawyers without Restrictions” has called for the banning of “One Thousand and One Nights“. They are suing Egypt‘s very own General Authority of Culture (they might be twinned with our classification board) and they are suing under article 178 of the Egyptian Criminal Code which bans publication of material deemed “offensive to public decency” with violations of that code bringing a jail sentence of up to two years.
Ludicrous isn’t it? Arabian Nights, Ali Baba and all being banned because they are offensive to public decency. Thank deities of choice that we live in a Western community where such lawsuits are relegated to our medieval past. *ahem*
Language Lessons
Tonio Fenech did not spare a few tirades at the level of English on the Labour side of parliament. Ironically though whenever he read from the Auditor General’s report he did not exactly strike us as the champion of the English Speaking board. We just loved “hundsajt” – a rendering of the word “hindsight” that is right up there with “majtezwell”.
Euro Crash
Having planned a trip to the Big Apple in the near future I am somewhat demoralised by the rapid decline of the buying power of the Euro in the US of A. A few months ago a euro would have bought you a dollar and a half. It is now down to a bit more than a dollar twenty-five. Thank you Greece, thank you UK, thank you Freddie bloody Mac and Fanny bloody Mae. Greece is still not out of the merde and we’ll just have to see what the European Economic Summit will bring us before wondering whether our purchasing power in New York will have gone up in the angry flames of Athens. How some idiots can still claim not to feel “involved” by the politics in other countries (let alone being “bored to tears” by relevant developments in their own) is beyond any reasonable persons ken.
More to come.
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2 replies on “I.M. Jack (shorts)”
Love the hundsajt in the same sentence as majtezwell and love that Russki postcard of trisicha i adin noch! Minn fejn qlajtha dik il-kartolina? Rock on celebrations for Victory in Great Patriotic War.
I don’t quite understand how you can plausibly lay the blame for Euro weakness on the UK, Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac.
How about a “thank you” to dithering eurozone politicians & bureaucrats who have spent the last few months playing a dangerous game of poker with the markets trying to bluff their way through this crisis, hoping never to have to reveal their hand. It has taken months for them to come up with a solution which still falls short of what is necessary. So I think you owe a “thank you” to Angela Merkel, Nicolas Sarkozy & Jean-Claude Trichet (just to mention a few). Contrast this with the way the US reacted in 2008 when Bear Stearns & Lehmans collapsed.
Not to mention the fact that the EU lacks an adequate system to discipline countries which fail to adhere to the Maastricht Criteria thereby undermining the credibility of the system. On this basis, Greece probably should have never been allowed to join the Eurozone or should have been kicked out for their consistent fiscal failures. Prepare to see the eurozone face darker days. This isn’t going to end here, won’t end soon and its unlikely to be a pretty ending!