Go on, knock yourself out comparing and contrasting with the previous videos
Published:
September 27, 2011 at 12:00pm
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21 Comments Comment
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Why does he thank Marlene Pullicino at 3:08 in the second video?
Inhobbkhom.
The million dollar question.
If you walk up to Laferla Cross you might get divine inspiration and an inkling of the truth.
“Din” looks rather miserable in the second clip – maybe he is embarrassing her with the stupid sob story that it was thanks to a Labour government that their babies lived.
[Daphne – Be grateful, Rita. At least he didn’t tell us that it was thanks to Labour that his wife finally got pregnant.]
Is he for real?
Joseph went to St. Aloysius College, not a state school. His father is an importer of explosives material, not a port worker.
Now I heard him say he comes from a poor family and he was lucky to continue school.
Well, relative to the son of Roman Abramovic he came from a poor family, but in the Maltese context he comes from a rich one. As a child I used to delivery newspapers to help my family out, not attend St. Aloysius College.
Once a person is caught not saying the truth we call him a liar.
Clarification – Joseph Muscat’s parents brazenly sent him to St. Aloysius’ College after it re-opened following forced closure and a period of great turmoil in 1983/84 when the government they voted for tried to close it down.
He has quite obviously inherited his opportunism and lack of principles from them.
By the time Joseph Muscat’s parents sent him to St Aloysius College, the government for which they voted – Labour – had done away with the fees. I think he should tell us whether they did the decent thing and paid the standard donation, or whether they bummed their son’s education for free despite having the means to pay for it.
Really, what a Mass ;-)
http://news.sky.com/home/uk-news/article/16078061
It’s not only in Malta.
I am somewhat certain that Joey and Ed are reading from the same book “How to win an election”
Extract form Telegraph online report on Labour’s Party Conference
The point of this speech was to create and enhance the ‘Ed Miliband: Labour leader’ brand. It’s been decided that it’s too early in the Parliament for policy detail of any kind, so instead this was a speech all about image and positioning. Over and over again, the Labour leader told his audience that they ‘know what their values are’. But at no point did he make it clear whether he shared this knowledge, or if he did, whether he could articulate it. It felt as if he was creating a logo without quite knowing what it represented. Even the rose behind him was about branding – it was blue, not red, in a nod to Maurice Glasman’s centrist ‘blue Labour’ ideas.
Heavy on personal attacks (on Fred Goodwin, on Nick Clegg, on Rupert Murdoch), the speech contained a few cleverly-crafted lines, such as the idea of standing up for ‘producers not predators’ on the economy and the exultant question ‘how dare they say we’re all in it together?’ But overall, this wasn’t a speech we’re supposed to remember. This is a party and a leader dug in for the rest of the Parliament, determined not to blow any political capital they might have too early so that they can be in with a chance in 2015.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/labour/8768064/Labour-Party-Conference-2011-live.html
Ihobbna.
Pathetic.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3839579/MILIBLAND-LABOUR-LEADERS-SPEECH-FAILS-TO-CONVINCE.html
Scousers nicked the satellite.
re previous link: no policies, not bloody worth listening to.
Coincidence?
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3839579/MILIBLAND-LABOUR-LEADERS-SPEECH-FAILS-TO-CONVINCE.html
An eulogy for all the losers…..Viva l-Labour.
Did you see the smirk on his face when he said “kien jiprometti naqra mill-iskola” in the first video at 9.08? When I saw that smirk I knew that this guy he was talking about in his story was himself.
“Mass really” – what’s that?
“Wij arr bekk in bizniss, bekk in biznizz bik tajmmmm.”
“Li kieku ma kienx hemm partit partikolari ma kienx nidhol l-universita”.
And he means Labour.
Incredible.
Hmm…that’s interesting, so a generation of people did not get to go to University because of Labour government policies, but he went to university – in the early 19909s – because of Labour government policies.
“I’m all right so f**k you, Jack.”
Great qualities for a potential future leader…