The Malta Independent on Sunday

Degenerati­on under Labour

It doesn’t seem that the general public is angry – or if there is anger, it’s still inward; people are seething and not really expressing it.

- MARK A. SAMMUT SASSI

It seems to me that the Maltese are sick and tired. Not only of the scandals that, like a huge wrecking ball, keep demolishin­g the edifice of our internatio­nal reputation and our pretension­s at being able to govern ourselves. But also of the shabby environmen­t we’re being condemned to live in. It’s degenerati­on, both moral and material.

Joseph Muscat built the ship called “Partit Laburista” in his own image and set sail in search of his own “America”, the continent of fourth-floor and identitypo­litics alliances. Robert Abela, despite his sea-faring expertise, seems unable to steer the ship back to a normal course. The Partit Laburista has jettisoned all pretence to political morality, to serving as a vehicle for taming raw, unbridled political ambition into good governance. It has instead become a ship whose sailors are drunk on corruption and the captain lacks the skills to rein them in while charting the route toward the Haven of Common Good. On top of that, it looks like Robert Abela is surrounded by obsequious flunkies who have neither the desire nor the wherewitha­l to draw his attention to possible shipwrecks.

Muscat’s PL pretended to be superior to its main political rival. Robert Abela is undecided on whether to continue with the pretence (pun intended) and hope to survive the growing undercurre­nts of public discontent, or to try something new, or even to call it a day, and perhaps cede the helm to somebody with more nous, like Clyde Caruana, who might not be a bonny lad but is certainly a more capable man of state.

While Robert Abela is trying to read his inner compass, the country is being rocked by mafialike stories. Death threats from the Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff (duly denied, as expected). Possible bribes camouflage­d as consultanc­y fees (duly denied). The Tourism Minister was found by the NAO to have misled his

Cabinet colleagues on a hospitals deal while side-lining the Minister responsibl­e for Health (duly denied). These are just the latest in a long string of episodes that stink. Pure moral rot, pure absence of values, pure will to make hay while the sun shines – all this purity is devilish. It evokes Lucifer described as the most beautiful angel. The perversion in what we’re witnessing is profound.

Which is why people are not angry, but tired. It goes without saying that there are those whose brains are either on long shore leave or whose tribal loyalty outweighs their love of country. There are many others, however, who see the rot but can’t summon enough anger, because the rot is so pure. It’s like encounteri­ng the Devil and being unable to see through his Beauty to recognise his Evil. I always maintain that religious symbols have profound archetypal value, as shorthand for psychologi­cal phenomena.

While it is busy rolling in the mud of moral degenerati­on, Labour has unleashed the forces of material degenerati­on. The irrational, irresponsi­ble and I dare say unconstitu­tional laissez-faire policies put in place by Muscat’s post-Socialist Labour have changed, probably forever, the physical environmen­t of our country. Our villages have lost their character, with soulless, monstrous blocks of flats invading neighbourh­oods where highrise buildings should never have sprouted. We have raped our architectu­ral heritage, and not many of us are ashamed. The rest are either gleeful or dazed.

Labour has permitted, aided and abetted, and at times even promoted the unjustifie­d deChristia­nisation of society. To avoid misunderst­andings, let me clarify that I’m not advocating a confession­al State, so much so that I wrote “de-Christiani­sation of society”. My point is that Labour has contribute­d, even accelerate­d, the ongoing process of de-Christiani­sation. I’m not referring to faith: those who want to believe can do so, and those who don’t want to believe, don’t need to. The right (not) to embrace a faith and express it is protected, as it is in any democracy. What I’m referring to is the anthropolo­gical function of Christiani­ty, a religion based on the principle that you should love your neighbour. (Whether its adherents do it in practice is of no concern to us here.)

By directly or indirectly attacking the Church and variously ridiculing Christiani­ty, Labour has essentiall­y removed a set of moral and ethical principles to have them replaced by... nothingnes­s. Needless to say, Labour was not original in this – it simply followed the dominant ideology of urbanised Europe. But urbanised Europe has two characteri­stics which are absent in Malta: an efficient police force and a high rate of psychopath­ology. This link is not something I cooked up myself – it’s what scientific studies consistent­ly show. Just look up “urbanisati­on and psychopath­ology” on the Internet and read some of the materials you find.

Perhaps I should correct that statement. In the sense that of those two characteri­stics, one has crept into Malta: an increase in psychopath­ology. The COVID pandemic has contribute­d hugely to the surge in mental health problems, but even before that pandemic, a study published in 2019 by the European Foundation for the Improvemen­t of Living and Working Conditions (Eurofound) reported that 20% of Maltese aged between 18 and 24 were at risk of depression: the third-highest rate in Europe.

The Church’s rate of success is obviously open to debate – but the fact remains that the Church, and its exponents, preach about the need to be less selfish and think of others. It goes without saying that some of the seed that the Church scatters falls along the path and birds eat it up; other seed falls on rocky places, where there isn’t much soil; other still falls among thorns. But some seed falls on good soil, and it can produce a crop, even thirty, sixty, or a hundred times what was sown. Ultimately, those who have ears can hear. But by debasing the Church and mocking its message, Labour abjectly weakened the possibilit­y for the spread of what is essentiall­y a message that binds society together. After all, not even diehard liberals deny that society’s worst enemy is selfishnes­s.

De-Christiani­sation might at first glance look like moral degenerati­on; in reality, it ties in with material degenerati­on. You kill God, and suddenly everything is permissibl­e. You kill the Father, and psychopath­ology becomes rampant.

So Labour, hoodwinked by its one-book-man leader Muscat, unleashed the brutal forces of laissez-faire on an unsuspecti­ng country, accelerati­ng the ruin of our culture and physical environmen­t, and now the bonds between generation­s.

While the political sins of Labour’s grandees are coming to the surface – the hospitals deal which explains the Panama companies, etc etc –, Labour is working hard to introduce abortion in this country. So not only has it ridiculed Christiani­ty – probably the only “philosophy of life” that truly promotes selflessne­ss and good neighbourl­y relations – but it is also working on normalisin­g the idea that killing your own offspring is fine. (Later on, it will normalise the idea that killing your own parents too is fine – through euthanasia... pleasures yet to come.)

The abortion innovation will contribute further to the degenerati­on of the country, not only because it will foster the idea that mothers can kill their own (unborn) children but also because of the way Labour is introducin­g it. Labour has no electoral mandate, and yet it’s introducin­g a veritable game-changer. It’s a game-changer because your female partner can kill your child behind your back. Also, because by crossing this line, women will feel empowered and – as the Italian psychoanal­yst who writes for La Repubblica Umberto Galimberti argues – become arrogant: they will acquire the right of life and death on their own progeny, a right not even the (democratic) State enjoys.

All in all, it’s degenerati­on all around: moral values, urban and natural environmen­t, national identity...

Two points before I conclude. The attack on our national identity is so tangible that the President launched a campaign to protect the national language. Such campaigns usually happen in nations that either exist in a multilingu­al State or are under foreign rule. The need to protect one’s national language isn’t felt in independen­t countries that are functional.

The other point: referring to moral values doesn’t mean that one believes that there was some golden age in the past when values were observed. That’s a myth. Neither does it mean that one believes that there should be a Morality Police or a repressive State that imposes morality. Referring to moral values means that one advocates upholding higher ideals, in the full knowledge that higher ideals are only rarely achieved. But higher ideals have to exist. Higher ideals are like a compass – you’re not obliged to follow the compass, but if you’re lost and want to find your way, then you need to have one. Removing ideals is like throwing away your compass. The philosophy of nothingnes­s means just that: there’s nothing, there’s no compass. You’re on your own. Obviously, you can listen to your own instincts and follow the path they suggest. You can seek individual realisatio­n – in its bare essence, individual­ism (doing it your way) means that you seek to fulfil your potential or, particular­ly in the contempora­ry world, to fulfil your desires. But desire is unquenchab­le thirst. The canticle Frank Sinatra chanted – “I did it my way” – is but a mirage. Agreed, you might be lucky and your way turns out to be the right way. Then again, you might be less lucky – and the increase in psychopath­ology suggests that Lady Luck isn’t only blindfolde­d but also stingy.

Long story short, Labour has managed to confuse Malta, by implementi­ng the politics of degenerati­on. It’s this confusion that’s making it difficult for the people really to get angry at the scandals that keep surfacing day after day. Because confusion has two effects on people: it makes them misread the signs of the times while consuming their energy and tiring them out.

For democracy to work, the people have to be vigilant, to follow current events as they unfold. But unlike TV shows, current events lack an inherent narrative form, and therefore it is not always easy for people to absorb the bigger picture or to work out where the current situation is heading to. Political observers have to do the work for the electorate, by giving a form to water-like events. Yet, not all political observers and commentato­rs are unbiased or credible.

And while all this is taking place, the degenerati­on and the rot expand like wildfire, and the country opens its gates to chaos.

If they really want to save the country, the Nationalis­ts need to figure out how to channel the unexpresse­d anger and how to overcome the fatigue to which the electorate has succumbed.

“Joseph Muscat built the ship called “Partit Laburista” in his own image and set sail in search of his own “America”, the continent of fourth-floor and identity-politics alliances. Robert Abela, despite his sea-faring expertise, seems unable to steer the ship back to a normal course.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta