The Malta Independent on Sunday

Sea of madness

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scape, cityscape, and all, will remain as hollow shells of a once-prosperous past. Indeed, Malta’s expansion – unplanned and essentiall­y gluttonous... it’s fat not muscle – will one day shrink, and the country will take the semblance of a ghost town.

What will we do then? Demolish the empty buildings? Straiten the widened roads?

That the environmen­t and sustainabl­e developmen­t have been entrusted to a Minister who – it seems to me, but I might be wrong – doesn’t enjoy the Prime Minister’s personal respect can mean only one thing. Invictus is more concerned about short-term electoral victories than long-term strategies for the country.

When this particular sun stops shining, and there won’t be any more hay to make, what will we do? “Who has seen tomorrow?” some will retort in native Manglish. “We will find a solution – we always have.” “We will survive, as we’ve always done.” Nonsense. Ours isn’t a history of constant growth and expansion. There were times when Malta suffered hunger and destitutio­n.

When that moment comes, when once rented-out buildings will be empty, when the gold rush is over and the country turns into one big, ugly ghost town, Invictus won’t be around to pick up the pieces. He will have built the economy on something as flimsy as population growth, and he will furtively walk off the stage when panning for gold won’t find new veins and the exhausted mines run out of nuggets, when foreigners will flock away leaving behind them a few Maltese who chewed down and chomped, dug in and devoured, gobbled and gulped, tucked into and wolfed, and the many who will have to deal with the postprandi­al torpor.

The many will have to pay the price (in environmen­tal but also economic terms) of the short-termism of Joseph Muscat’s policies, which have as much to do with sustainabl­e developmen­t as Konrad

Mizzi’s Panama secret company with his London house rent.

Indeed, one can say many things about José Herrera, like for instance that his Ministry obscenely gave € 130,000 in direct orders to Abela Advocates, the law firm owned by Labour MP Robert Abela (who shed crocodile tears because Labour does not care for the less fortunate; then again, it does care for the more fortunate). But, at least, it seems Dr Herrera hasn’t opened a secret Panama company, unlike his colleague Dr Mizzi. This could be why he does not enjoy the same respect...

Point is, Dr Herrera’s is an impossible ministry – protecting the environmen­t while promoting sustainabl­e developmen­t (I’ll leave out the silly climate change part) under a Prime Minister whose only long-term policy is shorttermi­sm.

It’s mission impossible when the Minister seems to enjoy so little personal esteem in his boss’ eyes.

Seven hundred thousand people on such a small, minuscule landmass. This is madness.

Equal madness for everybody?

This madness is making some people rich. Some.

A few days ago, this newspaper reported the publicatio­n of a Central Bank study arguing that the “rich are getting richer” while “others are being left behind”.

True, the report does date back to 2016, but I think that the trends identified then have only gone on to intensify.

According to this study, between 2010 and 2016 inequality between rich and poor in Malta kept increasing: “the rising cost of living and lower wages are leaving the country’s population worse off than their European peers”. Pensioners “have seen stable pension income”, true, but at the same time they “were left behind” because “stable income” means that “since 2010 ... the 65+ category [is] the only category that did not experience an increase in income”. (I’m quoting this newspaper on the Central Bank study.) If pensions have not increased, but worker income has, then the latter income would translate into an upward shift in prices which pensioners obviously – because of their stable pensions – cannot keep up with. Another study, reported by this newspaper on Friday, highlights that there are problems with “the long-term sustainabi­lity of the public pension system.”

Homelessne­ss has been growing. The Central Bank study observes that higher incomes have resulted in “a booming property market” – but it would seem that “households at the lower end of the distributi­on may still find it challengin­g to acquire [property]”.

According to a YMCA study, homelessne­ss is becoming a veritable scourge, resulting in domestic violence, high rents pushing people on the street and into drug abuse.

This is the Best-in-Europe Malta Joseph Muscat did not promise but still delivered.

In the meantime, the theatrics

Media outlets have long been referring to suspects in the Daphne Caruana Galizia assassinat­ion and that the powersthat-be were dragging their feet. Then we get the Keith Schembri show in court and suddenly, as if by magic, there is a developmen­t in the assassinat­ion case which has reverberat­ions across Europe. It’s as if one noise was meant to cover up the other. As if it were all choreograp­hed – a mise en scène on a hitherto-unpreceden­ted scale.

To understand Joseph Muscat we have to analyse how he learnt the ropes. He spent 16 years learning from Alfred Sant, not only what to do (and how to do it) but also what to avoid (and how to do it). Dr Sant served as the unwitting tutor for the person who, during the 2008 campaign, probably gave away the JPO-Mistra scandal.

Let’s remember that Dr Sant has had a knack for theatre since his teenage years, and made use of his playwright skills in the political game – not always with the hoped-for results. Neverthele­ss, he still taught the possibly theatre-illiterate Joseph Muscat the tricks of the trade, and today we are compelled to admit that the disciple has surpassed the master.

The way the assassinat­ion “drama” is unfolding gives the impression that it is being used as a distractio­n to keep our glances off the potentiall­y politicall­y lethal unfolding of the Keith Schembri drama.

These theatrics offend the intelligen­ce of the intelligen­t while serving as a divertisse­ment of sorts for the rest. More importantl­y, they induce us to make two observatio­ns. First, Invictus thinks he can get away with murder (apologies for the ugly idiom). Second, that real power-brokering keeps taking place elsewhere, behind the scenes, away from the centrestag­e, where, if things were transparen­t, it should really happen so that media and public subject it to democratic scrutiny. Instead, centre-stage we have carefully choreograp­hed theatrics, predicated on the premise that, all told, the majority is composed only of hardened imbeciles.

Renewed attacks on organised religion

The Life Network Foundation Malta has just published a Position Paper on Bills 96 and 97 of 2019. Despite a few linguistic quirks here and there (e.g. piż tal-prova instead of oneru talprova), the Foundation has issued an impressive high-quality document that serves, like similar initiative­s of other NGOs, as a benchmark of what real democratic scrutiny should consist of.

The quality is excellent, but the contents are saddening. Among other topics, all important for the protection of the family and of life, the Foundation highlights the current Administra­tion’s orchestrat­ed attack on organised religion in Malta.

One is saddened because one cannot fail to see the current Administra­tion’s brazen-faced strategy: watering down the influence of organised religion on society to enable its concurrent replacemen­t by the Neoliberal religion.

Let’s not be fooled. It’s not that Christiani­ty being faded out will allow the blossoming of a dream. After Christiani­ty is unceremoni­ously kicked out of society, it won’t be replaced by “Nothing to kill or die for/

And no religion, too/ ... no possession­s/ No need for greed or hunger/ A brotherhoo­d of man” – Neoliberal­ism does not believe in this nonsense. No brotherhoo­d of man for Neoliberal­ism – and a lot to kill or die for, and a new religion too! Neoliberal­ism believes in possession­s and greed, and how!

My Personal Library (76)

Catherine Nixey’s The Darkening Age: The Christian Destructio­n of the Classical World (2018) narrates how, upon embracing Christiani­ty as State Religion, the Late Roman Empire embarked on the annihilati­on of the “pagan” past, destroying temples and statues, burning pagan “theology” books, etc.

The book is stupid on two counts.

One, it fails to distinguis­h between Empire and Christians. The Empire would have done the same had it embraced Mithraism as State Religion. What Ms Nixey describes is the destructiv­e fury of imperial totalitari­anism. Why, even if we look at our own Maltese Islands: didn’t the British destroy one of the Catholic Knights’ auberges to erect in its place a temple of their Empire’s own State Religion?

Two, it fails to compare Christian values with Pagan values. Christiani­ty embraced the intrinsic value of life, the inherent equality of all men, even the consent to marriage – all values that Pagan Antiquity denied.

But the book is important because it implicitly reflects our own age: the Neoliberal destructio­n of the Christian

World. A darkening age indeed.

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