Labour’s love affair with horizontal stripes continues. In this installment…

Published: August 2, 2012 at 1:36am

This is the official car of the Labour-led St Paul’s Bay local council.




7 Comments Comment

  1. Not Tonight says:

    Not only is it parked on a pedestrian crossing but the driver probably ignored a ‘no entry’ sign too. All the other cars are facing the other way and the placing of the zebra crossing sign suggests that it is a one-way road. Prosit doppju.

  2. edward clemmer says:

    General attitude: “If I have been given any role of authority” = “I am the authorized LAW” = “I get to command”.

    If such corruption is evident at the grass roots, imagine at the top of the plant, or if the PL would be in government.

    The basic principle of true democracy requires respect for and negotiation with individuals and minorities towards the achievement of consensus for the common good. All such respect is absent in this illustrated case (let’s not review the examples throughout MLP/PL history, for the moment).

    My observation is that the history and continuing reality of the MLP/PL embraces a “top-down” only (authoritarian) structure, behavior, and attitudes. Power to the people only exists at the moment of an election (even at the level of Local Councils, according to this illustration).

    The problem with the PL is that once elected you can never determine how they will “interpret” existing law, or how they will exerise their power (especially in the absense of policies). Normal rules may evaporate at a whim or by design (it is especially troublesome if one cannot agree on the meaning of the Constitution or if one wants to “amend” it in ways that weaken democracy).

    The PL seem to prefer the paternalistic model, where the pater familis is the law and makes the decisions on the basis of natural authority (reality and equalitarinism be damned: everything is power and image projection); and Dom Mintoff is Joseph Muscat’s “ideal” and preferred model (the “Golden Years”).

  3. Park between the stripes says:

    Abuse of power.

  4. Mandango says:

    Depends where you look at them from. From the middle of the street, they’re vertical.

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