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Mediawatch Politics

PerjuryGate – Justine's Dilemma

There’s one more thing that’s been at the back of my mind in this Chris Said saga. It took Justine Caruana quite some time to distance herself from the perjury challenge that was made by her client. We then got Roberto Montalto explaining to the press that “his client’s decision was not a personal vendetta against Dr Said but simply a necessary step in his battle to gain custody of his only child”. It is not that easy to separate the political from the legal in this matter given the position held by Chris Said and given the way the Labour leader tried to gain whatever political mileage could be had from the issue at the first opportunity.

The nagging thought I have had relates to both the legal and the political side of the matter. I need to give you a hypothetical case for you to see this clearer. Imagine (just imagine) we were talking about theft or (heaven forbid) a more grievous crime such as murder. Imagine (just imagine) that we had a similar case but instead of perjury, a Parliamentary Secretary is being accused of theft or murder. Now imagine you were a lawyer whose client is claiming that the PS is guilty of one of these crimes and that you also happened to be a member of parliament for the opposition party.

You’d have two options available:

(1) In the first option you would be the one to strongly pursue the allegation because (a) you believe it and (b) it is your duty both towards your client as well as towards society to uncover the criminal acts of a representative of the people currently entrusted with governmental responsibilities.

(2) On the other hand you may feel that the accusation is actually not well-grounded and that being identified as the initiator of such an accusation would not have very good repercussions on your political career in the long term – so you make sure that you are not identified with such an accusation.

Legally this argument is not relevant since it is a lawyer’s duty to inform the client of his options and repercussions of such options but in the end he will take whatever action (within the boundaries of ethics) that the client requires.

Politically though the argument is important. In tis cynical age, there is much mileage to be made by a politician who actually uncovers the misdeeds of another politician. The graver the accusation the greater the duty of the politician to uncover it if he or she believes that this is the truth.  Even without the cynicism though there is much to be said in favour of the politician uncovering this kind of truth as a duty towards society. Politically this is the work of the servants of the people, ensuring that anybody else posing as as servant of the people is not tainted with a criminal record that could put into question his ability to handle his public duties.

So the nagging thought I have is this. We have Joseph Muscat trying to gain short-term brownie points BEFORE the actual case is decided by tut-tutting at Gonzi’s rashness to back his PS. At the same time though, we have Justine Caruana who is extremely eager to create an ocean between herself and the case in question – we are led to presume that this is because she is not entirely convinced that Said is actually in the business of the crime of perjury.

Can we presume that she believes that his was a genuine mistake that opened a window of opportunity for Mr Xuereb and his new lawyer to try their luck with a very wide interpretation of the law? Incidentally, the luck starts and ends with the right to institute proceedings for perjury – i.e. no need of very high level of proof at that stage pace the Criminal Court – once the actual perjury proceedings start Mr Xuereb’s lawyer might find that judges will require stronger arguments than “this is not a vendetta”.

The nagging thought is that if Justine were certain that the perjury proceedings would be successful (having been Mr Xuereb’s lawyer throughout the civil side of proceedings) she would be squarely behind her client in that step too – if not legally as his representative (for whatever reasons she may have) then politically. There is nothing wrong with Justine Caruana the politician distancing herself from the proceedings – nothing at all. She is fully entitled to do so. In doing so though, the political message she sends to many (and that she should have insisted upon with her dear leader) is that behind this cloud of smoke there lies nothing much. At least nothing that a politician acting in good faith would deem worth pursuing in the courts of law and taking up in the political forum.

There. Now we wait for the courts to get moving on Tuesday.

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Articles

J'accuse : The Forces of Daftness

Thursday night I watched a great documentary called Teenage Revolution on Channel 4. In it, stand-up comedian Alan Davies charts the political, social and cultural upheavals in the UK of the eighties. During the programme, Davies chooses to interview the then Labour leader (now Lord) Neil Kinnock, who was busy with a revolution of his own. At the time, the Labour Party was in turmoil and, as Gladys Kinnock (Neil’s wife) pointed out, “there was a feeling that the Labour Party was in danger of going under and that people where in absolute denial about where they actually stood as a party”. Kinnock explained how he had to battle the “short-term egos” – the ones he would describe in a historic speech at the 1985 party conference as “those who – in mockery of history and poverty of purpose – like to call themselves Social Democrats” and who, according to Kinnock, offered no means of progress because “they neither pacify Labour’s enemies nor inspire Labour’s friends”.

Kinnock was attempting a purge of his own. In the documentary he describes his opponents of the moment as “The Forces of Daftness”. He challenged them head-on at the 1985 conference: “You start with far-fetched resolutions, pickled into a rigid dogma or code and you go three years sticking to that, outdated, misplaced, irrelevant to the real needs and you end up in the grotesque chaos (…)”.

‘Sed libera nos a malo’ (Deliver us from evil)

Hardline extremists would have none of it. Eric Heffer, a Liverpudlian left-winger, felt aggrieved by what he deemed to be Kinnock’s attack on Liverpool Council and walked out in protest. In his interview with Davies, Kinnock points out that later on, when Heffer was on the point of dying, he told Kinnock: “You should be dying not me” – which only goes to show that it is not just in Malta that there are people (not just political) who are incapable of separating political grudges from personal hatred and who end up wishing the most despicable of things on their opponents long after they have left the scene.

Kinnock was battling against a species of extreme socialism that was grounded in the belief that the solution would be born of the deepening and widening of the suffering among the people. The slogan for the ultra-left was “it’s gotta get more grey before it gets more red”. Kinnock describes this movement as “infantile leftism” (a term originally used by Lenin) and at the time warned of the dangers posed by those “for whom politics is a diversion from undergraduate boredom or postgraduate senility”. Kinnock went on to win the battle in the party but not the next national election. He closed the 1985 conference with a messianic call: “We’ve got to win. Not for our sakes, but to deliver the British people from evil. Let’s do it.”

Still doing it (25 years on)

Politicians who present themselves as some form of messiah saving the world from evil have a long and hard trek trying to put their money where their mouth is. Just look at Obama and Blair. We have not been spared any of these shenanigans on our islands, of course. Last week we witnessed an ugly exchange between the main exponents of two very particular tribes in Malta – those who believe that we had a “Salvatur ta’ Malta” and those “Egging On for a Funeral Praesente Cadavere just to make sure he’s dead” and it’s not as if there is a lack of contenders for the throne of New Saviour.

Malta’s Labour has been belatedly going through the motions of renovation. A slap of paint there, a think-tank here and soon we will also have a kitschy new logo to adorn the flags of the fawning fanatics. You can distinctly perceive the message of “it must get more grey before it gets red” in the manner by which the Labourites go about their mission. It is patently obvious that with or without a bumbling, populist Nationalist Party living in denial of its representational obligations, this Labour Party would still be attempting a reinvention of the Maltese story – with the culmination being the dark ages of nationalist governance and of how The New Saviour – Inhobbkom Joseph – will deliver us from all evil.

Unfortunately, the more time that passes, the more we get to notice that what previously featured as hope (for those fleeting months post his election as il-Lijder) is now being uncovered as a 21st version of infantile leftism, packaged in a quickly assembled hamper of empty slogans, insubstantial

proposals and the kind of populism usually associated with the badly formed Nationalist rookies that populate Dar Centrali in Pietà. In other words, the Labour Party is busy depicting an axis of evil there where there is none, and painting the country grey in the wrongful hope that this will suffice to bring The Great Leader to power. On its path to this supposed redemption, it is committing error of judgement after error of judgement and only exposing the crass amateurism that is fuelled by short-term ego trips and misplaced ambition. Labour’s promise is not a new age once the Nationalists are long past their sell-by date but an era that will be a cornucopia of presents such as “poverty of purpose”, “the mockery of history” and the vacuum of a clear direction.

‘Crimen falsi’ (Crime of deceit)

Daftness and its forces are prone to act rashly in order to achieve their short-term objectives. This week’s saga, prompted by the resignation of Chris Said as Parliamentary Secretary, gave us much to ponder. Whether or not there is a direct political link between the origin of the happenings in court and the political maelstrom that followed will in fact be up to the people to decide – as Chris Said stated at his press conference. The issue though, is whether the judgement of the people – at least insofar as the political element is concerned – is allowed to run its normal course or whether those who are interested in painting a grey picture engage in the business of cultivating ignorance.

The farming and cultivation of ignorance is a speciality of those in power and of those who would love to achieve it. It is why our political parties hold on to their broadcasting facilities as if their life depends on them. It does. I do not mean “ignorance” in a denigratory manner but in the sense of “the veiling of the truth”. A people that is deliberately kept ignorant of the facts or fed half-truths cannot ever be in a position to pass political judgement, even more so if the political judgement is dependent on a clear understanding of the workings of the law with all its procedures and elements.

Listening to the Labour mouthpieces you would be forgiven for believing that the Criminal Court judgement that led to Chris Said’s resignation had already found him guilty of the “crimen falsi” or perjury. The rushed popular judgements and counter-judgements were not aided in any way by the performance of certain elements among the representatives of the people. Sure, had I been the Prime Minister I would have avoided appending the equivalent of a political “get well soon” when accepting Chris Said’s resignation. It is, however, a huge leap from that lack of tact to the allegations of prime ministerial interference in judicial autonomy and independence.

V for Vendetta

Joseph Muscat opted for the “very worried” (“ninstab imhasseb”) stance with regard to the Prime Minister’s wishes of a speedy return to the governmental fold. Over at J’accuse we were also deeply worried. What worried us mostly was the Pharisee-like zeal displayed by the prime minister-in-waiting that was contemporaneous with the obvious fact that he had not given the slightest of legal considerations to the actual weight of the perjury accusations. Given the choice between fuzzy grey and transparent clarity, Muscat will blindly leap into the grey any day if it serves his purpose.

The journalist who posed the question regarding Justyne Caruana’s involvement in the case opened up another can of worms as the honorary member from the Isle of Calypso slowly (very slowly) moved to deny her direct involvement in the perjury proceedings. There was something amiss, though. And strangely not many in the fourth estate were willing to go beyond taking the politician’s various assertions at face value (that would be “prima facie”, no?).

So back to the case. It’s a mother who just lost control of her still breastfeeding infant. Try not to lose yourself in the emotion and the passion of it all. Simply focus on the case. Enter Chris Said – the mum’s lawyer. He files an urgent rikors (application) before the Magistrates’ Courts requesting that the child be entrusted to the care of the mother (not “custody” which has far greater legal implications). The rikors lists the points of urgency among which is the fact that the mother needs to have the child because it is still being breastfed. For some reason, the first court to receive the rikors ignored the urgency pleas and set up the first sitting for three weeks later. As the lawyer of a desperate mother seeking immediate access to her offspring, Said had one option. He withdrew the first rikors and filed a second before the Magistrates’ Courts in the hope that the plea of urgency be held (an action that is incidentally not prohibited by the Code of Ethics).

In this case it worked – and the mother was entrusted with the child – not with the custody thereof which remained joint.

At one point the mother decides to institute a case for permanent custody and it is in this case that Chris Said’s testimony is required. By this time Chris Said is no longer the mother’s lawyer and has also become Parliamentary Secretary but he is called to bear witness about the historic events of the case. The father’s lawyer is Justyne Caruana. It is at this point when Chris Said states that “during an evening sitting the Court decided that the baby be returned to my client”. Interestingly, this happens during the hearing of witnesses. At this point, if Caruana had any doubts as to the veracity of the time of the sitting she was within her power to challenge Chris Said’s statement during cross-examination. Had it been relevant to the proceedings she probably would have. But she did not.

What happens next is interesting. The custody is awarded to the mother by the court and there is an appeal from that decision. In the meantime, the father requests the police to investigate a possible perjury by Chris Said. When the police refuse he opens a new application before the Court of Magistrates. In this case the application is signed by the father – not his lawyer at that point – and as I argue in the post entitled “The Leap of Faith” (see blog), it is hard to believe that this application is made on the sole initiative of the applicant without any advice from his legal counsel in the custody case. The court is not actually being asked to investigate the existence or otherwise of perjury but has been called upon to decide whether the police were right not to institute proceedings for perjury themselves (article 541 of the Criminal Code). The Court of Magistrates found that there were insufficient grounds for such proceedings and rejected the application.

Which brings us to the Criminal Court that decides upon the application challenging the Magistrates’ Court decision. That is the Criminal Court decision of the 23rd September 2010 by which time Roberto Montalto is definitely the father’s representative. This court went into the legal issue of what amount of proof is necessary in order to convince a court to order the police to institute proceedings. There is much ground for legal arguments here – and very interesting arguments at that – but at this point it is worth noting that the court chose to order the police to institute proceedings. Which means that the matter of the existence of Chris Said’s error in deposition will now become subject to a court decision of whether or not it constitutes perjury.

‘Legum servi summus’ (We are slaves of the law)

We are all servants of the law so that we may be free. I invite readers to join me on the blog for further elaboration for I have long run out of space here. Ours is not the first society in which politicians and lawyers mix their professions for the sake of their short-term advancement – just ask Cicero. We are the people being asked to judge each step for what it is. There is the distinct professional matter of Chris Said being accused of perjury (coupled with all the colourful courts dabbling in the questionable politics of guilt by association viz: Tasteyourownmedicine who are being so disgustingly true to their promise – we only have their inspiration to thank). In that we hope that the law will serve its purpose and give us a clear result.

There is also more than a hint of suspicion that the Labour Party is trying to make a meal out of the whole issue long before it reaches its legal end – and a final judgement. The reason may be that they know full well that once the court speaks its final words they might find very little fodder for their zealous machines. Now is the time of mud-slinging politics and the no-holds barred methods that are prepared to put a person’s career on the line as collateral damage for the greater cause.

Consider these facts (1) the parliamentary hullabaloo on Justyne Caruana’s vote –misheard by many – occurred on the eve of the 7th of May. (2) The original application relating to the perjury charges was filed on the 9th of May. (3) By 28th August ONE TV news was reporting the fact as though Chris Said had already been found guilty of perjury (Chris eventually threatened to sue for libel). Those are all factual statements – deal with them as best you deem fit.

It is times like these that make it abundantly clear to all that the PLPN grip on knowledge and information is detrimental to the health and sanity of this democracy of ours.

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Mediawatch Politics

The Leap of Faith

Many are rushing to “apologise” to MP Justyne Caruana for the rash judgements they had made with regards to her potential role in the resignation of Chris Said from the post of Parliamentary Secretary. It’s an interesting development and one that requires a leap of faith. The association began yesterday when the press conference called by Chris Said in order to announce his resignation. A journalist (PBS? Times?) asked Chris Said whether the fact that Justyne Caruana was the lawyer for the person accusing him of perjury meant that this case had a political element. Chris Said replied that he would let the people decide.

Over twelve  hours passed in this day and age of internet and immediate newspaper updates before Justyne Caruana issued a clarification explaining that she was not the lawyer who presented the perjury challenge. Interesting. Or as we say on this side of the looking glass… curiouser and curiouser. Now without in any way questioning the factual side of the statement by the labour MP for the greater isle: i.e. that she was only the representative in the civil case but not in the cases alleging perjury we require a leap of faith. This leap of faith is that the civilian represented by Justyne Caruana in the civil domain of his legal battles is fully empowered with the knowledge of legal niceties related to a the laws and regulations that apply to lying under oath – or perjury.

To be more exact this client of Justyne Caruana’s would have to have had the insight, knowledge and quick wit to move for criminal proceedings di sua sponta, or of his own volition. For you see. Not only is the matter for which Chris Said is being accused infinitesimally technical – and far beyond the auspices of relevance to the ultimate outcome of the civil case – but it is also a legal conundrum visible only to the legal eye with which are endowed the most litigant and perfidious of practitioners of my not so humble trade. In other words you would have had to have been party to the civil proceedings in your lawyering capacity and to have spotted the possibility of creating a devious obstacle to the opposite lawyer concerned – full knowing that the ultimate effect of this case (for it is blatantly obvious to even the non-legal eye) will in no way impinge on the civil rights being claimed by the client concerned.

In other words. Between the moment Justyne Caruana’s client pounced on the opportunity to tackle Chris Said with a frivolous claim of perjury (we all know those facts) and the moment he got himself a lawyer to move on to the criminal stage of perjurial accusation there must have been an informed, intelligent and qualified person who must have pointd out this legal avenue afforded by Article 541 of the Criminal Code – his lawyer in the civil case for example? Are we allowed to doubt the client’s capability to do so of his own accord?

Worse still. (Ho-hum). Are we not allowed to consider the (admittedly) circumstantial fact that the perjury proceedings came within a short period of the hullaballoo in parliament when Chris Said was deemed to have slighted the pregnant Justyne by having misheard her vote? As at the time of Plategate J’accuse insists on motive and sincerely wishes that a couple of investigative journalists (preferably not of the bondi travesty kind) take up the challenge and look further into this mess. It deserves it.

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Mediawatch Politics

Cultivating Ignorance

If Malta wasn’t sufficiently steeped in partisan ignorance, Inhobbkom Joseph would have to invent it. His latest intervention in the light of Chris Said’s resignation does not just defy logic but it creates a whole new universe of abject insensitivity, crass opportunism and is the political equivalent of the cheap whore that nobody would pay to sleep with. Inhobbkom Joseph may (and I say may out of whatever modicum of respect is left) have the excuse of having no inkling of the law and how it works since his studies took him far far away from the logical and the rational and into the world of lies and statistics. Having said that however he is surrounded by a bunch of people who might (again might) claim to have an idea about the workings of the law them having been proferred with the dikri (and probably their sporting such dikri on a plakka outside their offices).

Inhobbkom is appalled because Gonzi’s letter accepting Said’s resignation implies a readiness to reappoint Said as PS once this is over.  Inhobbkom “jinstab imhasseb” (is worried) that the letter does not leave the judiciary the necessary comfort zone of independence and burdens them with undue pressure. What should worry the electors is that here is a man who will soon be in a decision making position and is able to shoot such weighted bullshit out of his pen in order to gain political mileage. There is no other explanation. The facts of the alleged perjury are known to everyone and his brother (except… it seems… the Maltastar crowd who are intent on depicting Said as a criminal). Mr Leader of the Opposition (should I say Dr?) seems to be very willing to ignore these facts and prefers to murk the waters even more.

Who knows though? This might not be a mistaken attempt by inhobbkom but a concerted effort to sabotage the government’s workings. Given the weak stand of the perjury allegation and coupling that with the fact that Labour MP Justyne Caruana is the “politician/lawyer” handling the allegation on behalf of the supposed victim we would all be forgiven for being convinced that this is yet another Labour attempt to engage in the wrong form of politics. Inhobbkom might inflict damage to Chris Said’s reputation among his detractors but I am firmly convinced that Said will bounce back stronger than before.

Maltastar’s purposive selectivity is not the first we saw this week. The Times of Malta was equally damned when reporting the developments in the Nikki Dimech case. Given that it was reporting different witness statements it was somewhat worying that it chose to highlight the statement of the former contracts manager (the alleged perpetrator or victim of the bribe depending on who you believe) and failed to point out the alleged improper behaviour of a Member of Parliament. It was alleged that Robert Arrigo insisted on the contracts manager being compensated and also that the same Arrigo entered the council and shouted (intimidated) at one of the members. FUnny how the Times developed amnesia about these particular allegations which have as much weight as the allegations that it eventually chose to place in the headline.

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Mediawatch

Leading by Example – Chris Said

Like a bolt out of the blue (or “out of the blues” if you speak Jose Herrera English) we have just received the news of Chris Said’s resignation from  his post of Parliamentary Secretary. I have on previous occasions, had the opportunity to praise the sterling work and promise of PS Chris Said and can only, at this point, express my full solidarity with him in what is definitely a difficult moment in his career. It is no coincidence that Dr Said has chosen to resign from his post as Parliamentary Secretary in order to better be able to defend himself in a “tranquil manner”. The accusations being brought against Said may be of a trivial nature – and we have no reason to doubt Chris Said on this matter – but the best manner to combat them is as Dr Chris Said, divested of his public persona and separate. It may be no coincidence that this is the second Gozitan within months to resign from his public post in order to better defend himself on what may be seen as  a trivial matter but still an attack on his reputation nonetheless. We sincerely wish Chris Said all the necessary success in his fight to clear his name. It is unfortunate that there may be a hint of political manipulation behind this attack – this too is PLPN politics.

Good luck Chris Said.

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Sport

Intercettati FC – Trema, intercettato, trema

An article from today’s webnews and opinion. The recent developments in the Napoli trials continue to confirm J’accuse’s line since 2006. Juventus was no more guilty than any other of the “rubacchioni” in the Serie A over the last twenty years. Juventus paid for a conflation of a “malcostume” because it was convenient for others to use the bianconeri as a sacrificial lamb. The constant lack of proof that failed to substantiate the various accusations: sorteggi, doping etc continues to confirm that much of the “sports” trial was built around a barsport kind of argumentation – with many of the jealous, unsuccessful teams still scratching their heads to find a way a seemingly indestructible machine. They managed to destroy the machine in the “sports” court by hiding evidence and manufacturing other unsupported accusations that managed to dismantle a team that would go on to win the World Cup a few months later. Intercettati fc the prime fingerpointers were saved the trouble the first time round because Saint Facchetti and Saint Moratti’s phone calls were not brought before the farce of a sport tribunal. This too is why “per noi sono sempre 29”.

Il Processo di Napoli fa paura

Arcangelo Tangorra (TuttoJuve.com)

Il Processo di Napoli fa paura; è nell’aria, si sente, si respira. Le tesi dell’accusa stanno cadendo e, a onor del vero, tra tutti i testimoni sfilati fin’ora (testimoni anch’essi dell’accusa, vale la pena si sottolinearlo) nessuno è stato né incisivo né decisivo. Ognuno si è perso in una selva di “non ricordo”, di “certe cose si dicono a caldo, è normale”, di “non so”, di “non posso esserne certo” (per chi non conosce l’evolversi REALE i file INTEGRALI degli interrogatori sono a disposizione in rete). Signori, chiediamo noi: ma le prove?

Dove sono le prove su cui è stata basata la teoria della cupola Moggiana? Non ce n’è traccia. Eppure, Luciano Moggi è fuori dal “sistema” ormai dal 2006, se si avessero delle prove sarebbero saltate fuori, dato che “il pentolone è stato scoperchiato”. Eppure “non ricordo”, eppure “non so”, eppure “non l’ho mai detto”, a testimonianza, semmai, che una deposizione sotto giuramento è ben diversa da una battuta fatta al bar dello sport, davanti al cappuccino, con brioche tra i denti e il solito sibilo a sfondo gazzettaro “la giuvvve ruvvva”. Noi, di parte, noi, faziosi, noi, bianconeri in malafede (e per qualcuno “barboni”) chiediamo solo le prove che certe cose supposte siano davvero accadute; anche perché, come diceva il buon Totò, le cose reali possiamo mettercele davanti agli occhi e riconoscere serenamente i fatti, “ma le supposte dove ce le mettiamo?”.

Lo sappiamo, da tutte le parti e con grandi squilli di tromba hanno starnazzato ai quattro venti tutte le ochette giulive in merito alla frode Juventina; e credetemi se vi dico che non aspettavano altro. “Così truccavano i sorteggi” a tutta pagina, e poi neanche un trafiletto per dire che i sorteggi non erano truccati, prove alla mano con dichiarazione di NOTAI, mica di pinco pallini qualsiasi, “Cannavaro positivo al doping”…e i medici assolti (notizia recente, letta sì…ma sul Tuttosport!), e anche qui potremmo continuare, ma…no. Lasciamo una sola domanda al lettore intelligente, di qualsiasi fede calcistica sia: come faceva la Gazzetta dello Sport a sapere in anticipo, nel 2006, quali sarebbero state le sentenze definitive?

Bella domanda, vero? La risposta, fondamentalmente, non ci interessa; ci preme, semmai, mettere qualche pulce nell’orecchio a chi legge, senza sostenere che Moggi sia un santo, e ci mancherebbe. Affermando, però, che Moggi era solo uno dei tanti in un insieme che si muoveva nello stesso modo, e le intercettazioni che CI HANNO TENUTO NASCOSTO nel 2006 lo dimostrano. Al limite, dunque, possiamo parlare di malcostume generale, ma non di illeciti o di cupole; in questo senso, sì, Moggi è innocente, oppure colpevole. Come quasi chiunque altro.

Chi ama il calcio, come lo amiamo noi a prescindere dai colori, non può che auspicarsi che questa volta si faccia davvero pulizia, senza nascondere la polvere “della casa” sotto il solito “tappeto del soggiorno”. Per chi resta convinto di una cosa o dell’altra, l’appuntamento è dal primo di ottobre, a Napoli; noi, da parte nostra, anticipiamo da adesso che accetteremo qualunque vedretto con serenità. E lo stiamo dicendo in anticipo. Chi, tra i non Juventini, è in grado di fare altrettanto alzi la mano. Come sempre, si tratta di una “Questione di Stile”.

Now on Tuttosport: http://www.tuttosport.com/calcio/serie_a/juventus/2010/09/23-85478/Calciopoli%2C+Moratti+attacca+la+Juventus+e+la+Figc

Here is a good memory of one of the last scudetti to be fought competitively before Intercettati had the bright idea of dismantling their opponents off the pitch. “I giocatori dell’Inter non ce la fanno piu… in tutti i sensi”….