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Divorce

Mark A Falzon's YES

Mark Anthony Falzon, a columnist, lecturer and friend sent me the following document together with a request to disseminate the content. I gladly oblige for two reasons. The first is out of friendship towards Mark and out of the great respect to his manner of reasoning – I find that even when I do not agree with his statements there is always a way to reason things out. The second is that in this case I couldn’t agree more – hence the absence of the usual Zolabyte disclaimer.

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WHY I WILL BE VOTING YES ON SATURDAY

Dr. Mark-Anthony Falzon is a social anthropologist, Head of Department of Sociology at the University of Malta, and “Sunday Times” columnist.

The reasons that follow are based on and take into account the following premises:

1. It is true that society needs to regulate for long-term kinship. This is primarily because of three things. First, kinship is associated with strong emotional bonds of attachment and commitment; second, children’s interests are best served by structures of kinship that are as transparent, stable, and long-lived as possible; and third, because of issues of property and reproduction of the domestic unit;

2. like all generalisations, the ‘common good’ argument has its risks. It is however mostly useful. It is true that voters should take into account the long-term consequences, for ‘society’ generally and not just for themselves, of their decisions;

3. a ‘realist’ approach. By which I mean not resignation or passive acceptance of undesirable things, but rather the balanced assessment of facts and the discarding of rhetoric;

4. whether or not one agrees that this issue should have escalated into a referendum, and irrespective of one’s thoughts about the obsoleteness of the question, it is one’s responsibility to vote. Politics is not about what could/should be but rather about what is. Come Saturday, the real and current question will be whether or not one thinks that Malta should legislate for divorce;

5. a belief that a fair and forward-looking society should be based on laws and structures that seek as far as possible to include rather than exclude. Social inclusion produces emotional, economic, and many other dividends.

In view of these premises I will be voting Yes on Saturday:

1. because couples whose relationships are over will split anyway, it makes sense to have strong legal systems and other structures by which these splits are properly regulated;

2. because the ‘common good’ dictates that (1) above is especially relevant when there are children, ie. that it is in the long-term interest of children whose parents’ marriages are over that their parents should split in a responsible and regulated way;

3. because a realist approach tells me that some couples will be happy for the rest of their lives and others won’t. The idea that marital bliss can be extended to everyone, and that it is possible in principle for all marriages to work, is rhetorical nonsense;

4. because I know that all the rhetoric and vague promises of ‘strengthening families’ that we have heard in these past months will be all but forgotten by Monday morning, and that couples whose marital lives are over will be left to struggle to pick up the pieces in the absence of structures and legal frameworks, as they have been condemned to do so far;

5. because I believe that it is in the interests of society that people should not be forced to go through annulment proceedings using far-flung excuses and shifty arguments, as they have done so far. This humiliates the individual and makes a mockery of justice and institutions. Such institutionalised hypocrisy and cynicism invariably spill over into the social order broadly defined;

6. because it is patent nonsense that divorce has ruined societies ‘everywhere’. The family is still very highly prized in countries where divorce is legal, and people go to enormous lengths and expense to sustain it. The notion of ‘ruined societies’ is simply another form of the little islander’s fear and incomprehension of the outside world;

7. because the ‘stable traditional families of old’ are a myth. In fact there have always been couples, significant numbers of them, who did not fit the model. It was simply a case of ignoring or labelling them as deviants and misfits, and creating poverty and social exclusion as a direct consequence. It is absolutely essential to understand that we will not be voting to regulate for a ‘new reality’. Rather, it’s a case of a fairer approach to the age-old reality of marriage breakdown;

8. because a truly pluralist society is not about privileging one model and letting everyone else do as they please, but rather about legislating sensitively to incorporate as many realities as possible. This, and not greener roundabouts and nicer roads, is the EU I and thousands of others voted for in 2003;

9. because the notion of family and kinship should be based on responsibility and integrity. There is much more of these in owning up to a marital breakup and taking long-term responsibility for one’s failings. This is especially true when children are involved;

10. because all around me I see people who, despite a failed marriage, go to enormous lengths to sustain and love their children. I also see ex-spouses who somehow find it in their hearts to accept new situations. These people, thousands of them, do not deserve a slap in the face but rather encouragement and the proper structures to sustain kinship and respect well beyond the duration of their failed marriage.

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9 replies on “Mark A Falzon's YES”

Excellent article. I fear the worst though – the closer we get to Saturday, the greater the number apathetic ‘yes’ sympathisers I’m coming across.

The ‘no’ camp’s fire and brimstone rhetoric, on the other hand, is tailor-made to drive the masses to the polling booths in droves.

Hello Mark,

What about the fact that this no-fault divorce will be imposed on people who were faithful in their marriage and who do not want to get divorced? Do you seriously think that it is just to reward an unfaithful person with the right to re-marry, even when this clashes with the will of the faithful partner and the children?

And you are telling us that the situation with marriages in countries like the US and the UK is a healthy one? And do you seriously think that having a divorce, where any reason will do, will not affect the attitude towards marriage, the sense of commitment, and preparation for marriage? Come on …the truth cannot be farther than that.

Hi, in the situation you’re describing (and I know many who are first-hand in that situation), the party at fault is not being allowed to remarry out of spite. The faithful partner and children will very probably never see their wayward family member back, simply because he/she has no intention to return no matter what. So divorce or no divorce, the person who left the family unit will not be going back, and stopping him/her from moving forward will implicitly stop the ones left behind from moving forward. It may not sound fair, but in the long-term, there lies the only chance for happiness for everyone. Living in constant anger and in constant need to seek revenge on the person that hurt you has long been proven not to be the best solution.

@ Peter Borg:

It is a mistake to think of this as a “winning and losing” issue. Relationships are not that simple.

Think of this: What has anyone to win by clinging on to a person who no longer loves you and wishes to be with you.

And if you think in terms of imposition, isn’t separation similarly imposed.

If you are concerned that the one “at fault” gets to remarry, well, in what way does that effect the one “not at fault”, when the relationship is over in any case? Revenge does not mend matters.

As for marriages in countries like the US and the UK, you should keep in mind that, as in all things, a product (the introduction of divorce) is always preceded by a market (people leaving their spouses).

People in failed marriages (for whatever reason) will leave their spouses (with or without divorce). Face up to this reality.

@ Kenneth Cassar: i agree with your last line in your comment that ‘People in failed marriages (for whatever reason) will leave their spouses (with or without divorcee’.
BUT you must also mention that in these countries, as statistics show us, the rate of the cases of divorce grows exponentially. in the USA alone, in the last 50years divorce rate TRIPLED. That means that divorce brings with some sort of mentality which thankfully we don’t have yet in Malta. The situation is not perfect but surely not as bad as it can get. that’s what really worries me about the divorce issue.

@ alex

Ok,over the last 50 years the rate of divorce in the US has tripled. Some statistics from Malta are also important.

In Malta in 1985 separated people made up 1.1% of the population. By 2005 this figure rose to 4%. And this over 20 years not 50 years! (http://www.discern-malta.org/research_pdfs/marriage.pdf) With or without divorce legislation, marriage breakdowns in Malta are as much a reality as they are in other countries. Where there is divorce legislation, people divorce. Where there is no such legislation people separate. Unfortunately it is as simple as that!

Finally – a well written piece with realistic sound arguments. Thanks

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