There was a grimly humorous video that I once on the Internet of two pensioners socking it to each other over some trivial dispute. That’s what always comes to mind when Kenneth Wain throws himself into an unseemly scrap with another similarly senile old codger. The only unfortunate difference being that these encounters are far from funny, though attentive reading does reveal a veneer of cruelty and pettiness that rightly belongs in the playgrounds of infant schools, though the Times of Malta is probably an adequate surrogate.
The latest extended slinging match is between the self-appointed Renaissance man Kenneth Wain in the red corner and haughty sot Jojo Mifsud Bonnici in the blue corner. The dispute has gone back further than the Times archives serve one to link, but suffice it to say the unprompted exchange on constitutional reform has had nobody on the edge of their seat. What is interesting is the childish in which neither party is prepared to let the whole thing go. Today, Wain denounces Mifsud Bonnici’s own reply to an earlier letter by Wain, and so on. With the presumptuousness of a megalomaniac convinced of his own importance, Wain begins not by setting the context, but by launching a thinly and badly veiled attack on Mifsud Bonnici:
I regret that Giuseppe Mifsud Bonnici was offended that I described him as a "dyed-in-the wool conservative". "Dyed-in-the-wool" simply means confirmed and unchangeable and that is what I meant.
Not being a constitutional expert I went to my on-line encyclopaedia to take his challenge up. It told me that constitutional amendments are made in different ways but "In jurisdictions with 'rigid' or 'entrenched' constitutions amendments require a special procedure different from that used for enacting ordinary laws".
The letter that inspired this nonsense in the first place was no less picky and tedious, however, a fact happily signaled by the opening sentence, which almost invites the readers to mind their own business:
Looking at Kenneth Wain's article (November 1) in reply to what I had written (September 13), I have the following remarks to make.
I did say it is incorrect to call the derivation of "ought" from "is" the "naturalistic fallacy". I did so as I follow what Prof. Finnis says on this misnomer.
For now, we await the next salvo. Turn Joseph Mifsud Bonnici.
2 comments:
it seems to me that you spend too much time reading The Times
I will bet you anything that The Times editor asks himself that last question every single day!
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