Leading Italian gynaecologist to be guest speaker at public debate on MAP

Leading Italian gynaecologist, Dr. Bruno Mozzanega, of the University of Padova, will be in Malta next week at the invitation of Life Network Foundation Malta. During this visit, Dr Mozzanega, will share his research and experiences at a public debate called ‘Morning After Pill. Abortion through the back door?’ to be held at the Excelsior Hotel, on Thursday 19th January at 7.30pm.

Dr. Bruno Mozzanega is author/co-author of over 180 scientific papers, including oral presentations in Congresses and abstracts. Moreover, he wrote a textbook (Da Vita a Vita), concerning reproductive biology, directed to adolescents, couples and families. Ninety four papers are present in the website of the Ministero dell’ Istruzione dell’Universita`e della Ricerca (MIUR).

He always put a great interest to the ethical aspects of Reproductive Medicine and is involved in activities aiming at forming high-school teachers in the fields of Reproductive Biology and Fertility Control. In recent years he published review papers on the mechanism of action (MOA) of emergency contraceptives, evidencing that their main MOA is post conceptional and not anti conceptional. His textbook “Da Vita a Vita – viaggio alla scoperta della riproduzione umana”, first edited in 1992, was successively edited by Gregoriana Libreria Editrice, Padova, 2002. The third Edition (2010) is by Società Editrice Universo – SEU – Roma, and has been widened and updated in 2013.

He is the Chairman of the Società Italiana per la Procreazione Responsabile, S.I.P.Re. http://www.sipre.eu/

He is currently assistant professor at Padova University in the postgraduate School of Gynaecology and Obstetrics (Course of “Family Planning”) and in the Triennial Degrees in Obstetrics and in Nursing. In the past he delivered lectures at the Magistral Degree in Medicine and Surgery and has been a lecturer in the Triennial Degrees in Social Assistance and in Physiotherapy.

A counter-cultural Church again! by Dr. Michael Asciak

It is interesting for the Archbishop to remark that the current state prospective law on discrimination goes beyond what an EU directive states on discrimination and imply that this could be an effort by the current government to impose a secularist agenda on Catholic schools (and hospitals – had they still existed).

Any perceived discrimination by a Church school against people whose value system went against the very values the Catholic school programme proposed could mean that that particular school could be held accountable at law. Catholic schools should remain just that – and please take your hands off them! Schools that provide an education inculcating Catholic values in their students should keep this as their priority, and any interference by the state in that respect is most uncalled for and unappreciated.

Can you imagine a law where Super One News or TV was found to be discriminating against people because they refused to employ a Nationalist Party supporter, or vice versa, because they wished a person to transmit the same political values on their station as the political party which they promote? Would that not also be discrimination? Why is it only the Church that cannot do this?

It is the great hypocrisy of secularism to criticise religion for forcing its beliefs on others when, in fact, many laws of the secular state and its secular religion can do just that against Christians in society and their Church. New laws are constantly being proposed that override Christian values and their respect for life in favour of pagan secular values, including the disposability of the most vulnerable lives in society. Accepting a personal relationship with God would mean making a commitment, or changing one’s behaviour, so some people would rather focus on the Church’s failures so that they have an excuse to dismiss the idea that they should belong. They conveniently forget that God never sanctioned this abuse and it is both self-serving and self-defeating to reject God because of the failures of some of God’s people.

When detractors criticise the Church, they can only do so on the basis of standards of behaviour that the Church itself gave the world. We know that those things are wrong only because of the influence of the Church. Before the Church came along, all these terrible sins – such as religious oppression, abuse of power, greed and sexual exploitation – were business as usual in the Greco-Roman world. Now again, atheism assumes a place of legitimacy, demanding the rights of a religion, at the same time that the historic religions are dismissed as unworthy of our modern age. It is the collaboration of the non-religious minority and the non-practicing Christians that now drives the factors that influence our culture, while the majority of practicing Christians have let the minority define what is culturally acceptable.

What can we all do to change this trend? First, we should reject isolationism and individualism and not be afraid to socialise with people outside our own group and comfort zone and involve ourselves in our parish or any lay religious group. God’s will is for us to be inclusive. Therefore, we should resist simplistic and naive forms of patriotism that closely associate Christianity singularly with our present culture and make it difficult for hardworking, law-abiding refugees to share in the benefits of citizenship.

Secondly, we should respect the value of every human life, including life in the mother’s womb or even in a glass test-tube. Every person is created in the image of God and that image is present from the moment of conception until natural death. Christians believe that those who are weaker should be protected. Anything that makes the human body a commodity is a form of slavery and a human sacrifice to the gods of commercialism, and Christians should resist this. Being pro-life does not only involve pushing an anti-abortion agenda but also means opposing the exploitation of women and children, brutal blood sports, euthanasia, assisted suicide, capital punishment and closed borders. We should reaffirm further the option of adoption, protest where necessary and elect those politicians who promote this ethic so that there will be someone to criticise our society when it falls short of respect for rights and freedom. To that end, Christians should involve themselves in politics and work for the greater good.

We should reject the culture of human humiliation – such as the pornography industry – as a form of entertainment and hold out for a life based on virtue. Although we should be tolerant of people’s problems and create different forms of support in society, marriage should be promoted singularly as being possible between a man and a woman, both real man and woman. The marriage between a man and a woman should be considered as the regular ideal in which to nurture children. People should consider everything they have as a gift from God and share it through almsgiving with those less fortunate without judging the life situation of any other person, giving everybody the benefit of the doubt where any may exist.

We should reject the creation of a secular religion of the state. Christianity has given the world freedom of religion and human rights and governments cannot provide this without religious faith. In fact, the Church has outlived every empire that has tried to suppress it. We should support the right of every religious organisation to define themselves and their mission and elect their leaders and be free from having to support things they consider morally wrong. We should make the care of creation and the environment an essential priority and vote out of office any politicians who use their position to serve themselves and the interests of their peers at the expense of the greater good. We should reject a defeatist attitude and speak up to defend justice and the Church in society. We should respect our neighbours and keep in mind that where differences exist, the real enemy is bad philosophy not bad people. This is the great paradox that we all face. In defending what we believe in, we should avoid hateful words or harsh speech and reaffirm that the religion of every faithful person is worthy of respect, as long as that religion promotes love of neighbour.

Christians have changed the world before, under the Greeks and Romans, by living their faith. Christianity can change the world again but only if Christians continue to live their faith. The Church has changed the world and can do it again. Only remember that we are the Church. In Malta, there is much that needs to be done and we should be bold enough to do it. In the New Year here it is illegal to smoke in a car carrying children or to drive a horse-sulky during the rush hour, but it is now fine and legal to vilify God and religion. Politicians responsible for the latter law should be ashamed of themselves as they take us back in time to pagan eras.

Incidentally, Dr Bruno Mozzanega and Dr Salvatore Gizzo will be visiting Malta in the second week of January at the invitation of the Life Network Foundation. Both are gynaecologists with extensive research and publications including on the effects of the morning-after pill. Just because MAPs have been licensed across the board by the government and the Medicines Authority and made available without a prescription, it does not make them right because they can still work as an abortifacient by destroying human life if used haphazardly and without care.

Ref: http://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2017-01-08/newspaper-opinions/A-counter-cultural-Church-again-6736168732

PN issues press release on Abortion and Euthanasia

Under my leadership the PN is not open to the legislation of abortion or euthanasia

Reference is being made to Gift of Life’s press release today.

I reiterate that under my leadership, the Nationalist Party will not be open to the legislation of abortion or euthanasia.

Whilst having people in the party with different views is a strength that I welcome, the Party’s position on abortion and euthanasia will not change under my leadership.

The same cannot be said on Joseph Muscat who is clearly flirting with the idea of introducing one or both should he win the next election.

Simon Busuttil
Leader of the Nationalist Party

09.01.17

Need for renewal

Every new year fills most of us with a sense of renewal. It is an opportunity for fresh resolutions. It is a time of stock-taking and a chance to make some serious soul-searching.

For Christians, it is an invitation to ask questions that are largely conspicuous by their absence. Do we give much thought to the existence of God; why we were created and what are our ultimate ends?

Are such questions relevant to the problems we face at every level? We live in an age of sound bites and a staccato of easy answers to complicated and complex issues. In his masterpiece Orthodoxy, G. K. Chesterton reminds us how obsessed we have become in energy-saving technology. As a nation, we are surely hooked, if excessive car use is an indicator of our inclination.

With his typical incisiveness, Chesterton remarked: “The chief mark of our epoch is a profound laziness and fatigue; and the real laziness is the cause of the apparent bustle.” Our world would be more silent if it were more strenuous, if we walked or cycled instead of sitting in our cars.

Needless to say, Chesterton was linking physical laziness with mental laziness. We are too lazy to indulge in serious connected thought and the endless background noise and endless TV news make sure that we evade the deeper analysis of life and its purpose as we muddle through from day to day.

Yet, the dawn of a new year is always a providential opportunity to stimulate us out of the lethargy of the everyday cares and routine. Deep down, we all yearn for the elusive feeling of joy and peace. In this respect our Faith, if tried, has not been found wanting by those who really make space to pray with a humble disposition and seek the truth.

The media, influential politicians and businessmen are trying to remake society in the absence of the transcendent

I never fail to be impressed by the spiritual odyssey of people who have grappled with life’s fundamental questions. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s personal history is a case in point. From a convinced atheist he returned to Christianity, the faith of his country that had suffered so disproportionately in the last century. His writings and witness made him a prophet that has impacted on the conscience of many people both in his country and abroad.

Other recent examples are equally impressive. I was blessed to have come across the writings of men of the calibre of E. F. Schumacher, Bernard Nathanson, Joseph Pearce and more recently, Benedict Rogers, a human rights activist who was captivated by the witness of Catholics in the hostile environments of Timor, Pakistan, Burma and elsewhere. His book From Burma to Rome is a sweeping testimony to the importance of action and reflection. One feeds the other.

Unfortunately, Europe is losing its Christian credentials due to indifference and a profound ignorance of the amazing contribution the Christian faith has given to every dimension of life, be it economics, agriculture, science, music, art, food or other areas. Even a superficial knowledge should captivate our imagination and make us realise how foolish we are to neglect such a religious heritage.

Unfortunately, the media and the dominant class of influential politicians and businessmen are trying to remake society in the absence of the transcendent. This shows up in the crass indifference to the common good and is so clearly reflected in policies that disregard the environment, promote easy divorce, the LGBT agenda, abortion and euthanasia.

Malta has not been spared from these contagious and highly virulent ideas and is even trying to outdo other countries, trying to portray itself as a beacon of progress and liberalism without any serious examination of what these values really imply. This year will see a stronger onslaught on the core values of human dignity and life with the numbing of the collective conscience on such issues as the rights of the embryo and the seriously ill.

Hopefully, we will rediscover our Christian roots and have the sensitivity to be impressed by the life stories of people like Rebecca Kiessling, whose tragic experiences have been transformed into a radical conversion, leading her to sacrifice her time and energy to inspire others to cherish life in all its stages and value the life-changing power of our Faith.

Dr. Klaus Vella Bardon is deputy chairman of Life Network Foundation Malta

We should be stewards of life

Providentially, I was kindly invited by Paul Borg to the launching of his book “…jiena xi ħadd…” at Verdala Palace on November 24. This powerfully-written book is an attempt by the author to raise public awareness about the reality behind the destruction of embryonic life and abortion. The title and subtitle of the book, freely translated, is ‘I am someone…I count… I matter’.

In the introduction to his book, Borg claims he was deeply shocked and, at the same time, galvanised by a TV programme he had watched. This set him off on a journey of research and consultation on the issue of termination of pregnancy. In his introduction, he makes five piercing and logical questions asking why such a practice is condoned and promoted.

With passion and sensitivity, this book tries to place the reader in the shoes of the embryo and the foetus, faced with an untimely end.

Malta is on the threshold of far-reaching changes that are uprooting the fabric of our society 

The overpowering plea is for the right to life and we are shaken out of our indifference and ignorance to what it means to be so weak, insignificant and vulnerable and at the mercy of a culture that is increasingly so ready to eliminate life at its source.

The book has chapters in Maltese and also in English as well as poetry in both languages. Throughout, the tone is urgent and shocking as it goes into well-researched and graphic detail of what such cruel procedures really entail. He also draws out the agonising situation of women who bear the brunt of bearing the scars of such soul-wrenching decisions.

Borg even reflects on the terrible destiny of children whose lives are cut short by war and by drowning in their attempt to escape to a better life. He draws our attention to the atrocious practice of female genital mutilation, the widespread use of which cripples so many young girls.

Throughout, the book is an attempt to shed light and enlighten us, a heartfelt supplication mainly addressed to those in power and positions of responsibility. He feels that they have a grave duty to educate and legislate in favour of life and to provide frameworks in which life can be nurtured and given the full opportunity to flourish and reach its full potential through love and support.

This book could not have had a more timely inauguration. Malta is on the threshold of far-reaching changes that are uprooting the fabric of our society. These issues were always with us but the cultural changes that have engulfed our country so overwhelmingly are now rapidly coming to fruition.

Some of us have been acutely aware of this unfolding scenario, the slippery slope down which Malta is sliding so precipitously. Sadly, many people do not realise that this is not just an unrelated cascade of uncontrollable events.

Our country is in the grip of a highly-determined and well-placed cadre of committed activists who influence the policies being foisted on our largely indifferent and uninformed population.

Like the rest of the world, we are being swept by what John Paul II prophetically labelled the “new ideology of evil”. The Pope did not hesitate to do the unthinkable and challenge the ideology of communism. Neither did he shirk from standing up to gender ideology, the new evil that he described as more subtle and hidden and which is intent on exploiting human rights themselves against Man and against the family.

This callous ideology denies the very essence of our humanity and promotes contraception and abortion with a vengeance. Man is no longer in awe of creation and aware of transcendent realities that are the bedrock of our culture. This materialistic approach can be seen in the wanton destruction of our environment where everything and anything is reduced to its monetary value. Power and pleasure dominate our lives and the concept of God is slowly but surely being excluded.

The season of Christmas is with us again, with its reminder of the mystery of Christ and the perennial call for renewal. More than ever, in the turbulent times we face, the birth of Christ is an opportunity to uphold the sanctity of life in all its dimensions and all its fullness that invites us to cherish creation. This includes our impact on the animal world and the environment.

We are called to be stewards not manipulators and least of all destroyers.

The Year of Mercy came to a close on November 20 and the first corporal work of mercy is to instruct the uninformed. Borg does this eloquently and with a burning desire to change hearts, an appeal we should all heed, especially at this sacred time of the year.

Dr. Klaus Vella Bardon is deputy chairman of Life Network Foundation Malta

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161221/opinion/We-should-be-stewards-of-life.634469

One of Us European Federation wishes you a Merry Christmas!

 

Dear One of Us friends, followers and partners,
 
We want to thank you for your work for the life defense and protection in your countries and in Europe. 

Life and Human Dignity is the core of our existence and we must demand and spread our message every day. Every life matters and from our local, national and international levels we are working to spread this message in our societies. 
 
Next year we will continue working for every human being protection, because every human being is ONE OF US.  
 
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Unequivocally pro-life legislation by Clyde Puli

Our Embryo Protection Act establishes an authority to regulate the sector of assisted reproduction and requires it to publish an annual report on the sector’s state of play. This year’s report, actually the first ever, sees the light of day at a time when government hostility is threatening to undo the consensus that was painstakingly built and which gave birth to the Act in 2012.

In Malta, in-vitro fertilisation (IVF), along with other fertility treatments, has been offered since the early 1990s when the ban of the 1970s on the private healthcare sector operators was lifted.

The first Maltese conceived by IVF was in 1991 and 20 years on, the sector was still unregulated. In 2005 as president of Parliament’s Standing Committee on Social Affairs, and following eight months of inquiry and discussion with practitioners, experts and stakeholders I authored a report which included recommendations to legislate on solid foundations, as it eventually did.

I take pride in the fact that I oversaw the first report ever produced by a parliamentary standing committee. It was also a report that cast the net very wide, proving that parliamentarians can set the bar high if they put in the necessary effort and commitment.

We invited experts from a wide range of disciplines but we also heard childless couples whose failure to conceive had had serious consequences including marital breakdown and mental health problems. The encounter convinced me that regulating the sector was urgent but it had to be accompanied by making IVF available for free as part of the public health service.

My heart goes out to those couples and their suffering. And so it is with great joy and satisfaction that I note that last year the IVF/ICSI cycles increased threefold over 2012, the year the legislation was enacted.

The report helped frame the subsequent discussion, both inside and outside Parliament and its content is reflected in the essential elements of the Act.

IVF was kept legal and the regulation it was subject to, included availability of treatment only to couples in a stable relationship, availability of oocyte (unfertilised egg) freezing, the prohibition of surrogacy, gamete donation and embryo freezing except in very particular circumstances where it was unsafe to implant the embryo.

The present legal framework and its ethical underpinnings have proved their worth and any future amendments have to remain true to its spirit 

All of this was in the best interests of the child.

In a nutshell, the law, as the report that preceded it, is unequivocally pro-life and pro-child without being unreasonable. And in the end that is why the vote was unanimous in Parliament and, nationally there was wide-reaching consensus with very few the discordant notes.

The view that the regulation of IVF in Malta has generally been a success is vindicated by statistics reporting that between January 2013 and June 2015 a total of 411 IVF and ICSI (intracytoplasmic sperm injection) cycles were carried out, resulting in 116 pregnancies meaning a 28 per cent success rate. Even if it is to be noted that there were slight decreases in the rates in 2015, which have to be further analysed.

As different countries permit different things and measure success differently it may be difficult to compare like with like. But to put things into perspective our 28 per cent success rate compares favourably with the UK’s, for example, where its Human Fertilisation and Embryo Authority (HFEA) has recently reported a success rate of 25 per cent and this for a country whose law allows embryo freezing. No wonder a group of local experts concluded that permitting embryo freezing in Maltese law would bring about little added value.

So the reasons behind the Labour Party radicals belittling the success achieved so far and their call for reform after solely three years of introducing the legislation and the practice of oocyte vitrification is, to say the least, suspicious.

With statistics showing oocyte freezing’s comparable success to embryo freezing one wonders about the true motives behind this insistence. Is there really the need to enter into unnecessary ethical conundrums?

Of course continuous investment in technology, professional training and research into the causes of infertility is essential and no one will object to any updating of the law, which is necessary in a sector where the rate of technological change is breathtaking.

But doing away with the fundamental principles of an Act which places the highest premium on the interests of the unborn child is a totally different issue. This is more a matter of protecting the vulnerable rather than tampering with anyone’s liberty.

The present legal framework and its ethical underpinnings have proved their worth and any future amendments have to remain true to its spirit, that is, protecting human life while bringing joy to our families.

Clyde Puli is Nationalist Party spokesman on social dialogue.

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161220/opinion/Unequivocally-pro-life-legislation.634359

From persecuted to persecutors by Arthur Muscat

A security camera reveals a man attacking an elderly woman, his third victim, hurting her and relieving her of money and jewellery. Making his third appearance in court, the criminal relapser, as is within his rights, declares himself innocent. It is up to the prosecution to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt. The criminal relapser is, and rightly so, afforded all the guarantees for a due process of justice in a constitutionally compliant court of law presided by a competent judge.

An employer is accused by an employee of harassment at the place of work and discrimination on the basis of “gender identity”. He is summoned to appear before an empowered “Commissioner for Human Rights and Equality” who has the authority to investigate, prosecute, judge him and confirm his conviction. The permissible punishments this Commissioner can mete out apparently could range from a €5,000 fine to a period of imprisonment, or both. The employer cannot plead innocent but is a priori considered guilty and is held as such until, and unless, he manages to prove his innocence beyond reasonable doubt. This concept is described as the shifting of the burden of proof and is based on an erroneous and dishonest principle.

Now, according to a proposed Bill, this is the standard of justice to be meted out to employers as set out in the “Human Rights and Equality Commission Act 2015”, being proposed for parliamentary approval, by the Minister for Social Dialogue, Consumer Affairs and Civil Liberties Helena Dalli. Our courts of criminal and civil jurisdiction do not recognize this concept of “the shifting of the burden of proof”. In Malta it is always up to the prosecution to prove the accused is guilty. A further proposal by this Minister is the “Equality Act 2015”, which will go to create a very enabling legal framework for a Commissioner to arbitrarily take initiatives and strike out against presumed employer offenders. They will be considered guilty as they could be accused by possibly ill meaning employees, or by negative and aggressive NGOs or by the same Commissioner ex officio. 

The shifting of “the Burden of Proof” in the hands of an all-powerful Commissioner/Judge acting in isolation could prove lethal to an accused employer. Furthermore, this Commissioner could turn out to be legally illiterate, since the proposed Bill does not specify the qualifications and experience required for the post.

Besides that of judge, this Commissioner has a pro-active duty to promote specific causes like, for example, the enhancement of migrant, feminist and gay rights. It is therefore very doubtful how far this Commissioner/judge can be objective and impartial when judging an employer accused of presumably offending his specific pet causes.

This proposed Act further expands on an already existing adequate listing of characteristics that an employer could be deemed to infringe. The possible infringements may occur on the basis of “belief, creed or religion”, “gender expression”, “gender identity”, “race, colour or ethnic origin”, “HIV status”, “sex orientation” and “sex characteristics” such as genitalia, hormones, “muscle mass”, “hair distribution”, “stature”, “breasts”, and so on. Furthermore, the infringements against these characteristics may occur through direct, indirect or intersectional discrimination. So much for complicating the life of employers with far-fetched unclear definitions open to abusive, diverse and strange interpretations, which will extend a wide and insidious catchment net. Considering the way these Bills are worded, employers will be rendered extremely vulnerable to possible unscrupulous employees and negative officials of particular NGOs.

To add further to the peril of being made to submit to possibly a totally inadequate person wielding dangerously unrestrained judicial power, the proposal of the Minister, unless she has had a rethink, incredibly includes a provision whereby this Commissioner may, at his discretion, delegate any of his powers, including judicial authority, to any person holding any office under him!

The Minister must stop this madness and desist from promoting these unnecessary ill-conceived and ill-drafted Bills, and allow employees, employers and Unions to continue abiding by the current laws on equality and discrimination at the place of work. Current laws are EU compliant, satisfy all EU requirements, and guarantee a safe legal framework for both parties – employees and employers. The framework includes a Commissioner and a Director of Employment and Industrial Relations with no judicial powers but very effective persuasive powers, and when needed reporting to the Police leading to recourse to an Industrial Tribunal or another court that ensures final redress of injustices. 

On issues of equality and discrimination, it is presumptuous and not wise of the Minister to force Malta to foolishly attempt to go beyond EU standards and practices. Malta is erroneously being made to walk into dangerous uncharted territory with amateurish thought-out concepts. These concepts are being enshrined in legislation that seems to have been written according to standards prevalent in legal undergraduate papers. Very dangerous consequences will result from these ill-conceived anti-employer Bills. 

Excluding the Constitution, Clause 27(4), of the proposed “Equality Act” towards the end declares that in any conflict which other laws may have with this Act, it is this “Equality Act” that will prevail. This pre-eminent feature indicates an arrogant determination to impose one’s will on all reasonable checks and balances.

Therefore, it will have to be the Constitution that should save us from what appears to be the shoddiest legislative proposals ever presented to Parliament for approval. It is surprising that lawyers are not reacting to this threat to employers and citizens. Is it possible that they do not perceive a legislative proposal that will elevate a Commission and a Commissioner to a status identical to that of a court of law presided by a judge? An improvised court of law without fair rules, expertise and impartiality to guarantee an equitable trial and judgement to a person who a priori will be assumed guilty!

The final appeal of the MEA is a request to the government to completely drop these two Bills. Employees, employers and unions are more than well served with the current legal structures. As they seem to prevail, it is time to stop invasive influences and power that extreme fringes of immigrant, feminist and gay lobbies appear to exercise in the Ministry of Social Dialogue and Industrial Relations. As it appears to have gone berserk, this pressure is resulting in the likes of these pieces of legislation which are being imposed on the whole community through the pretence of tackling falsely alleged rampant discrimination. It is important to emphasise that these Bills go beyond regulating the specific world of work. They are intended to, and will, regulate so many other areas. They will control and condition the behaviour of citizens as they go about their daily life. It is therefore very worrying that the Bills as proposed will infringe on the basic human rights of citizens in practice. The Minister for Civil Liberties is there to serve not just minority groups but also a majority citizen group which includes employers. We hope we are not witnessing the proverbial blackmail and leveraging of voting power, with politicians succumbing to, and indulging in, an exercise of vote harvesting.

Finally, it is most unfair and incorrect to give advantage to, and enhance the rights of, a particular group in society at the expense of another. The MEA is prepared for the eventual need to challenge partisan, arbitrary and erroneous diktats at constitutional level. 

Mr Muscat is the president of Malta Employers’ Association

Ref: http://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2016-12-18/newspaper-opinions/From-persecuted-to-persecutors-6736168041

Slipping into dictatorship by Christopher Attard

Once again, the far-left lobby groups demonstrate utter contempt towards a free, meritocratic society, now in the tremendously serious form of prospective legislation. The misleadingly named Equality Act as well as the Human Rights and Equality Commission Act (2015) are being promoted as solutions to legal deficiencies in equality and discrimination in the workplace and employment in general – it’s safe to say that they are anything but.

If this sounds alarming, it’s because it is. This is nothing short of authoritarian legislation being shamelessly, and possibly even insidiously portrayed as a force for good, when it is in fact the exact opposite. This is very urgent business and I urge you to not take this lightly if you value your basic liberties.

Simply browsing through the initial pages makes it patently obvious that this is a real-life manifestation of George Orwell’s 1984. First of all, the whole concept of innocent until proven guilty is turned on its head, making the burden of proof fall upon the accused. Secondly, the vague nature of this document is an open invitation for rampant lying, corruption and abuse. But you needn’t worry, the dear leader (chairman) has absolute power to dismiss you, if he so chooses (hopefully you’ll find him in a good mood).

Upon closer inspection of the ambiguous and ineptly written definition of terms, it is not at all unlikely for one to retract in dismay and disbelief. For example, ‘harassment’ – “shall be deemed to occur where an unwanted conduct related to one or more of the protected characteristics laid down under this Act, has the purpose or effect of violating the dignity of a person and of creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment”.

Well one thing is definitely clear – anything you do can be deemed as harassment, and you (the accused) have to prove it’s not. And these documents are riddled with unclear, nebulous nonsense that is broadly open to interpretation and therefore extremely welcoming of abusers, liars and hypocrites.

And who is to be the arbitrator of what is offensive? After all, being offended is fundamentally subjective and next to impossible to provide evidence for. So how on earth can one adequately legislate for it? Let’s entertain the principles of this fundamentally immoral Bill in a more general understanding.

I find this Bill deeply offensive. Truly, it goes to the core of what I believe, attacking the very essence of my being. Now, while I have every right to be offended, I do not claim or expect to be given the right to legally prosecute people for offending me.

To think that a 22-year-old whippersnapper has to explain such a basic principle is not only unheard of, but extremely worrying. What level of incompetence (at best) or I dare say wickedness must one have to manage to dream up this kind of nonsense? Are these the sort of legislations we can expect from our esteemed activists?

I can carve a better document out of a banana than what these so-called equal rights groups can ever dream of 

And you need not worry as these ‘equality’ Bills come with their fully-fledged tribunals too, and you better believe they’re impartial because that’s what they say – when has that ever gone wrong?

Let’s just be clear, the appointed dear leader has widespread, unhinged authority to investigate, prosecute, judge and finally condemn an accused employer if he does not prove his innocence in front of his benevolent, no-doubt impartial judgement – a sort of divine North Korea, if you will.

In addition to our supreme leader, one of the main roles of this layered, dictatorial drivel is to “ensure that there is a balanced representation of men and women, and, as far as possible, a wide and pluralist representation of civil society”.

This is Marxism incarnate, and if you’re not worried, you should be. You see, whereas most people understand equality as being equal opportunity, the far left understands equality through equality of outcome, which is to say no equality whatsoever, as this cannot be achieved and has categorically resulted in socialist misery everywhere it has been enforced.

Also, it’s one thing saying that you should have an arbitrary 50-50 quota for men and women, but having a representation of society? What kind of lunacy is this? The very premise of these arbitrary quotas is entirely untenable, as why should a person’s genitalia have anything to do with their ability to fulfil their prospective job, don’t we have certificates for that? And how are 12 members supposed to represent all of society?

To give you one point of contact, I invite you to consider the new and approved feminist, science-free definition of gender, which has now seen more than 50 new “non-binary” genders introduced. This doesn’t seem very equal, now does it? Is this not discriminatory? Perhaps I identify as a fabulous “androgyne” – who represents me? My offence meter is rising.

This legislation is just an overt confession of Marxist, totalitarian, far-left, propaganda-made law, and the worst part is, these groups might not even think it is. The useful idiots of society march along in their echo chamber of groupthink to that which inevitably leads to totalitarianism, and they may not even know it.

These documents are so vague as to enshrine in law any perceived offences by alleged victims and even “an intention to offend”, which is the very definition of a thought crime – if you think it, you’re just as guilty as if you had done it. George Orwell must be rolling over is his grave as we speak.

If you’re feeling a sense of ease knowing that this is directed at employers, you shouldn’t because every employee is directly affected by this – as employers will have to abide by anti-meritocratic legislation, lest they be prosecuted for not reaching their arbitrary quotas (among many other things). Indeed, I can carve a better document out of a banana than what these so-called equal rights groups can ever dream of. What an absolute farce, one that would see us all slaves to its insidious rule.

We stand on the precipice of fundamental changes to our way of life. Should this Bill pass, who is to say that this does not spill over into all Maltese law? The whole premise this legislation is built upon is wholly antithetical to the open marketplace, and we should be very worried about it.

Every utopia is approached through a sea of blood and is ultimately never realised. Make no mistake, this is very urgent business – so I implore you to resist it while you still can, before the right to complain is also taken away from you.

Christopher Attard is a staunch advocate for free and open inquiry.

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161217/opinion/Slipping-into-dictatorship.634066

A Coffee Shop with a Big Difference!

You won’t find any coffee shop more welcoming or warmhearted than Bitty & Beau’s in Wilmington, North Carolina. Founded by owner Amy Wright and her husband, the shop is run by individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, in honor of the couple’s two children – Bitty and Beau – who have Down Syndrome. “While Bitty and Beau aren’t looking for jobs right now, ” says Amy, “it’s on our radar. There’s a statistic that somewhere between 70-85% of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities are unemployed–and we just think that’s an embarrassment to our country.” The Wilmington community has rallied around this shop, which employees more than forty individuals, and reinforced it as a true gem of Southern pride, culture, warmth, and hospitality. We love what Bitty & Beau’s is doing – and we think you will, too.

http://www.southernliving.com/culture/bitty-and-beaus-coffee-shop-video