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Dean of Faculty of Arts supports Rosianne Cutajar

I just love it when things come together and people expose themselves for who they really are. This is Dominic Fenech, the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and the Head of the History Department declaring he is happy for Rosianne Cutajar to have been elected to parliament despite all the “chauvinistic bullying” she received from many critics like myself.

As expected, a Labour victory at the polls consolidates Labour’s Orwellian discourse and its corruption, and by now they are not even ashamed of publicly defending criminals and the corrupt allies of Joseph Muscat’s cabal.

Ask yourself this. How deeply embedded is rent-seeking and political corruption at the University of Malta if the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and the Head of the History Department is publicly not ashamed to support a MP who not only took bribes but also militated in defence of criminals like Yorgen Fenech and the government’s corruption? Such instances of pro-mafia public declarations by pseudo-university intellectuals are rare even in Banana Republics.

Here’s a proposal for Dominic who reads my website. If you are so keen on seeing Rosianne elected to Parliament, why don’t you ask her to be one of her defendants in the libel case she instituted against me? Maybe you can explain to your audience why outing an MP who had an intimate relationship with an alleged murderer who bribed her, constitutes “chauvinistic bullying”.


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9 responses to “Dean of Faculty of Arts supports Rosianne Cutajar”

  1. […] The History Department is like a ghost town which never ever produces historiographic research and Dominic Fenech, the pro-Labour and ex-Labour Secretary General, who barely does any work, is supported by allies at the University like the far-right and […]

  2. […] may also remember Dominic Fenech defending Rosianne Cutajar saying he doesn’t remember what Rosianne Cutajar did wrong. Allow me to refresh his memory […]

  3. […] Vella is part of the Faculty of Arts whose head is also a staunch Labour Party supporter. Getting employed and promoted at the Faculty of Arts requires friendship and approval from Dominic […]

  4. […] On the other hand, Dominic Fenech has spent many years earning an additional salary as both Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Head of the Department of History, without ever publishing anything other than his Phd which he published in two consecutive books. He was also previously the Secretary-General of the Labour Party during the 1980s and stopped voting Labour during Alfred Sant’s tenure as leader due to a personal squabble he had with him. Nowadays, he has the gall to call people like me “traitors to the Party”. Today, he also larps for corrupt Labour Party politicians like Rosianne Cutajar. […]

  5. […] full support of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and the Head of the Department of History on this, Dominic Fenech. Both of them are very supportive of each […]

  6. […] most difficult and riskiest battles. Being engaged in this battle even puts you at risk of being condemned by the Dean of the Faculty of Arts,ย and other top-officials of the University of […]

  7. […] rejecting its brightest minds. What’s worse is that the “local intelligentsia” is directly supporting this idoocracy out of opportunism and unaltered self-interest. It is also the reason this same […]

  8. […] through various stories showing how lecturers and senior officials at the University also serve to support the government in different ways, particularly by normalising its actions. The University also serves as an […]

  9. […] Labour Party members to serve the governmentโ€™s needs and interests – although some of them do so openly and actively. All they need to do is to remain passive in the national political process in which Labour is […]

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