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Divorce

A hymn – No to the Free Vote

As parliament gathers for the first reading tonight we have already heard the news about the first abstentions: Marie Louuise Coleiro and Charlò Bonnici have confirmed their intention to abstain. J’accuse has chosen a hymn for the Civil Rights Movement that is (hopefully) forming. It had to be Dylan of course.

Moviment Le ghal Free Vote

AD event on 7th June

Dylan performing When the Ship comes in with Joan Baez at the March on Washington

Capossela’s Italian interpretation:

LYRICS:

When The Ship Comes In
by Bob Dylan

Oh the time will come up
When the winds will stop
And the breeze will cease to be a’breathin’
Like the stillness in the wind
Before the hurricane begins
The hour when the ship comes in

And the sea will split
And the ship will hit
And the shoreline sands will be a’shakin’
And the tide will sound
And the waves will pound
And the morning will be breakin’

Oh the fishes will laugh
As they swim out of the path
And the seagulls will be a’smilin’
And the rocks on the sand
Will proudly stand
The hour that the ship comes in

And the words that are used
For to get the ship confused
Will not be understood as they’re spoken
For the chains of the sea
Will have busted in the night
And be buried at the bottom of the ocean

A song will lift,
As the mainsail shifts
And the boat drifts out to the shoreline
And the sun will respect
Every face on the deck
The hour that the ship comes in

And the sands will roll
Out a carpet of gold
For your weary toes to be a’touchin’
And the ship’s wise men
Will remind you once again
That the whole wide world is watchin’

Oh the foe will rise
With the sleep still in their eyes
And they’ll jerk from their beds and think they’re dreamin’
And they’ll pinch themselves and squeal
And they’ll know that it’s for real
The hour when the ship comes in

And they’ll raise their hands
Sayin’ “We’ll meet all your demands”
And we’ll shout from the bow “Your days are numbered”
And like the pharoah’s triumph
They’ll be drownded in the tide
Like Goliath they’ll be conquered

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Divorce

As the dust settles – Citizen Jack

The noise had almost begun to subside and the metaphorical dust seemed to settle around the result of “53% IVA 47% LE” it became increasingly unclear whether another showdown was underway. The definitive conclusion that could be drawn from the last 72 hours is that this is definitely a crisis moment for Maltese society. Echoes of this conclusion can be heard all over the place and there is definitely no going back.

Interestingly enough in our multifaceted society of victors and defeated (because there always has to be a winner in our mind) the assumptions being made through the grapevine all the way to the reported ideas in the press do not seem to take in the wider picture. The citizen, the netizen, the reporter, the church, the politician, the party, the government – might all be engaged in a short-term assessment and quick recalibration of immediate requirements.

Let’s see how the actors played it out starting with this post about Citizen Jack.

CITIZEN JACK
Shaken. Very stirred. The divorce debate catapulted Jack out of his default position of “politics ain’t for me”, “it’s all the same anyway”, “they’re all a bunch of time-wasting egotists”. Was Jack aware that the question was more about emancipation and less about divorce? Maybe. For one thing he got to ditch his long-outdated political compass and was obliged to think for himself. No default/lesser-evil position would allow him to make ethical compromises.

Lacking the classical reference points Jack went solo. Where possible he found the comfort of numbers – from facebook movements to processions – yet this did not dispense him from having to think and think hard. It was hard to get a crash course in constitutional law and social mores what with all the noise: the perennial dilemma of the uninformed (a euphemism for uneducated? – but then how many are there?). The planes of discussion were at times too many for Jack to follow: Was this a battle between the devil and the Lord for his soul? Or was it a battle between the controllers and the controlled over a more liberal society?

As in Aesop’s fable the battle between the sun and the wind to strip one man of his vote escalated with worrying consequences on the man’s constitution. As the dust of the first battle settles you can sense an eagerness to end all this. Shouldn’t it be over by now? Hasn’t the YES won? Isn’t the parliamentary debate a formality? The people have spoken (the bastards) haven’t day? It’s time to get back to the cocooned life of casual complaint and leave it all to those who know best no? Jack might begrudge the very existence of your average MP but he sure is grateful not to have to carry his responsibilities.

The question we should be asking at the moment is whether the multiplicity of virtual and real movements have brought the message home to Jack that there is an underlying, deeper battle than the one that has just closed. Censorship, minority rights, social freedoms, respect for the environment, the battle against the networks of corruption, the stranglehold on representation …. and much much more. Is that too much for Jack to handle? Will he be wishing that the monster vanishes or that it will be swept under the carpet for hopefully another 50 years?

Can Jack be stirred further? Is Jack aware that cashing the change cheque will imply much more than simply ticking the yellow box in one referendum?

Se vogliamo che tutto cambi bisogna che tutto rimanga lo stesso.

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J'accuse : CTRL + ALT + DEL

The combination of letters in the title is a common occurrence in computing jargon – mostly favoured by the illiterati and semi-literati of the world of the microprocessor whenever their computing machine seems to have gone A.W.O.L and is failing to obey the most basic of orders. Pressing a combination of keys that are abbreviations for “Control”, “Alternating Function” and “Delete” allows one to accede to a wondrous screen that (hopefully) puts the user in control of the system once again. We have all experienced the tremendous joy of ordering the computer to RESTART or to STOP RUNNING programmes that seem to have gone off at a tangent and taken up most of the thinking space of our units.

The “rebooting” of the system allows all the programs and thingummies that are usually whirring silently in the background to resume operation in a preordained order – one that is receptive to the user as originally intended. At best, upon restarting his unit, the user might find the note that several “system upgrades” are available and “would he like to download them before rebooting the system once again?” (my paraphrasing of course). So you see – the main programs of the OS (operating system) get rusty every now and again – there is a little pause, a decision to take and before you can say “Why didn’t I buy a Macintosh?” your system has rebooted to a much better version at the click of a button. You’ve been upgraded.

Crisis
We get the word crisis from the Greeks (krisis) and normally associate it with moments of great uncertainty. Crisis is also used in a philosophical sense whenever there is a “process of transformation where the older system can no longer be maintained”. We are currently passing through what seems to be a moment of crisis for Maltese society. Borrowing from computer jargon, our current operating system has ground to a temporary halt and somebody, somewhere has pressed the three magic buttons “CTRL + ALT +DEL” – next on the agenda the maintenance or otherwise of the old system.

If you are reading this article after 10am you will probably already know the result of the consultative referendum. Whether there are carcades of liberals or novenas of thank yous spilling through the streets and halls of the nation the truth is that the answer to Bertoon’s question today is no. We are nowhere near a final point of this crisis that was officially brought out from under the carpet with Jeffrey Pullicino Orlando’s presentation of the bill for the introduction of divorce. What we can do is begin to draw a list of the operating system essentials that might be in serious need of upgrade after this crisis moment.

bert4j_110529

It’s Constitutional
The underlying fabric of our society is a woven mix of historic tradition, social mores and the law. The interaction between influential centres of power and representation and the individuals that make up this demo is a multi-tiered, interest-driven approach that culminates in a collective set of rules, traditions and customs that make up our operating system set-up. We have come to recognise – thanks to this crisis – that what was on the surface a system that worked and was apparently accepted by (and acceptable to) all actually had developed more than a few glitches and was evidently slowing down the whole works.

JPO’s bill has been the national CTRL + ALT + DEL. Suddenly the programme that had thrived on “if we want everything to change then everything must remain the same” worked no more. Or at least many questions were being asked of its compatibility with the 21st century. Through this debate we discovered a number of uncomfortable truths. First of all there was the awareness that even when you took the main actors of our power struggle out of the equation the behaviour of the various parts within the system tended to settle around the same old bugs – because we did not know otherwise.

Witness the electoral system written and produced by the main actors themselves. Once PLPN no longer figured we still formed two distinctive masses who soon discovered that the rules could not be changed and that they were absurdly written for a black and white reality that was being challenged. Not only that by they tried to milk the rules to their advantage (just look at the fun and games with the broadcasting authority or the electoral commissioner).

When we say that this crisis is not about divorce but about much more we do not immediately realise that we are challenging the foundations of the DNA of our society. When alternative politicians suddenly discover that “it’s the constitution stupid” we try hard to not sigh with exasperation at the length of time it has taken to discover this and clap our hands in encouragement.

It’s Moral
The main actors had danced, tangoed and fandangoed for long on our constitutional plane. Every actor – the main parties, the church, the opiated media – had played his role to a tee until the latest crisis question proved too hot to handle. The nationalist party slipped into a conservative coma, the labour party went into opportunist overdrive and the catholic church discovered that it was in charge of a weak, weak flock (coupled with quite a few errant shepherds) who had completely misunderstood the importance of free will in the defining of a good christian.

So here we are – as I wrote last week – on the brink of a huge decision between emancipation and submission. There may be carcades today as one side or the other triumphs victoriously in the battle of collective opinions. A resounding NO or a resounding YES may be treasured as a hard-won victory in a battle of attrition that seemed destined towards Mutual Assured Destruction. It does little to close the crisis though. Each side will lick its wounds and carry its laurels but the most important part is still to come. The defining moment of a democracy like ours will be the reaction of our representatives in parliament.

The J’accuse indictment had been clear from the start. We have been diverted onto a roller-coaster emotional ride that had little to do with constitutional resetting and much, much more to do with a psychological heart-opening session – very useful for the diagnosis but very poor insofar as practical solutions are concerned. The referendum allowed for the abdication of our representatives but has created a new sense of awareness – little pockets of resistance to the current faulty program. As we put it poetically… in un paese pieno di coglioni, ci mancano le palle.

The Final Answer
There is no final answer. Every set of rules for society is built on compromise based on the ultimate need of thousands of homo sapiens sapiens living together. We are at the very start of a crucial learning curve for our nation. I personally do not have faith in the 69 politicians in parliament who should be picking up the ball from here. Our goals should be set much higher than the mere introduction of a basic civil right in the 21st century. We should be looking at the gaping hole in civic education, the vacuum in the basic understanding of citizen rights and obligations, at the chaotic state of the fourth (and fifth) estates and more. We should be rebuilding what has been undone over the past 30 years Ad Maiorem Politici Comoditatem (for the greater comfort of polticians).

Above all we might have come to a point when we understand that Malta is in dire need of new leadership – one that is a complete and utter upgrade from the menu that is on offer until now. It is important that we do not lose many of the lessons learnt from this crisis starter – emancipation is not achieved easily… and there may still be many a reboot on the horizon.

www.re-vu.org
Before I thank every single taxpayer individually for having kept the PLPN in tow for so long and thus for having contributed to the latest flight of fancy to Malta I have a new little project to present. Mark Vella, an ex-blogger and publisher, and I are about to launch a new (open-source & non-profit) online review magazine. REVU – b’accent fuq kollox,(www.re-vu.org) will hopefully offer a different and calmer perspective to the many angles of the debates that will be an offshoot of this crisis. We launch quietly this week with a special edition in which a number of contributors analyse the impact of the divorce debate on Maltese society. A bien tôt.

www.akkuza.com “Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard-disk?” had a great pause in Malta. Yes we tanned. Yes we voted. Yes we enjoyed the chance of a quick break with the family. Crisis or no crisis there is no place like home.

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Divorce

Eppur' si muove…

These were the famously defiant words attributed by popular legend to Galileo. He was addressing the Pope shortly after being obliged to sign a recant of his theory that the earth spun around the sun. They are apt words today as the first news came out from the counting hall in MCC and as it gets closer to an official YES.

J’accuse’s preferred outcome for a referendum that should never have been seems to be winning with a 54%-46% result. For Malta’s voting pattern this is not far from being a resounding victory in a consultative referendum. The ball now passes to the politicians’ court.

We have to see now whether the PLPN dinosaurs will now shift given that they have a “popular” position that they can easily translate to a “populist” policy.

Austin Gatt and his like will have to think hard before moving on down the path of “conscientious” voting within the PN fold. Civic conscience would lead them to voting YES in favour of the bill. They have a condition they could exploit (the responsible divorce allows for some refining of the bill to ensure it is so) but they cannot escape the writing on the wall.

Joseph’s Labour might finally grow some balls. It is more likely to perform some logical somersault and suddenly switch to being pro-divorce as a party.It will be hard for Inhobbkoms party to do otherwise. If the parliamentary vote fails also thanks to conscience votes on Joseph’s side then the PL must bear the consequences.

The PM’s speech (now on NET) to the people seems to lean towards “respecting the will of the people”. In his statement he does mention that the parliament is obliged “biex ifassal ligi tal-maggoranza” – tfassal: to draft and to propose – is not the same as “jghaddi” or to actually pass the law.

PM Gonzi still mentions the respect of deputies who still believe that their conscience does not allow them to vote in favour of divorce. The hand washing is still there.

Will there be enough YES votes to carry the law in parliament? More importantly from a purely political point of view what will this vote tell us about the political parties and what baggage will they carry to the elections.

Austin Sammut’s first-hand analysis on NET tv just about sums it all up: “Il-free vote ghadu hemm”. They shot themselves in the foot long ago…. will they be mature enough to reflect on their civic duty or will the mysterious personal conscience trump their representative duty.

54%… Change begins at the MCC today.

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Divorce

YES

Fist in the air in the land of hypocrisy… How long? Not long. Because what you reap is what you sow.

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Divorce

In Primis

And the series continues… J’accuse’s very own BLOB in the run up to the electoral booths… enjoy this scene from “Il Marchese del Grillo”… as Don Bastiano explains to the simpletons the separation between church, state and the individual.

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