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MALTATODAY 16 February 2020

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6 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 16 FEBRUARY 2020 OPINION WHETHER the topic is an in- nocuous one, like who should have won X Factor Malta or the more volatile topics of domestic violence and being pro-choice, there is a running theme in some quarters: an inability to disagree without becoming irrationally enraged. The fury spilling out on social media is often at such a high- pitched level I sometimes won- der if the person behind the key- board is going to have a coronary. Why do people have to get so an- gry about everything? Can't they see something they don't agree with (and, believe me, there is a lot one cannot agree with) and simply keep scrolling, which is the online equivalent of walking away? It often seems to me that peo- ple trawl through Facebook and news portals actively looking for something to piss them off. But it's not enough for them to simply become angry; it is that they go out of their way to post a screenshot of the comment or a photo of the person they don't agree with, calling them all sorts of names and wishing for all sorts of evil, malicious things to hap- pen to them. Posting a photo, of course, is an unspoken invitation for others to join in with their own insults and for a cannonball of vitriol to be unleashed from some quarters. I have often wondered whether this hate was always there, and was merely waiting around for a public domain like FB to be ex- posed. The contradiction of resorting to hate speech seems to go over some people's heads on highly sensitive issues such as abortion. Whether or not to have an abor- tion is such a personal matter and decision that I prefer to steer clear of it; debating it rationally seems almost impossible because many people on both sides of the spectrum just boil over and see red. However, what I cannot understand is why some of those who are actively campaigning against the introduction of abor- tion Malta (which they are per- fectly entitled to do) feel the need to deliberately seek out those who are in favour of it in order to personally attack them for their views. You will never change the mind of someone who is pro-choice by hurling abuse at them and calling them 'murderers with blood-stained hands who hate babies'. And similarly, you will never change the mind of some- one who is vehemently against abortion by calling them igno- rant, uneducated, 'a bitch' and so many other names which I have seen thrown around. I have also never seen the point of drawing attention to hate speech by sharing it (ostensibly to denounce it) no matter what the topic is. From politics to re- productive rights, what are we gaining from this, other than to make more people even more angry, while those who want a quiet life just shirk away? As I pointed out when I last wrote about domestic violence, antagonism and hostility are not getting us anywhere. Whether it is men vs women, pro-choice vs anti-abortion, those who support Adrian Delia vs those who want him out at all costs (although they have no clue who to replace him with), the inability to dis- agree without blowing a fuse is what we need to address. There are those, of course, who troll the Internet with the ex- press purpose of provoking a re- action by posting inflammatory comments, guaranteed to trigger an outburst; but surely by now we should be able to recognise these trolls and just not react? Or do we feel compelled to post a comment in predictable Pavlo- vian response, because otherwise we will burst with the effort of trying to keep it all to ourselves? Maybe we need to remember there was actually a time when we didn't have Facebook, and people ranted and raved to their friends and close ones about top- ics which got their goat. It's still perfectly possible to do that you know, letting off steam within a small, closed circle rather than 200 of your closest "friends" who, for all you know, do not necessarily agree with you about everything. And bear in mind that on groups and pages numbering tens of thousands you might as well have posted your comment on a roadside billboard or blared it out through a megaphone in the middle of a crowded square. The corrosive nature of corrup- tion For some people, this week's news that the majority of police officers within the traffic divi- sion were fraudulently claiming overtime was no big deal. "U iva," some said – fiddling with overtime is nothing compared to what those who are really cor- rupt have got away with. But that's not the point, is it? The point is that police officers are there to uphold the law, not break it. The point is that this amounts to stealing from your employer, and in this case they were stealing from us, the tax- payers, who pay their salaries. The point is that if you are will- ing to risk your whole career and pension for a few euros, that speaks volumes about your mor- al character – so whether the amount was €100 or €1,000 is irrelevant. Someone who steals a bit, will eventually steal a lot once they know they are getting away with it. In fact, the amounts sto- len run into the thousands as this has been happening for a num- ber of years, so apart from being arrested, I trust they will be made to pay the money back. At the time of writing, the number of those involved in the police racket amounts to 41 of- ficers who have been arrested, with 25 suspended and seven who stepped down. High-rank- ing officers were involved in the scheme which was brazenly be- ing run through a bank account. It has been a major blow to an institution which has already suffered a lot of bad PR for oth- er reasons, and these revelations have simply reinforced the gen- eral impression that the dire lack of enforcement on our streets was due to some form of corrup- tion. As reported by MaltaToday, "The police also clarified that its reference to the generic term 'overtime' specifically re- fers to the abuse of extra duty payments, which are paid when police officers render services to third parties while they are off work. The corruption in the police traffic branch was ex- posed by a whistleblower, who has claimed officers collected 'protection money' from major construction firms and transport companies to turn a blind eye on traffic contraventions and other violations." This then, is the corrosive na- ture of corruption, in plain sight for all of us to see. If everyone is doing it, especially the top dogs, then who is to say the "little guy" should not get a piece of the pie? What this police racket has al- so exposed is the dangerous level of tolerance which occurs when pervasive, nationwide corrup- tion is met by a nonchalant "u iva" shrug of the shoulders. It is for this precise reason that there have to be high ethical standards and people of impeccable moral character at the very top, because without that we have nothing. You can say that I am being impossibly idealistic, but if we at least try to aim for that standard we might have a chance of get- ting 3/4 of the way there; but if our expectations of morality in public officers is non-existent, and we lower the bar too low then there might as well not even be a bar. As a nation we should thank this whistleblower who was brave enough to expose this racket, as well as the internal investigators who took action. We should be glad this has hap- pened, because the alternative would have been for this corrupt scheme to have continued un- abated while ordinary citizens fume at the lack of enforcement. We must also not forget the percentage of police officers who are not corrupt, who carry out their duties properly and who are a credit to their uniform. They should be treated with respect and thanked, for it is not easy to remain morally upright when all around you there are people who are on the take. Josanne Cassar Why does disagreeing with someone have to lead to rage? Deals on wheels... As a nation we should thank this whistleblower who was brave enough to expose this racket... the alternative would have been for this corrupt scheme to have continued unabated

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