Oh dear! Joe Grima forgot to interview these people for his Inkontri With My Brother u Qabda Nies In Need Of Prozac
Published:
October 18, 2011 at 1:04am
17 Comments Comment
Reply to Nigel pace Click here to cancel reply

I don`t know much about politics and was never influenced much by either party.
I just listen, make my own conclusions and just hope that the party in power will be the right one to govern.
But I would never trust ANY politician who flits from one party to another like he is changing a shirt.
If one finds himself uncomfortable in his initial party of choice, OK, fair enough, he should resign and move on with his life.
It is just not fair on the voters who would have put all their faith in a particular candidate (obviously contesting the election with the party they would wish to have in power), and then find themselves deluded in such a manner.
How can one spend most of his life criticizing the other side, and, all of a sudden, take it all back? It truly baffles me. Honesty is definetely not the best policy in these people`s books.
Just listen to Alex Sceberras Trigona. Whilst giving a voice through a broadcasting panel in Malta to people in Algeria, he is aggressively glad to see that the PN radio in Ragusa was closed down after excessive pressure by the Labour government on the Italian government.
He messed up not only with Libya, but with our broadcasting. He is back in the front seat of Labour today, straight from the cold years of 1981.
And in that front seat, you’ll find Joe Grima with his Inkontri. You can see him with Mintoff in the 1981 electoral victory in the opening shots of part 1. That was 30 years ago. There is no thing as new Labour. There is only Labour.
He justifies the pressure made on the Italian government by saying that if this were to be tolerated, others would be able to transmit including Baader Meinhof and the Brigate Rosse.
Both terrorist groups funded by the Gaddafi regime.
In other words, stop the transmissions from Sicily or we’ll unleash these groups.
Aldo Moro’s assassination by the Brigate Rosse had led to Italy’s change of tack with Libya, maintaining diplomatic relations with Gaddafi through Malta. This incident however, led to Flaminio Piccoli’s faction within the DC to gather support for open confrontation and subsequent pressure on Mintoff. Italy had signed the protocol specifically to rid herself of Libyan presence in Malta.
Mintoff responded by reverting to Craxi, inviting him to Malta. When the Nationalists asked Piccoli’s Roberto Formigoni to attend a conference, he was practically arrested upon arrival at the airport and expelled. The Labour government had made use of the ‘indhil barrani’ act. A law which prohibited anyone except for the government to make any political contact with the rest of the world.
We were a pawn in Gaddafi’s blackmail, AST, Labour’s current International secretary, was one of the players on his team.
Before lumping it all on Gaddafi, read about the outcome of judicial investigations into the assassination of Moro and other terrorist acts during Italy’s ‘anni di piombo’, when elements within the Italian Ministry of State colluded with NATO and the masonic P2 lodge to infiltrate and utilise both the far-right and the extremist left in the preparation and perpetration of ‘false flag’ operations in what was called ‘Operation Gladio’.
Known generally as ‘la strategia della tensione’ this state-sanctioned criminal activity was justified as being the perpetration of evil for the good of all (the latter being more powers to the state police).
Key search words are: Gladio, strategy of tension, Andreotti’s revelations
Kev,
yes,
however these investigations also confirm Libyan training camps for leading exponents of the BR.
Moro and Berlinguer had reached the ‘Compromesso Storico’ effectively removing any doubt to the country’s political capability, leading to what you mention.
Fasanella’s latest work, Il Golpe Inglese, puts everything in a new perspective, tracing links between the P2 and MI6, and shedding new light on Matteoti’s plane crash.
British and French interests at the time were to disrupt any relations between Italy and Libya. Gaddafi was the key to regain the Suez.
There you go again, Kevvy. Selectively Googling in order to ‘prove’ yet another conspiracy theory:
Got a lot of time on your hands?
Better be careful, if you don’t keep the house clean, mummy might get pissed.
Not as much time as you have, Purdie, but I can still compete.
And as you said, better to know no truth and believe the lies, than to know some truth believing it to be a lie.
“That was 30 years ago. There is no thing as new Labour. There is only Labour.”
Somebody, please tell Dr. Deborah Schembri that Inkontri was aired yesterday, 17th. October 2011. It is not ‘il-passat’. Indeed, it is the future.
Is this the best they can offer? The character assassination of people not present to answer insults and allegations? Of course JPO had to have his half-hour tantrum.
Do we know what we are doing?
Don’t forget who got a hasla papali last Sunday. Saviour Balzan. So, now Jeffrey cuts him and goes on a scathing attack on Lou Bondi and WE.
And how different would this have been in the times of the pitiful Sciberras Trigona
http://www.ansa.it/web/notizie/rubriche/topnews/2011/10/18/visualizza_new.html_670694928.html
It appears that besides hunters, bird-trappers, bus (Arriva) passengers, journalists, former Financial Times stringers, certain newspaper editors and St Paul’s Bay residents, anti-depressants should also be prescribed for Old and New Labour failed politicians and prime minister wannabes (a miss is as good as a mile and leads to a golden cage in Brussels) going with last night’s depressing and harrowing performances on One’s Inkontri.
The sooner the PN gets rid of unreliable persons such as Pullicino Orlando and the other wise guy Franco Debone, the better; then the party can start planning ahead for the 2013 elections.
Unfortunately not until 2013.
@Ms DCG;
Thank you for uploading those clips.
Those political ogres are now back in circulation in Joseph’s skip.
Alfred Sant wisely distanced himself from these militant Labourites and he almost won the election in 2008.
Surprisingly, Joseph Muscat is doing the opposite, placing them in front again and giving them a crucial platform.
People would be fools to vote for these undemocratic bunch. If George Abela was at the helm of the MLP these militant people would still be mothballed in their holes.
I wish someone would shed some light on this- Why did the Labour Party made the decision to bring these militant people back? Could it be that they were instrumental in making Joseph Muscat the leader and now he is indebted to them?
According to our friend JPO on Joe Grima’s incredibly biased programme on One yesterday, both Lou Bondi and DCG are doing more harm than good to the PN. What cheek! LOL, a true case of ‘l’ispizjar milli jkollu jaghtik.