MaltaToday previous editions

MALTATODAY 25 December 2022

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1489031

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 22 of 39

A few weeks ago, it was reported that the UK no longer has a ma- jority of citizens who consider themselves as Christian. In 2011, eleven years ago, 59.3% consid- ered themselves as Christians. In 2021 this figure dwindled down to 46.2%. Of the majority, 37.2% claim they have no religion at all, while the rest profess different non-Christian religions. Yet Christmas is being cele- brated in the UK as if the notion of Christianity covered every- body's religious beliefs. Ebenezer Scrooge would definitely be justi- fied to grunt 'Bah Humbug'! It seems that in the UK the so- called 'Christmas' cheer has gone back to its pagan origins – a cel- ebration of the day when the dai- ly hours of sunlight begin to in- crease – the hope that light will always win against darkness… No such statistic is available for Malta, but according to a recent poll commissioned by the Arch- bishop's Curia, there is a broad support for the termination of a pregnancy to save the mother's life, while only 70% of Maltese adults oppose abortion when a woman's life is not at risk. My late mother would have been shocked. She believed what she was taught – that the life of a ba- by in the womb was more impor- tant than that of the mother. My mother had read Hen- ry Morton Robinson's novel 'The Cardinal' long before Otto Preminger made the film ver- sion in 1963. The story centres around a Catholic priest who ris- es to become a Cardinal despite falling into a number of pitfalls during his life. In one episode, the priest had to make the awkward choice between saving the life of his sister or that of her unborn child, who was conceived out of wedlock. He chooses the birth of the child, citing the teachings of the Church, and that leads to the death of his sister during delivery. That was as Catholic as one could be! But those were other times. Today only very few are still in- terested in the nitty gritty of the Catholic faith – or of other reli- gions for that matter. More than the different teachings about Christ propounded by so many different Christian sects and reli- gions, I believe that what makes Christianity still valid today is Christ's ethics summed up in one sentence: 'Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself'. Over the years, I have tended to consider most of the rest of Christianity's supposed tenets as poppycock. Today most Maltese behave daily in many ways that are the opposite of how they should be- have as Christians. Selfishness and lack of kindness and com- passion towards others stick out in most local posts in the social media. Even courtesy has become extinct, apparently. When responding to criticism – whether justified or not – per- sonal attacks are more preferred than genuine arguments. There are some who attack the same people, whatever they say – even when there is hardly any differ- ence in what is being said by both sides. Bias and personal antipa- thy surpasses common sense, it seems. I must admit that some- times this happens to me as well. No surprise here. No difference is made between the sin – which one should ab- hor – and the sinner whom one should always consider as a neighbour. Many are not capable of even making this distinction. I have today let myself to fall into preaching mood, perhaps. But this is what I feel during this year's Christmas period – or is it just the Holiday Season... A financial 'Jurassic Park' The attitude of the UK gov- ernment to Brexit is completely flawed. This was confirmed this week by the Independent Moni- toring Authority (IMA) – a body funded by the British govern- ment to oversee citizens' rights – after it took action against the Home Office, arguing Britain is breaching its withdrawal agree- ment with the European Union by requiring EU citizens to reap- ply for the right to live and work in the United Kingdom. The scheme unlawfully requires EU citizens to make a second application after being allowed to remain in the UK or else lose their rights of residence. EU citizens and their family members who had not estab- lished a right of permanent resi- dence before the end of 2020 can be granted limited leave to enter and remain in the UK for five years, known as 'pre-settled sta- tus', while those who do not make another application within five years of being granted pre-settled status were to automatically lose their right to residence in the UK. Judge Peter Lane ruled that the British government's interpreta- tion of the withdrawal agreement was 'wrong in law' and therefore the settlement scheme was un- lawful. Meanwhile, London's position as the pre-eminent European financial centre has been more than dented in recent years. The UK's capital city briefly lost its long-time crown of most valu- able European stock market to Paris before gains in the pound pushed it narrowly back ahead, while Amsterdam took the title of busiest European share dealing centre. The head of a leading hedge fund recently described the Lon- don financial markets as a 'Juras- sic Park' of old-fashioned com- panies and investors, and it has struggled to attract the world's fastest growing companies to list on UK exchanges, often losing out to New York, Shanghai or even Amsterdam. Brexit will not reverse this trend, whatever tricks the UK 'Brexiteers' have up their sleeve. Recently, the UK government announced what it describes as one of the biggest overhauls of fi- nancial regulation for more than three decades. It says the pack- age of more than 30 reforms will 'cut red tape' and 'turbo-charge growth'. Rules that force banks to legal- ly separate retail banking from riskier investment operations will be reviewed. A package of chang- es, dubbed the "Edinburgh Re- forms", is being presented as an example of post-Brexit freedom with the excuse that regulation has to be tailored specifically to the needs and strengths of the UK economy. The British government has already announced it will scrap a cap on bankers' bonuses and allow insurance companies to in- vest in long-term assets such as housing and wind-farms to boost investment, while rules govern- ing how senior finance executives are hired, monitored and sanc- tioned will be overhauled. All this reveals why Brexit was actually proposed: to benefit a few millionaires who felt that restrictions imposed on the fi- nancial market and the banking sector by the EU limited their profits. * * * Here's wishing a Happy Christmas to all readers of MaltaToday! 7 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 25 DECEMBER 2022 OPINION Bah... humbug! Michael Falzon micfal45@gmail.com

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MALTATODAY 25 December 2022