Eddie Hobbs looks at Ireland’s powerful, unelected forces who control decision-making

The message in this article hits the nail right on the head.  Democracy in Ireland partially exists every few years at election time when politicians and media make a little fuss and somehow cajole you into believing their myths.  What they do not tell you or you don't seem to get is that you really do not have any power.  Real power only exist in what Mr Hobbs calls 'Deep State'.

It is surprising that this article comes from the pen of Eddie Hobbs who is an Irish financial advisor, a television presenter, an author.  He is a member of Renua, what could be described as a very right wing party.   That being said we will take the truth wherever we can find it and perhaps it takes an insider to know the goings on of the establishment.  However, the answer to the problem will take a bit more than what Mr Hobbs suggests.

frankunderwood.jpg

Article by Eddie Hobbs, March 18, 2016

Eddie Hobbs looks at Ireland’s powerful, unelected forces who control decision-making, upholding the status quo, and protecting their own interests at the expense of the general public, social progress, and the effective functioning of democracy

VIEWERS of the American political TV drama, House of Cards will be unsurprised by the risk of misallocation of scarce resources caused by excessive access and privilege afforded to powerful groups that comprise the Deep State — it is the stuff of human behaviour, the silent hand of soft power.

America’s Depression leader, President Roosevelt, didn’t mince his words alerting US citizens that “behind the ostensible government sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility to the people”.

President Eisenhower’s broadcast when departing his office in 1961 named part of the Deep State: “In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military–industrial complex”.

Speaking truth to power isn’t easy, neither is it rewarding in a country like Ireland whose own version of its Deep State appears entrenched and immune from a political system that remains mired in the shoe leather of constituency clientelism, selecting every few years those best at playing the local game to the national chamber in the uncertain hope that the long-term national interest will be served.

In truth, it matters not to the Irish Deep State who controls the Dáil chamber, so long as sufficient power rests outside it to allow the organism to fulfil its primary purpose, which is to survive and thrive.

The Irish Deep State is a nexus of relationships comprised of unelected government bureaucrats, bank executives, public trade union brass, top accountancy firms, multinational corporations, IBEC, agencies like RTÉ, regulators and quangos and is defended by an outer circle of those most dependent on it.

You certainly won’t hear about it on the State broadcaster nor among the panels stuffed with net takers, university lecturers for the most part, who find it hard to accept their role in a Deep State which stood by while the worst parts of the last depression were privatised, namely the job losses and emigration that devastated the indigenous Irish economy and emaciated its private working poor and most indebted.

You won’t hear President Higgins name it and neither, sadly, are you likely to hear it in a media nervous of a litigious billionaire, nor among Ireland’s conventional political classes who live in perpetual fear of upsetting it. But it’s there in plain sight, just follow the money, power and privileges:

  • Despite causing social devastation, the surviving bank officer class leaned over the shoulders of Government and ensured that the Insolvency Act maintained the chronic imbalance between creditor and debtor, ensnaring tens of thousands of Irish workers in open-ended stress while many of the most powerful got write-downs and, some, salaries.
  • Trade unions which ought to be principally fighting for the weakest and most vulnerable to exploitation by pernicious private sector employers, crossed to the Deep State lured by gains from ‘Benchmarking’ for which no notes exist, in deals linking their personal remuneration to the top echelons of the Civil Service and which are a multiple of those of ordinary workers.

In the last round, the drawbridge was pulled up, with open pricing against new teachers, for example. It’s why (and, despite constant demonisation) I’ve consistently named public sector trade unions, a price-fixing cartel.

  • Despite linking the dismantling of the last remnants of protectionism in the professions to the conditions of Ireland’s controversial bailout, the legal profession escaped the fulsome reforms that accompanied the removal of protective barriers in all others.

There is to be no fall in Ireland’s very high legal costs, leaving barriers for many consumers elevated. FOI requests reveal evidence of official lobbying by the Bar Council and Law Society but there will be no trace of the impact of the galvanised efforts of its most powerful members.

  • Irish society is within two decades of a chronic social crisis characterised by retirement apartheid as most of the private workforce face retirement poverty. The unfunded pension debt in the social insurance scheme is €324 billion but remains unspoken among the political class because to do so means grasping the nettle of the €100bn in the public sector scheme debt, the reform of which would most threaten the top echelons including long-serving senior politicians whose retirement benefits run into several millions and rank as the largest asset on their balance sheet.
  • No clearer example exists of the Deep State than the manner through which the early retirement scheme was fattened with benefits during the worst hours of Ireland’s depression and then immunised from taxation on its biggest pensions by ensuring the economic cost was understated and matched by free life cover to pay off Revenue debt on premature death for anyone unfortunate to be caught. Meanwhile over €2bn was appropriated from private pensions, by threatening the guardians, pension trustees, with daily fines of €380 for any delays.
  • Adjusting for its youthful population, Ireland’s spending on health relative to GNP is among the highest in Europe, with some of the worst outcomes. It’s not just about money. Eleven years after forming the HSE, it still has no centralised HR system or digitised patient files and over 50 different invoice systems — who’d stand to lose?

Bending to internal interests, the Government allowed the HSE a second outing to compress the huge National Children’s Hospital into the wrong location, the latest at St James expected to cost over €800m for which the Irish people could get both a children’s and a maternity hospital co-locating at the vast green field Connolly Hospital site, off the M50.

  • The 31st Dáil elected on the promise of reform, delivered the largest state agency since the HSE, with no efficiencies and conceived in a room comprising 33 local councils, trade union chiefs and the Minister for the Environment, a meeting without notes, the template for which was set by Benchmarking.

Irish Water is a shambles, rejected by the Irish people whose ownership of water, like all natural resources, was alienated in the 1937 Constitution by de Valera when he took ownership of it to the State and prevented the Irish people from challenging its guardianship through their courts which is why there are protests on the streets.

  • The attitude, especially to whistleblowers, those within the gardaí, exposed the cultural reflex in favour of secrecy and protection, behind which the Deep State gets its work done. The opposite is a culture of openness, engagement, accountability and a strongly independent, free-thinking press.

These, among many other reasons, are why I deem Irish democracy to be captive both externally, by EU rules and a credit market for highly indebted countries and, internally. It is evidently weak and chatter about breakthroughs driven by arithmetic following the general election lacks credibility.

Government of the Irish people, by the Irish people, for the Irish people, cannot properly exist, outside of short general election windows, without a polar shift in power, pushing down to local government and communities, empowering Dáil committees and replacing Punch and Judy politics with collegiate engagement and open debate, that depoliticises budget setting in particular.

The answer to balancing Deep State power is deep access, transparency, and accountability. Government in the sunshine, led by a fully modernised public sector energised by fresh leaders running teams driven by performance and not dampened by the secrecy, obduracy and conservativeness of an Edwardian legacy, where longevity and not merit is most treasured.

Meanwhile, to take the posturing, opinion and guesswork out of social progress, it ought to be measured at grassroots across a range of outcomes like literacy, education, health, crime detection and equality. These measures of social impacts could feed into a single annual measurement of social progress so that we do not stumble forward venerating GDP, praying for its trickle down, but instead utilise our best experts to depoliticise the debate by scientifically reporting to the Irish people how well or otherwise we are translating economic activity into a range of social outcomes.

An annual Social Progress Index can inform healthy debate about how tax transfers ought to be best weighted, using left of centre or right of centre policies — whatever works best.

Eddie Hobbs is a financial advisor.
Original article Irish Examiner, March 18, 2016


Sinn Fein recruiting activists for cyber combat

By James Quigley

"The internet and social media are transforming politics around the world and here in Ireland.  Never before has there been so many ways that you can help influence and make change happen through this global online community we live in."  (link below)

So says Sinn Fein's 'Online Supporters' (SFOS) web page.  It's proclamation and intent,  accompanied with Twitter ads,  seems overtly and blatantly obvious.  It is a recruitment campaign for cyber warriors to be part of the 'Digital Rising'.  

We know enough already about Sinn Fein's online scrutiny, abuse and bullying and we know that the practice is all too prevalent.  You would think that after all the evidence of this terrible phenomenon , Sinn Fein might apologise and in so doing stamp out the practice.  Unfortunately they haven't and instead by the looks of it they intend to intensify it. 

Wouldn't it be interesting to see inside the online activist's instruction manual?

Sinn Fein recruitment centre for online activists  - here at www.sinnfein.ie/sfos

Sinn Fein recruitment centre for online activists  - here at www.sinnfein.ie/sfos

 

Sinn Fein's drive for cyber watchdogs

Sinn Fein's latest advertisements and recruitment drive for online activists is overtly militaristic.  It is a command to action.  It is aggressive.  The above ad is a take on the iconic 1914 Lord Kitchener's First World War recruitment poster 'I Want You',  a macho image symbolising authoritarianism and militarism.  It is an order, a call to arms.   Interestingly the colour scheme of red on yellow is a warning signal in the animal world (aposematism).

Sinn Fein's command on their web page is  "Anois an t-am le gníomhú!  Now is that time to act!" .  And on the pages logo the symbolism is, in place of an armalite each activist is equipped with a mobile phone.

 

Should we be worried of this 'Digital Rising'

Paul@pauldelaney, March 2016, put up a warning on Twitter pointing out that " Everyone needs to be aware that Sinn Fein are planning an online onslaught that will troll accounts,  bullying & intimidating".
 

What on earth is Digital Rising?'

The journal.ie  said on Sept 2015  "Party supporters are also among the most active on social media.  Although a recent study found that it's supporters are less likely to use Twitter than other party supporters.  But Sinn Féin has also faced criticism for having so-called ‘keyboard warriors’ who have attacked abuse victim Máiria Cahill online.
 

Mairia Cahill's armchair Provo trolls sink to sickest depths

Belfast Telegraph wrote on March 2016 "Internet attacks on Mairia Cahill are nothing new, of course. They started up almost as soon as the original Spotlight programme detailing her alleged abuse by a suspected IRA man was broadcast back in October last year. Since then the news agenda has moved on. But the trolls haven't."
 

 The trolling of Ann Travers

sluggerotoole.com   on Nov 2014 asked " What do you think motivates people to troll you on Twitter?


Ann Travers;  Wow! Big question! I really don’t have any idea, however I guess it’s because I question and support others who question. I also guess it’s because my Dad was a Judge and my sister was murdered by the IRA. they see me as “fair game”.
 

A Critique - Donegal a microcosm of the malaise affecting Rigt2Change Ireland

Buncrana Together   on Nov 2015 Buncrana Together published an article about experiences of the control Sinn Fein had on the Right2Water/Right2Change movement and tried to show how they manipulated the campaign for it's own ends.  This end being Dáil Éireann

Sinn Fein/Right2Change strategy was one of 'controlled opposition'.  The party controlled, led and used the public to further their own ends.  It used main stream and social media in a well honed maneuver to push their agenda and attacked anyone who dared question.   Many good community campaigners fell victim to abuse and intimidation.     In the end Sinn Fein was for all intents and purposes Right2Change and more or less controlled the agenda.  If you questioned Sinn Fein/Right2change you were abused, isolated and ostracised.

 

Marginalisation, Isolation a Sinn Fein well honed tactic

Gerry Adams                 Sinn Fein President

Gerry Adams                 Sinn Fein President

The Belfast leader had once confided to a colleague on the Army Council the tactical approach he favored when going about the destruction and removal of political enemies, and it was this line of attack that he adopted to remove the Southern veterans:  " 'You don't confront people,'  he would say.   'You isolate and marginalize them and then get rid of them.'  I often heard him say that," the figure recalled.   page 178 'A Secret History of the IRA'  by Ed Moloney (referring to Gerry Adams)

 

Why should we be worried

'Totalitarianism is a political system where the state recognises no limits to its authority and strives to regulate every aspect of public and private life wherever feasible' wikipedia.  

Not far away from  Sinn Fein's obsession with control and power by the party.  This domination is a  quest  by the party for power and the notion of online activism and Sinn Fein's documented track record in this field is akin to the control of the public's thoughts and feelings.  

Even the dogs in the street know how Gerry Adams and his closest advisors have control over Sinn Fein.  It is not surprising, after all,  he has been it's president since the 1980's and he has been associated with secretive organisations including the IRA in the longest, intensive period of military rebellion against British occupation of Northern Ireland.   

Given the history of secretive, clandestine operations of the Provisional IRA and Sinn Fein's political manoeuvring and what has been recently revealed about their nefarious activities including the use of the internet to bully, abuse and attack, we may well be right to take note.  

The now well chronicled  facts of Sinn Fein's  online cyber activities and its call to arms  reminds one of the former East German secret police, the Stasi,  " whose main task was spying on the population, mainly through a vast network of citizens turned informants and fighting any opposition by overt and covert measures, including hidden psychological destruction of dissidents." wikipedia

 


Fianna Fáil's Four Core Priorities - Abolish Irish Water and End Water Charges is number two

 

What is the difference between a 'red-line' issue and a 'core priority'?   Between you and me the answer would have to be definitely 'None'.   However, since Fianna Fail galloped into second place in this years Irish General Election race, with a grand total of 44 seats, (6 fewer than the front runner Fine Gael), party members are falling at the first hurdle, including leader Micheál Martin.  They are tripping over themselves and are trying to say that there are no red-line issues in their negotiations for government.
 

Setting out our stall

Before any more party political manoeuvres and Fianna Fáil's shifting of fences, let us set out our stall by stating that abolishing Irish Water and water charges was a key election issue, one that the electorate voted for and one that put the majority of successful candidates into the 32nd Dáil Éireann.  

Let us remind all those TDs about their manifesto promises and in particular, Fianna Fáil whose 'An Ireland for all' manifesto states that their core priorityincludes 'Abolishing Irish Water and Water Charges' page 38,  section 'Cut costs for families & improve the services they rely on'.

Fine Gael's Trail of broken Promises

Cllr Jack Chambers wrote in Fianna Fail's web page accusingFine Gael/Labour Government of leaving a 'Trail of Broken Promises', Feb 14, 2016.  He continued by listing ten top broken promises by the Fine Gael/Labour coalition and finished by saying " It's easy to make promises on the campaign trail, but the facts don't lie.  Fianna Fail has an independent costed and completely verified alternative'An Ireland for all'. "

Fianna Fáil's position is clear

Fianna Fáil, in their social media page,  today answered a query from James Duffy who asked "I understood from Barry Cowan that if FF enter government, IW will be abolished and we wont be paying water charges" by stating

" Our position on the abolition of Irish Water is completely clear.  It is detailed in our Manifesto which can be found here: https://www.fiannafail.ie/.../An-Ireland-for-all-Fianna... "


Micheál Martin Presidential Address Fianna Fáil Ard Fheis

Micheál Martin said in hispresidential address at the Fianna Fáil Ard Fheis on Jan 16, 2016 in Dublin, (see Fianna Fail.ie/presidential-address )

"But of course I know people are cynical about political promises. They will ask ‘why should we believe you after the broken promises of Fine Gael and Labour?’
That’s why we’re going to take a lead and do something no party has done before. We are going to get an independent analysis of our commitments which reviews the accuracy and affordability of our costings and their impact on economic growth. We will publish this with the manifesto.  There will be no auction politics. ... And we will scrap Irish Water and the failed, loss-making charge which funds it."

 

 Ok!, that's clear, 

Fianna Fáil is not going to break promises, they are going to have a fairer Ireland, they are committed to four key priorities.  All set out in their 2016 independent costed manifesto 'An Ireland for All'.  And if it is not clear enough in the actual manifesto, all the core principles are fully explained and signed by Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin in this web page An Ireland for All  

 

Four Core Priorities

On page 3 of Fianna Fáil's manifesto they present their four core priorities.  Notice number two'Cut costs for families and improve the services they rely on'.  Go to page 38.  Under the heading 'Reduce the Cost of living, section (ii)'  you will find 'Abolish Irish Water and end Water Charges'.  It is not hidden away.  It is in full view and there is no sigh of small print or addendum.

 

An Ireland For All Section 'Cut costs for families'

Page 38 of the Fianna Fáil manifesto 'An Ireland For All' clearly and unequivocally states abolishing Irish Water and ending water charges is a core priority.