Categories
Arts Travel

Pompidou

Last Saturday we tripped off to the military town across the border. Well it is military no more and ever since the Franco-German hostilites over Alsace-Lorraine cooled down the city of Metz has been trying to reinvent itself. The Centre Pompidou inaugurated this year goes a long way in placing the beautiful city back on the map of “visitable” destinations in France. Metz is hoping to have the “Bilbao effect” in this quiet north-east corner of the hexagon.

It’s worth visiting. Not just for the Pompidou centre but also for the magnificent cathedral, for the lovely architecture that is a mélange of the attempts of the French/German occupiers to stamp their imprint on this outpost. If you do visit this corner of the world then you would not be amiss to try out the Italian restaurant on Place de Paris in Luxembourg called “La Voglia Matta“. They have an incredible choice of pastas – with the additional benefit of a copious choice of home made gluten-free pastissimi. I’m in love with the gf gnocchi quattro formaggi or the sugo di cinghiale.The restaurant is also worth visiting because of the kitschy fifties decor and magnificent view over Avenue de la Liberté – book a window seat to really enjoy the experience!

Skip dessert at the restaurant (you’ll have no space for it anyway) and drive/bus to the City Concorde in Bertrange for one of the best ice-creams on the face of this planet. It’s another Italian establishment called Franky. My favourite is a fiordilatte/chocolate mix though you cannot be disappointed by any of the tastes on sale.

The Pompidou Photoshoot (feat. LL & the innocent bystanders):

Categories
Divorce Politics

CMB and the Marriage Certificate

There’s a logical leap in Carmelo Mifsud Bonnici’s article in today’s Times (The burden of public interest on indissolubility of marriage) that has escaped the attention of the many anti-divorce campaigners who have been linking the article all over facebook. CMB is eager to explain the stake the state has within the boundaries of private marriage – he has to be clear why the state believes in the tool of indissolubility as being the best bet for civil society’s sanity. To get to the point of arguing on the importance of indissolubility of marriage for the public interest, CMB has to justify the interference of the state in the first place: why does the state care whether or not marriage can be dissolved or not?

Aha. And that is where the quick gloss by CMB is glaringly obvious. CMB tells us:

The state should not in any way be involved in the decision to enter into that union and in the choice of marriage partners. The state registers a marriage and recognises certain rights of the parties.

This is not to say that the state has no stake in the stability of marriage, because it is within stable marriages that its future citizens are nurtured and brought to maturity in the best possible way and because the spouses in a stable marriage are not distracted unduly from their normal civilian working life.

Q.E.D. right? Not really. If you really were to follow CMB’s logic to its conclusion then the first part of his statements is built on a deceitful assertion. The state cannot suddenly develop an interest in the success or otherwise of a marriage ONLY once it has been sealed. CMB feigns a passive role of the state until the marriage union is sealed – it recognises the union and certain rights of the parties. Then – only then – according to CMB does the state develop a stake in the stability of marriage. This stake is supposedly because the spouses should not be distracted unduly from their civilian working life.

Why not before the union then? What stops the state from ensuring that its stake in the civil union is safeguarded? How? Well by making sure that its citizens about to engage in the union are fully prepared to do so – that they can guarantee a stable marriage that “nurtures and produces the maturity that does not distract from their civilian working life”.

If CMB were serious about the role of the state as he describes it, then his kind of logic would lead to marriage permits and marriages being sanctioned by the state. The state would be able to tell you whether or not you are allowed to marry in the first place – based on suitability. If the state’s role is in trying to ensure the stable, mature etc marriage then it should do so in full. Imagine that. Imagine criteria for stable marriages – the certificate of a suitable wife and husband who will contribute to society.

It would not work would it? And maybe that’s the very same reason why the state has no business imposing indissolubility on the marriage contract. It cannot decide for the parties if they are willing to move on and try again. CMB’s logic is false because it is built on a false assertion about the motives of the state. The problem of CMB is that his logic is in a twist because no amount of legal philosophy will justify the denial of divorce rights. He cannot declare his ultimate motivation at the end of the day because it has nothing to do with laws and civic duty. It is a fettered discretion based on his private beliefs.

Categories
Articles

J'accuse : I.M. Jack (The Uncouth)

I’ve got a running series of posts in the blog that goes by the name of “I.M. Jack”. The title came around as a bit of a spoofy nod to the rotund columnist who graces the pages of a rival paper every Saturday. Every time I blog an “I.M. Jack” post it’s more of a round-up of different stories that serendipitously find themselves sharing the same post and limelight. I normally do that out of expediency and to save myself from posting a series of mini-posts, and also because by the time the third “I.M. Jack” got out I sort of got used to the little “round-up” idea possibilities that it afforded.

So yes, this week’s effort comes to you in a disjointed, I.M. Jack-ish sort of way, that is it can be read in little snippets or (for the well-trained in J’accuse loghorrea) all in one go. The quality of the articles, incidentally, should be improving exponentially (modestly speaking of course) as the cold weather begins to bitch-slap the Grand Duchy earlier than usual. Like Terry Pratchett’s golems and trolls, I tend to function more sharply as the weather begins to get colder. (Speaking of Pratchett, do get your hands on his latest novel I Shall Wear Midnight – it rocks). Let us then begin the I.M. Jack tour.

On the dignity of Parliament

Is it just me or is Parliament really becoming government’s bitch? I know, I know, I should be more reverent towards the hallowed institution that is fundamental to our very democracy but hey, if our very own representatives seem to be having a tough time understanding the importance of their roles, I don’t see why we should bother – right? Austin Gatt usually figures high on my list of valid politicians in this country of ours but he took the lead in the dismissal of the request for hearing of witnesses in the PAC on some wobbly excuse that the Auditor General had already carried out much of the hearing.

Bollocks. Even the kind of papers that do not usually lend themselves easily to government criticism carried harsh editorials condemning the lacklustre sense of wanton disrespect that everybody under the sun could read into the happenings at the PAC. We did not even have to fight off the temptation to be balanced and to apportion a fair share of criticism to the Labourite side of the benches by questioning their constant nagging and moral convictions. The message Austin et al were sending was plain – they refused to submit the BWSC process to a parliamentary level of scrutiny that is normal in most parliamentary democracies. The words of Franco Debono come back to haunt the mind now – the dignity of Parliament is being seriously diluted and something must be done quickly to repristinate a good working order.

On money

It is not just our sense of democracy that is being put into serious question. This week, EU leaders sat around a table somewhere in Luxembourg and agreed to revise the rules on budget deficit. Meanwhile, in the House of Commons in London, George Osborne delivered a budget that was described as a “historic attempt to turn around the juggernaut of state public spending”. The Daily Mail headlined Man Who Rolled Back The State on Friday, as the Con-Dem coalition embarked on a programme that would savage benefits, axe jobs, slash budgets and attempt to reverse 60 years of public spending.

An interesting article in the International Herald Tribune took in these latest European reforms at both EU and national level and questioned whether the Keynesian formula has been ditched once and for all. European governments no longer seem to believe that the solution to the recession is to pump more money into the economy and let the economy fix itself. Probably this has much to do with the distrust in the key power centres of the economy and how they seem to have brought about this recession themselves with their unethical way of thinking.

So yes, capitalism as we know it is in a bit of a fix. Which is when the loony left goes out on the streets and begins to whine. Fairness, as they know it, is about to go terribly wrong and the welfare state in which money seems to grow on trees for those who qualify for the big safety net in the sky is suddenly shrinking before their very eyes. Which is why we have angry men in streets preparing to raise barricades and fight with the riot police. Like the money will come flying from the sky once the capitalist monster is dealt the final deathblow. Go figure. Baroness Thatcher was hospitalised this week so she was saved the horror of having to see reminders of the age of her iron hand when minors and other representatives of the leftist workforce took to the streets.

On values and relativism

Maltese relativism is back with a twist. The House of Lords (UK) this week opened up a new world in the universe of marriage law by accepting the validity of a prenup. That’s short for prenuptial contract and has been the stuff of movies and murder stories across the pond for quite a while, but it may surprise you that its legal validity is very much a novelty this side of the Atlantic. What a prenup does is that it stipulates what will happen in the unfortunate eventuality that a happy couple that is about to engage in lawful matrimony should somehow fall out.

It’s a divorce settlement signed when things are still rosy, when the amours are still love struck and when altruistic lovey-doveyiness still pervades the inner sanctum of the quasi-conjugal unit. It takes advantage of the goodwill of the parties to pre-draft and establish what can still be considered to be an amicable settlement as to the division of all property. Thusly, later, when the better half is reaching for the short and curlies armed with a knife, and it is clear that it will not be death that will “us part” but rather the manifest impossibility of future cohabitation, the couple will find that the prenup they signed in what must seem another life will come into force and the pre-ordained division of assets as per prenup will take place without too much acrimonious battling.

The House of Lords hath ruled that such prenups will always apply unless they are manifestly unfair (leave it to the men of law to argue whether charm by fatal attraction could sufficiently qualify as having succumbed under sexual duress). Meanwhile, back in Malta (and back is the operative word here) we are still facing the discombobulating farce of wondering whether or not to introduce divorce by popular suffrage. As I said last week, this is a result of our testicle-less politicians (sanscouillistes) wanting to hide behind the “will of the people”. What next? A referendum on Income Tax? I wonder how that one will go.

Then, as fellow columnist Caruana Galizia pointed out on Thursday, there was the blatant contradiction between on the one hand all the disquisitions as to the morality of voting for divorce and on the other hand, the facility with which some parliamentary committee had no qualms in proposing the freezing of embryos. Climb up walls? We do that… every five years. All we needed was the LGBT movement complaining about the prohibition of IVF accessibility for gay couples. Sure – this country is having problems coming to terms with the idea of divorce but it will have no problems with little Capslock (I’m sure someone, somewhere has that name) being raised by mummy and … mummy. (The ghost of Beppe shudders).

On the strong arm of the law

The next time you are angry with someone and your anger leads you to the uncontrollable urge to punch that person, just remember one thing: it comes at a price. And if you can afford €100 then go ahead and do your Mohammed Ali. That is the going rate for a punch, as the man who assaulted the CABS officer discovered. Not that expensive, is it? As for letting loose with a gun on officers of the law and putting their life in manifest danger (vide HSBC hold-up and shootout) – that still does not disqualify you from bail.

Sarcasm aside – it is pissing off isn’t it? I mean, what the hell? Personally, I am not of the very physical kind and my best weapon in a punch up is my wit that sends one three-letter word to the brain: RUN. So if ever I risk being on the receiving end of someone’s clenched fist, I would like to think that there is also a sufficient disincentive in the form of a legal deterrent that will allow me to bargain my way out of such fury without having to resort to the Coward’s Gentlemanly Exit. It should be so for any law-abiding citizen, who would prefer not to have to calculate at which point throwing a punch or two towards the rabid bully could constitute valid self-defence (assuming he has a punch or two he can throw). The news from the Law Courts is not promising in this respect.

Traitors and idols

When some members of the black and white community of which I form part labelled Zlatan Ibrahimovic a gypsy whore, I tended to turn a blind eye and deaf ear and glossed over the possibility of tut-tutting such unsporting behaviour. I despised the lanky, self-pompous oaf all the more for leaving Juventus bang in the middle of what is now evidently a frame up to play for the saddest of teams ever to have disgraced Italian football grounds. When he actually moved on to another team a few complaints later, I did not shed a tear of sympathy for his latest dumped girlfriend but confirmed my earlier suspicions that here we were seeing the epitome of modern footballing greed. He’s moved on again (go figure) and is still worthless when it comes to crucial games on the European football stage but I’m not here to talk about Zlatan.

It’s the Rooney saga that really lit up more red lights as to the general decline of the gentlemanly side of football. Where are the Ryan Giggs, the Francesco Tottis, the Rauls, the Maldinis – and above all the Alessandro Del Pieros – in modern football? The word mercenary does not even begin to explain the spirit of today’s breed of men of the leather ball. No matter that by the time I finished typing this article Wayne has signed a new, improved contract keeping him at United, as predicted solely by Luciano Moggi when everybody else was betting on his next destination. No matter that he has been appeased with some beefing up of the contract.

What I would like to know is how the little Scouser will walk into that changing room and face his “team-mates” from Giggs to Nani to Bebe to Fletcher without being overcome by a sense of shame. Forget fidelity to the club, forget respect for the supporters, forget gratitude to a coach who fathered him. What jarred most in the Rooney saga was the ease with which he could bad-mouth his fellow team-mates by going public and basically claiming that they are not good enough to play with him. It’s stuff that makes you sick and I seriously doubt how easily Rooney can win back the respect he blew away over two crazy days in October.

Milos Krasic, Juventus’ latest idol, is a step back out of this world of mercenaries. I was not sure whether his determination to join Juventus should be taken seriously but the stories coming from Torino day after day show an old-fashioned, dedicated footballer who is in love with his new environment and determined to show the kind of attachment to a club that is sadly becoming rarer and rarer. He has one captain he can look up to who has broken all kinds of records and won all sorts of trophies. Last Sunday he broke one of the latest barriers, reaching the great Boniperti’s goal-tally in the Campionato. He turns 36 next month but we could be lucky enough to see him in action for some time yet.

Grazie Alex.

Categories
Mediawatch

Reporters Sans Frontières

NGO Reporters Sans Frontières has released the 2010 Press Freedom Index. You can find this index by clicking here. Surprisingly, given the weird goings on in the field of censorship in the island over the past year, Malta’s performance is quite good. It features in the 14th place overall – which is excellent to be honest. Which got J’accuse thinking. How exactly is the information compiled? More importantly who compiles it? By following the link you can also se the pdf documents explaining what questions were asked of each country and how the questions were scored (marked). What we do not know is what answers were given for Malta.

Before you go ballistic, we are not trying to imply that Malta is some sort of third world state with no real press freedoms but think of these points:

1) Censorship of Realtà magazine

2) Dearth of investigative journalism on TV and press

3) the absence of independent TVs

4) the strong presence of establishment points of view and barriers to the market penetration

5) lack of scrutiny of such programmes as exist (they can afford to bumble on in limbo)

6) The facility with which a politician can be classified as a pressman for the purposes of political propaganda (see JPO)

7) the weakness of the freedom of information and data protection acts

8) the farcical conditions and conditioning with which our politicians allow scrutiny of their acts (can you really investigate a politician or must you submit to the conditions for interview?)

There’s more. But it does make you wonder who is sending the info to RSF. Who exactly made Malta sound like an idyllic state where the press is performing its functions of the fourth estate and fourth guardian of democratic principles? Interesting questions no?

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Categories
Sport

Moggi Gets Rooney Right

This morning I read my usual fare of morning news while following the roundup of Juve’s miserable performance in the Europa league last night. The last article I read before packing off for work was Moggi’s weekly contribution to tuttomercatoweb in which he once again attacked Saint Moratti and pointed out the Intercettato Magnate’s incongruities. The article then ended with a prediction on the current Rooney saga:

In chiusura dalla redazione di Tuttomercatoweb.com, mi hanno chiesto un pronostico su come finirà la trattativa Rooney; rispondo volentieri. Real? Chelsea? Inter? City? Penso che alla lunga resti allo United con un nuovo contratto: più lungo e più ricco. Almeno, di solito, il giochino dei “Campioni” è questo; basta saperlo.

Which is when I decided that no matter how right he can be about Moratti’s lies upon lies, Moggi had definitely lost it with regards to guessing Rooney’s future. I thought that there was no way ManU could keep Rooney after his misfit outburst and his insults to his teammates. Well. Turns out that Mago Moggi was right.

BBC news just out has confirmed that Rooney has signed a new 5-year deal to stay at United. Now we wait for the rest of Moggi’s points to be finally confirmed in a court of law. Here’s a reminder (still Moggi speaking):

“Sono d’accordo con le sentenze del 2006”. Incredibile, ma assurdamente vero. Sono le parole di Massimo Moratti, il quale nell’atto di sfoggiare ed ostentare un’onestà che tutti avete avuto modo di vedere quanto gli appartenga, continua a dimenticare fatti incontestabili, provati ed evidenti, che cozzano con le sue professioni d’innocenza. Il presidente nerazzurro, non so se volontariamente o meno, tralascia di ricordare l’interrogatorio di Tavaroli, nel quale quest’ultimo confessava di aver ricevuto precise disposizioni di pedinare ed intercettare giocatori e dirigenti vari. Non ricorda di avere avuto a completa disposizione un colosso della telefonia (guardacaso)come Telecom; dimentica di aver dato mandato ad un suo dirigente di procurarsi un passaporto falso, attraverso la motorizzazione di Latina e con l’ausilio di un certo Baldini fece il resto. Non esattamente uno stinco di santo. Un passaporto che, tra le altre cose, pagò qualcosa come ottantamila dollari. L’onesto per eccellenza è lo stesso che ha rivendicato per anni lo scudetto del 1998, quello del famoso rigore su Ronaldo. A nessuno è però venuto in mente che quella partita sarebbe dovuta finire 3-0 a tavolino per la Juventus, dato che nella rosa interista c’era un giocatore che non avrebbe nemmeno potuto farne parte, figuriamoci giocare.

The full article on Tuttomercatoweb.

Categories
Mediawatch

Definitely not Bondi+

Here’s an interesting interview with Roberto Saviano. Look out (3 minutes plus) for the explanation on why it is important that investigative (and narrative) programs exist and more importantly that they are paid (and paid well, when they generate good returns from ads). But more importantly look out for how Saviano explains that the biggest justification for having people earning money from these programmes is that they can be judged, that we can expect standards from them and that the job is well done. Next time you complain about Bondi+ don’t get stuck on the typical Maltese pettiness of who earns what and why – remember the crucial point : the obligation Bondi and his team have to provide a quality investigative programme of real journalism. J’accuse will keep on reminding Bondi of his obligation and we will continue to bask in the idea that he actually thinks he can get away selling the idea that he is unaware of any criticism because he can’t read.

“Essere professionale significa che lo spettatore puo giudicare anche in maniera severa. Perche sei stato pagato e quindi devi dare il meglio di te.” – Saviano