If I were you, what I'd do, is now that the system Perl is in a reasonable state; use that to install App::perlbrew; use perlbrew to install a fresh copy of Perl in my home directory; and use that fresh copy of Perl for any serious work.
There is a popular school of thought that you should touch the version of Perl that was pre-installed with your system as little as possible, because upgrading modules might break your system. (Lots of Linux distributions' admin scripts, package managers, etc are written in Perl.)
In reply to Re^3: Broken cpan
by tobyink
in thread Broken cpan
by halfcountplus
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