Right2Water Affiliated Unions Policy Document & Left Alliance Submission

Policy Document from Right2Water and Affiliated Unions which came out of the conference in Dublin on May 2, 2015.  The organisers has released this document for discussion and are seeking input from all interested people.  A further conference will be held on June 13, 2015.  Below is a submission from the left alliance including People Before Profit, Anti Austerity Alliance and Independents.

Policy Principles for a Progressive Irish Government

“It shall be the first duty of the Government of the Republic to make provision for the physical, mental and spiritual well-being of the children, to secure that no child shall suffer hunger or cold from lack of food, clothing, or shelter, but that all shall be provided with the means and facilities requisite for their proper education and training as Citizens of a Free and Gaelic Ireland. Likewise it shall be the duty of the Republic to take such measures as will safeguard the health of the people and ensure the physical as well as the moral well-being of the Nation.
It shall be the duty of the Republic to adopt all measures necessary for the recreation and invigoration of our Industries, and to ensure their being developed on the most beneficial and progressive co-operative and industrial lines.” Democratic Programme for the first Dáil, 1919

1867 PROCLAMATION OF THE IRISH REPUBLIC
All men [and women] are born with equal rights, and in associating to protect one another and share public burdens, justice demands that such associations should rest upon a basis which maintains equality instead of destroying it.

1916 PROCLAMATION OF THE IRISH REPUBLIC
The Irish Republic is entitled to, and hereby claims, the allegiance of every Irishman and Irishwoman. The Republic guarantees religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens, and declares its resolve to pursue the happiness and prosperity of the whole nation and of all its parts, cherishing all of the children of the nation equally... 

Right To Water
Water is a human right, essential for life and for all our human needs. As such, water provision and sanitation should not be subject to the profit motive or the free market and should be made available to all, free at the point of use, and on the basis of need, not means.

‘Irish Water PLC’ and domestic water charges will be abolished within the first 100 days of a Government endorsing this policy.

‘Irish Water PLC’ will be replaced with a single national water and sanitation board which will be solely responsible for the provision, transmission, sanitation, management and operation of the public water and sanitation supply in the public interest.

This policy will see a full referendum to enshrine a new Article in Bunreacht Na h’Eireann. The date of this referendum would coincide with the establishment of the new national water board.

Article 28 Section 4:2:1: “The Government shall be collectively responsible for the protection, management and maintenance of the public water system. The Government shall ensure in the public interest that this resource remains in public ownership and management.”

This policy will provide for an end to water meter installation and ensuing costs.

This policy will see conservation measures legislated for including mandatory planning permission requirements, incentivised and subsidised water saving devices, and a public education campaign.

Our water infrastructure is in desperate need of investment in order to upgrade the system and repair leaks. This policy provides for an investment of between €6 and €7 billion to be provided through a progressive taxation model, details of which will be published on June 13th 2015.

Funding our water services through progressive taxation measures will ensure citizens always have access to water based on their needs without the possibility of water shut-offs due to unpaid bills in the future. This policy will ensure Ireland remains with zero water povert

* Acknowledgement – The Right2Water Unions acknowledge the support and advice in framing the above referendum position of Seamus O’Tuathail S.C. and Treasa Brannick O’Cillin, candidate Barrister at Law Degree, The Honourable Society of Kings Inns.

Right To Jobs & Decent Work
“After the war people said, ‘If you can plan for war, why can’t you plan for peace?’ When I was 17, I had a letter from the government saying, ‘Dear Mr. Benn, will you turn up when you’re 17 1/2? We’ll give you free food, free clothes, free training, free accommodation, and two shillings, ten pence a day to just kill Germans.’ People said, well, if you can have full employment to kill people, why in God’s name couldn’t you have full employment and good schools, good hospitals, good houses?” Tony Benn, Member of the British Labour Party

Everyone has a right to gainful and decent employment which would provide dignity, respect and a living wage. A full employment economy requires several layers: a socially responsible private sector; an expanding public sector including public enterprise; a growing cooperative sector, non-profit and labour- managed sector; and a growing public enterprise. At the very least, where people cannot find work, the state must act as an employer of last resort, directly employing people in socially productive activity.

We will vindicate people’s right to decent work through a revolution in the workplace embodied in a far-reaching Decent Work Act. This will eliminate precarious employment, provide under-employed workers with the right to seek additional hours in their workplace when they become available, introduce the right to collective bargaining – enabling economic and political democracy, end bogus self-employment, and legislate for overtime and unsocial hours pay.

The future is wage-led – in particular, the ending of low pay. The medium term goal should be to make the Living Wage the statutory floor.

To further support workers’ living standards, a reform of our social protection system to bring it into European norms - in particular, the introduction of pay-related benefits and stronger family supports (e.g. childcare). This will be paid from a higher social wage; that is, employers’ PRSI levied at average European levels. This constitutes a major drive against poverty and deprivation in society.

Right To Housing
“Housing is a human right. There can be no fairness or justice in a society in which some live in homelessness, or in the shadow of that risk, while others cannot even imagine it.” Jordan Flaherty, award-winning journalist, producer and author 

We believe that Housing is a basic human right, that this right should be enshrined in Bunreacht na hÉireann and that the bligation on the State to adequately house people should be enforceable by the courts.

As a direct result of the State’s failure to deal with this issue our country is now living through a homelessness epidemic.

Having a home is a social and economic right. A progressive policy will develop a range of housing models to vindicate this right, starting with the ending of homelessness and the clearing of social housing waiting lists. The current crisis in rents should be addressed through rent controls in the short-term but in the long-term the state needs to intervene in the market to mobilise the investment required to modernise the sector, including the provision of income-related rental accommodation to low and average income earners. The State also needs to commence a national home building project. People should also be offered the opportunity to own their homes through limited equity ownership or non-speculative housing. Housing policy should be based on need and choice, not speculation

Right To Health
“The social conditions in which people live and work can help create or destroy their health. Lack of income, inappropriate housing, unsafe workplaces and lack of access to health care systems are some of the social determinants of health leading to inequalities.” World Health Organization [WHO], 2004

Healthcare is a human right and access to quality healthcare should not be dependent on income. The long-standing policy whereby successive governments promote and incentivise the private healthcare industry is inefficient and discriminatory against those on low incomes. The role of government should be to create a universal healthcare system free at the point of entry which provides the highest possible level of care for all citizens, irrespective of social or economic factors.

The current healthcare crisis in Ireland, where hundreds lie on hospital trolleys and tens of thousands wait more than 12 months for appointments must be addressed. Any future government must acknowledge errors in past policies and invest in the mental and

physical wellbeing of the nation, instead of a private industry. A well-funded and efficient public healthcare system would provide economic and social benefits for individuals and wider society in general.

Right To Debt Justice
“Blessed are the young for they shall inherit the national debt.” Herbert Hoover, 31st resident of the United States

The past recklessness of financial speculation is imposing an intolerable burden on people’s future. Debt justice requires a European Debt Conference to restructure sovereign debt throughout the Eurozone; the introduction of a Financial Transaction Tax in order to repay states for the private bank debt they assimilated; an end to bank-driven mortgage debt resolution through a state led and democratically accountable programme of restructuring and writing down of mortgage debt; and restructuring of money-lending debt which traps people in 100 percent interest loans.

Three steps to address the debt crisis, in Ireland, Europe and Globally:

-Build alliances with progressive citizen-led movements in Europe to develop and promote  alternative proposals for realistic and responsible debt reduction strategies for people across Europe.
-End the Irish government’s inexplicable boycott of the UN Committee on Sovereign Debt Restructuring, and begin to work, led by partners in the Global South, to develop legal mechanisms to protect citizens from the impact of financial speculation and vulture funds.

Right To Education
“I speak – not for myself, but for all... I raise up my voice – not so that I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard. Those who have fought for their rights: Their right to live in peace. Their right to be treated with dignity. Their right to equality of opportunity. Their right to be educated.” Malala Yousafzai, youngest ever Nobel Prize Laureate

Everyone has the right to education. The provision of education should be truly free – without the necessity for ‘voluntary contributions’ – up to at least primary degree level. The provision of professional and technical education should be affordable and available to all and should be equally accessible. Three basic priorities for any new government should be:

1 To reduce the ratio of students to teachers from among the highest levels in the EU to the lowest.
2 The restoration of and increased provision of Special Needs Assistants – which should be seen as an investment in the most vulnerable of our children.
3 Investment in early childhood education should be provided in line with a progressive childcare policy which would facilitate the option for parents to enter the workforce.

Education is an investment in the future of the nation whereby we can develop a productive and cohesive society. More funding for the apprenticeship programme and a coordinated jobs policy promoting labour intensive industries should form part of any future government education programme. A modern dynamic economy is dependent on well-educated citizens, increasing employment opportunities and providing the opportunities to create new services and technologies.

Right to Democratic Reform
“A community is democratic only when the humblest and weakest person can enjoy the highest civil, economic, and social rights that the biggest and most powerful possess. ”Asa Philip Randolph, leader in the African-American Civil Rights Movement

We need to undertake a programme of substantial democratic reform that is about more than tweaking time slots for questions or tokenistic measures. There must be real and meaningful reform of our local and national democratic processes which would put citizens at the heart of decision making. Hosting one general election every five years provides too large a gap for real democratic representation – particularly as there is no accountability for broken political promises subsequent to an election.

Citizens should have the capacity to recall elected members of parliament before the end of term. They should have the ability to propose changes to the constitution or call a referendum in relation to legislation introduced by the Oireachtas. Elections should be held at the most convenient time for all citizens and with encouragement for full participation in the voting process.

The introduction of breathalysers ahead of votes in the Oireachtas should also be ntroduced.

Other proposals include:
1 Separation between Government & Oireachtas – this is provided for in the Constitution but in reality it does not exist.
2 A relaxing of the Whip system.
3 Strengthen the committee system to significantly increase their powers of scrutiny and ensure the committee system operates independent of party patronage.
4 Reform of institutions in such a way as to redistribute power and decision making that includes local and regional Government.
5 Within all our institutions we have got to engage both the provider and the end user and provide both with the means to redesign systems, for eg. The HSE.

We Want Your Input

The intention of this document is to begin a discussion about what type of society we want to live in. For too long now the people of Ireland have served the needs of the economy instead of the economy serving the needs of the people. We want to develop this discussion further and so we are seeking your input. On Saturday, June 13th, the Right2Water Unions will host a second conference to determine a policy platform ahead of the next General Election.

Go to www.right2water.ie and let us know what your priorities are for the future of our country. You can also email right2waterirl@gmail.com
Or send your submission to: Right2Water, O’Lehane House, 9 Cavendish Row, Dublin 1

Policy Document can be found Here


Left Alliance And Independents Statement

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The following statement has been agreed between the People Before Profit Alliance, the Anti-Austerity Alliance and some independents.

The anti-water charges movement, which has seen hundreds of thousands mobilise and become active in campaigning, has transformed politics in this country. It has forced climbdowns by the government and given people confidence and hope that the austerity agenda can be defeated. It has opened a potential to build a significant Left, working class political movement.

We welcome the initiative by the trade unions involved in Right2Water to host conferences in May and June to discuss a political initiative. The fact that a number of significant unions are discussing launching a political platform and considering support for a range of candidates is a very important development. It could create a political pole of attraction for many who are fighting austerity and oppression – and who are looking for a political formation that fights for genuine social equality.

For a democratic, bottom-up, participative approach

In order for this to have the best chance of achieving its potential, we think it is essential that the process of deciding on a political platform and an approach to the general election is participative, open and democratic. The mobilisation and democratic self-organisation of people in their communities is vital to the strength of the movement against the water charge. Their involvement is essential for the development of mass support and participation in any new political initiative which could have an impact similar to Syriza or Podemos.

We welcome the initiative of the unions to organise events in May and June. But it is vital that these events do not remain limited and invite-only. Instead, they should become conferences involving all sections of the anti-water charges movement, anti-austerity groups and those active in fighting for democratic rights who favour taking a political initiative on an explicit anti-austerity basis.

In advance of the 13 June event, we think there should be local open meetings or assemblies of everybody active in the anti-water charges movement or other active social movements, meeting to discuss the issues and to decide on delegates to send to the event. The meeting on 13 June should therefore be a much larger meeting than 200 people: as well as including trade union representatives and political representatives, it should include representatives of campaign groups across the country, selected by those involved in campaigning on the ground. On foot of this, the June gathering should be able to decide for itself the political positions it adopts and how to proceed – not simply endorse previously determined statements.

Non-payment of water charges is key

We believe that this political initiative should complement the crucial struggle against water charges in the coming months – not become an alternative to it. In order to advance the actually existing struggle against austerity – the movement against the water charge – and to draw on its strengths and develop mass support, the political initiative should champion the demands of the movement, openly call for non-payment and use its forces to organise non-payment and active resistance to water metering on the ground. This should be part of a general approach, which is to use elected positions to encourage struggle from below, rather than focusing on elections and parliamentary positions.

Principled positions against austerity and for democratic rights

We think that the initiative should adopt a principled anti-austerity position. That means committing to oppose and organise to fight against any more austerity and for an immediate reversal of key austerity measures such as water charges, property tax, USC for those on average or low incomes, health, education and welfare cuts. It also means developing a strategy for repudiation of the bankers’ debt; for a write-down of residential mortgages; for taxation of wealth and big business profits; and against privatisation of public services and natural resources.

Instead of putting money into bank debt, we think there should be public investment in housing, healthcare, education, childcare, public transport, water services, renewable energy and environmental protection – as the start of re-orienting economic activity to meet social need and provide useful work for young people and the unemployed.

A new political initiative should stand for the separation of church and state; and commit to extending democratic rights to all oppressed groups: women, the young and the old, LGBT people, Travellers, migrants, asylum seekers and people with disabilities. As a first step, it should commit to campaigning for a Yes vote in the upcoming marriage equality referendum; and to campaign for repeal of the 8th Amendment and lift the ban on abortion in Ireland.

We also think a political initiative should champion the right of workers to defend their jobs and living standards. It should support solidarity action with the likes of the Dunnes workers and action to scrap the anti-union laws. Opposition to austerity should not stop at the border: we think austerity must be fought both in the North and the South. The implementation of Westminster cuts by Stormont is no more acceptable than the implementation of Troika cuts by the government in the South.

Reject coalition with Fianna Fail, Fine Gael or Labour

This kind of real change requires a political alternative that will break the rules that impoverish working class people. We cannot do that if we accept the approach of Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and Labour – the proponents of austerity, inequality and oppression. So a new political initiative must publicly commit to reject any coalition or deals with Fianna Fail, Fine Gael or Labour.

It should fight for a Left government committed to breaking the rules that impose austerity and that prioritise the restoration of the profits of banking and big business; for a government committed to restructuring the economy and society to meet the needs of people and to protect our environment – including unilateral repudiation, if necessary, of bankers’ debt.

The opportunity to build a substantial political challenge to the rule of the 1% in this country is massive. The initiative by the Right2Water unions can be an important step in building that if it is done on the basis of a bottom-up, participative and democratic approach. If it is based on struggle, non-payment of the water charges and a principled anti-austerity stance, we can have a major impact.

In summary, we think a new political initiative should:

  • be open, participative and democratic in its organisation and functioning;
    reject coalition with Fianna Fail, Fine Gael or Labour;
  • openly call for non-payment of the water charge;
  • have a principled anti-austerity approach that repudiates the bankers’ debt and supports public investment to meet the needs of ordinary people, environmental protection and provide proper jobs;
  • campaign against oppression and for democratic rights, including marriage equality and repeal of the 8th Amendment;
  • oppose racism and the scapegoating of minorities.

Signed:

Richard Boyd Barrett TD, Cllr. Brid Smyth, Cllr. John Lyons, Ailbhe Smyth and Brian O’Boyle on behalf of the People Before Profit Alliance; Paul Murphy TD, Ruth Coppinger TD, Joe Higgins TD, Eileen Gabbett and Joe Harrington on behalf of the Anti-Austerity Alliance; Cllr Brendan Young ; Eddie Conlon; Des Derwin; Shane Fitzgerald; Tomas O’Dulaing; Raymond Deane.

Left Alliance Submission can be found Here


Everything you wanted to know about the government’s priorities. The siteserv transaction

what we need is a drastic reorganization of power in society.

Giving Back To The Few


A lot of attention has been paid to the ongoing Siteserv controversy—but the implications for progressive politics have largely been missed in media commentary.

To begin, let’s recap some basic facts.

Siteserv is a construction services company that borrowed a lot from Anglo Irish Bank between 2006 and 2008 and accumulated a debt of €150 million. When the economic crisis struck, the government took over Anglo Irish and changed its name to IBRC.

The government (i.e., taxpayers) was thus made responsible for Siteserv’s debts and tried to get whatever it could out of those bad loans.

But instead of appointing a receiver to Siteserv to recoup those monies, IBRC let Siteserv handle the process themselves… and in 2012, Siteserv was sold to a company controlled by Denis O’Brien for €45 million.

A number of issues have been reported about the deal (although a full investigation has yet to be conducted).

First, Siteserv shareholders received €5 million from the sale. This is important because normally, shareholders, especially when they invested in a company that couldn’t even pay its debts back, are supposed to be wiped out before the creditors (in this case, IBRC). But here, taxpayers absorbed the losses.

Second, the result from the sale are as follows: shareholders got €5 million; state-owned IBRC got €40 million; and IBRC wrote off €110 million of debt it was owed by Siteserv—so the taxpayer took a hit of €110 million.

Third, it has been reported that there were other, more lucrative offers on the table for Siteserv that were rejected.

Fourth, Davy Stockbrokers and Arthur Cox solicitors acted for both sides of the transaction (Siteserv and Denis O’Brien’s company), which is not a transparent practice as it is difficult to obtain the best deal for the government when those overseeing the process simultaneously work for the buyer and the seller.

Fifth, the Central Bank of Ireland reviewed the deal just after it was finalised, but did nothing. The Irish Stock Exchange was also asked recently about a reported spike in Siteserv shares trading just before IBRC received bids from parties interested in buying Siteserv.

The Stock Exchange refused to comment, saying it was precluded from doing so on such matters.

Sixth, the government now wants to review the 2012 sale of Siteserv by using the audit firm KPMG. That is, even if KPMG was involved in the sale. In fact, so far, KPMG has been paid more than €70 million for its services in the liquidation of IBRC.

So asking KPMG to review itself is not exactly an instance of accountability. Indeed, Transparency International Ireland urged the government to remove KPMG from the review.

But our Minister of Finance, Michael Noonan, appointed a former judge to supervise KPMG in the review process. So, the plan is that a judge-reviewer will review the KPMG reviewer. It seems to be difficult to find an objective and neutral reviewer.

Seventh, in 2013, a year after it was bought by Denis O’Brien, Siteserv won several contracts to install water meters in Ireland (through its subsidiary GMC/Sierra). It was bad enough that taxpayers absorbed losses in the sale as stated above, but now Siteserv is benefiting again from the water charges.


A couple of points may be made about all this.

First, there have been accusations that the whole thing shows once again that the government is incompetent, mismanages everything and doesn’t learn from the mistakes of the past.

For example, Shaun Connoly wrote in the Examiner an article entitled “Incompetent Government will Bury the Controversy” in which he wonders if Enda Kenny “really not understands the laws of this country”? He also complains that we are faced with a “rotten system where nothing gets done properly and no lessons are ever learned”.

But the problem with this view is that it assumes that the government is actually trying to manage things properly for the common good, and that if only it could be more competent at doing so, things would improve.

However, in fact, the nature of the state is not to serve the people and to govern for the population as a whole.  This should be clear after a €64 billion bank bailout, a blanket guarantee making ordinary people responsible for €365 billion of bank liabilities, and six years of harsh austerity directed at the general population and the more vulnerable that has pushed the deprivation rate from 11.8% of the population in 2007 to 30.5% in 2013.

So by that standard government performance in the Siteserv deal is not too bad at all.

Siteserv shareholders have benefited. Denis O’Brien has benefited. Firms that have been paid fees to oversee the process have benefited. Taxpayers absorbed losses instead of private interests and bondholders, thanks to the socialisation of Anglo Irish debts.

And everything was kept quiet for about three years until one TD, Catherine Murphy, asked sustained questions—that’s not too bad, although in an ideal world, the deal would have been kept quiet forever.

Second, and related, how can we make sure this won’t happen again? UCD Professor of Politics David Farrell writes in the Irish Times that the controversy highlights “two major weaknesses in our political system”: first is “a Government that is not held adequately into account by parliament” and second is “a mindset that privileges secrecy over openness”.

Farrell’s solution is thus that “there needs to be a culture shift”, meaning that Ministers and civil servants “need to appreciate the principles that underline Freedom of Information—namely, to provide citizens with the information they deserve to know”.

Therefore, “instead of waiting behind closed doors” for information requests, the government should “simply put the information out there as a matter of course”.

The problem with this approach is that again, it assumes that if we could only convince those politicians to be more aware of the need for openness and transparency, things would get better.

It’s not incorrect per se, but the problem is that those politicians know very well that secrecy benefits them and those in power—that’s why they’re keeping things secret! Therefore, hoping they will change on their own won’t work.

So what are we left with? The way to change things is by redistributing economic and political power in society—that’s how you keep the powerful accountable, and in fact, that’s how you make sure nobody is too powerful relative to others.

If ordinary people had the same economic and political power as elites, there simply wouldn’t be too many elites around, by definition. A minority would not make decisions that affect everybody else’s lives.

Power would be decentralized, not concentrated in the hands of a few. In short, what we need is a drastic reorganization of power in society.

Dr Julien Mercille broadsheet.ie


All Bankers Are Bastards
I've often been rightly accused of crass stupidity when I've publicly made the above statement, overly broad, not accurate, many good, ethical and honest people work in the banking sector.
It's also an completely non-productive statement, it's lets us off the hook to. If they are bastards it's because we've allowed them to be so. We can't really point an wagging finger from the position of our overstretched credit cards and over extended mortgages and say, 'look at them bankers, they're all rich bastards.'
I also need to define the difference between 'a banker' and 'people who work in banks.
There is a big difference.
People who work in banks are not in any way bastards, they are people with jobs and recently very insecure jobs. However under current economic structures their jobs are vital to our way of life, we need them to be honest, of high moral standing, ethical and endlessly patient with a confused and battered public.
However, when I say 'bankers,' I mean the top (as always) 1%, the people who run the banks, the hedge funds, the 'investment arms' and the global financial houses.
They actually do steal, embezzle, and fiddle around with our trillions, the bankers who bribe politicians, threaten governments, manipulate world markets and receive eye watering bonuses just as the bank they theoretically run goes to the wall, they might be justifiably called bastards.
Even if you have spent too much, run up an overdraft, have a mortgage that you'll never live long enough to pay off. If your flexible friend has gone limp with over use, I firmly suggest you can still point a well aimed and accusatory finger at the likes of the gentlemen pictured below and shout, 'oi, mush, you, yeah, you, running for cover this morning, you lying, cheating, conniving unethical, immoral, two faced bastard, gimme my money back.'

by Robert Llewellyn
 


COMMENTS FROM A DUTCH PERSON LIVING IN IRELAND. Is Ireland Fucked?

Original article 'Is Ireland Fucked'  by Rick Wilbrink in As I See It edited by Buncrana Together

click on links in some photos and green writing

Dumb, self indulgent, uneducated bunch of sheep

 Even the government say it and they show it too, they're giving you the fingers.  Can't you see it?  They're repeatedly saying 'Fuck you Irish'.
You are a dumb, self-indulgent, uneducated bunch of sheep, unable to think for yourselves, let alone care yourselves. You hide behind old pains, unrelated pride, stupid religion and really irritating “ah sure” attitude. You are more interested in football, Voice of Ireland, gossip and facebook.  You are preoccupied with the UK (which you hate for sure), the so called land of the free, America and on the other side of the world,  Australia, (where emigrant families of past disputes went).  How can you focus on that shit. Where do you find the time to worry about other countries. What about your own country?

Pat Rabbitte has introduced legislation to outlaw offensive and sinister content on social media

Pat Rabbitte has introduced legislation to outlaw offensive and sinister content on social media

How can you, in your right mind, say you are proud to be Irish?  You give up after the first set back. You can only argue among yourselves.  You haven't even got a language and now you have allowed your government assholes to sell your country down the drain.  I bet some of you have stopped reading this by now.  Ah, well, good riddance. You are lost to the world anyway.

Dutch And Proud
I am glad I am not Irish. I am Dutch, blunt and straight forward. I am proud of it, I am just Dutch, and that is good enough. I wouldn’t want to limit myself in the way you lot do. I bet you all suffer from the 'Stockholm Syndrome'. Excusing those, who abuse you, do you down,  basically decide whether you live or die and all this while virtually living in other countries.
Do you know you are not an important part of Ireland.  Its resources are and you, you can all fuck off and die when your usability is spent, well past “abuse by” date.

I can see what is going wrong in this county.  I am amazed that you haven't said anything about it up to now.   Your have been fucked over and over and over. So many times it's hard to believe.   I am amazed there are no protests here every day. I am amazed that you have different names for parties who are basically the same, giving you the same choices to destroy yourself and you, dumb fucks, believe it every time.  You believe it is all going to be better with  this or that party  in power. Can't you see their promises are false and they have shafted you every time.  Frankly I am dumbfounded that  Ireland still exists at all. Well let me tell you that it's not going to be for much longer.  The corporations are clambering to get in and they are going to own it, lock stock and barrel.  Your government is practically throwing it at them.  Eventually they will kick out most of the surplus people and keep only the dumb asses who are screwed, up to their eyeballs in debt and those who are lackeys.

You are the monkeys?
I can see how you are lulled into a sense of Irish happiness for maybe a while at elections.  You continually get taken in with meaningless promises like less taxes, more health care, houses, jobs and so on,  You are blind to see your constitutional rights are  being eroded year in, year out.  You can not see  that your freedom is put in a box and locked away.  You will only be allowed to speak your mind as long as it suits the government and the national media.

Really! you are too stupid to discuss anything with. All you do is take the hump act like Neanderthals.  No, wait, maybe that's not fair to Neanderthals. You haven’t discussed anything for almost a hundred years, since your 1916 revolution.  You can’t discuss freedom with monkeys, you tell them when to jump and how high. Monkeys in captivity have no access to independent thought, they are  conditioned when to think and what to think. The government does not give in when monkeys revolt, it just sends in the other monkey brigades and let them hit and batter and hurt the complaining monkeys into compliance.  The media will write bad things about minor incidents, blow it up out of all proportions, create panic among the monkeys of every class.  This gives the leader monkeys the excuse to exert more pressure, more harsh laws to keep the revolting monkey in place under the disguise of security.  The leader monkeys then get their positive reinforcement from their masters, icing on the cake.

endakennyguilotine.jpg

Have you heard of surprise protests?
When it all becomes too much, you panic and as a last resort you revolt, you plan a day of protest.  You plan it well in advance and with months in between each protest.  This gives the powers that be all the time in the world to prepare and take away the sting before any action has even been started. Have you heard of surprise mass actions? Organised outside of the government monitored facebook?

Why has this country not been brought to a standstill? Why has the economy not been stopped, why has Leinster House not been laid siege to, with daily protests inside the chamber?  Why is there not massive “disobedience” on a daily basis. Take the country down, crumble the fascist power, kick out the traitors who are actually hurting you, put their heads on the block and cut them off.   Ok ok … not for real of course, but my indignation gets the better of me. At the very least jail them.  Forget the prosecuting part, you all know already what they have done, how many lives they have ruined.  Send them straight to jail.  Get rid of the old corrupt imperial laws and start anew.  Where you should be living in an egalitarian society you live in despair, for yourselves and your children. You are a dysfunctional society.

Ah go on, go on, go on, you'll not forget what I did for you. Give me your no 1 and I'll look after you.  Nod nod wink wink.


Ah go on, go on, go on, you'll not forget what I did for you. Give me your no 1 and I'll look after you.  Nod nod wink wink.

The Grand People
Spare me the dumb-fucks who go on about the fucking English who did this and that to you.   Yeah right. Get over it. You are out of touch with the world as it is today. For starters if they are so fucking bad, why do you still speak their language? Too stupid to speak your own?  As I said: I am Dutch. The fucking Germans overran our country in the second world war, and we are still speaking Dutch. The Spaniards had their go centuries ago, and we did not succumb to that. Hell even the ignorant French had a go.

It does not matter now if it has been an occupation of years or centuries. It is in the past. If you are a resilient lot you will get the fuck over it. If not you deserve what you got. If you are the 'Grand People' you think you are, you will forgive, you do not have to forget, but forgive. Seriously, why live in the past while there is so much going wrong in this lifetime, now.  All countries have old and past enemies. Currently Germans are taking over Europe and it's only 70 years after their asses were kicked. Do we not drive German cars? Is Germany not the biggest economy in Europe.

 



 

Voting Assholes in Time After Time
Every pub here in Ireland is filled with televisions where Sky bombards us with football. English football. I hear them all shouting go on Liverpool, get in there United. Why is this by the way? Ireland can’t even play football properly and you and all the managers are sitting in the pubs, shouting your drunken heads off. Then you start singing rebel songs and you feel fucking proud to be Irish.

But I don’t get this hypocritical stance of some Irish giving modern English people the evil eye or word. These are the ones up their own asses, voting other assholes in, time after time, because they think they are hurting England, and it helps the individuality of “The Irish”.  Dumb fucks. Quit blaming others for your own disappointing behaviour. There are Irish dickheads evicting people from their homes. Irish assholes wrecking lives, sucking money out of all of us' imposing illegal taxes, militarising the gardai.

Why do you not feel proud of your county. You seem to be ashamed. Maybe you as a nation were downtrodden by the invaders, morally numbed by religion and fooled the capitalists. Maybe it's because you were the ignorant poor who were forced to flee this country to colonise and downtrod other countries like a dysfunctional child who grows up only to perpetrate the same abuse on others. Maybe you never got time to heal. Has pride been knocked out of you?  You are racist begrudgers, only good with a shovel, envious of other people, the begorrahs, neither one thing or the other.

Are You Mad At Me Yet?
Are you fucking mad at me yet for blatantly discarding you as a fighting people? For calling you names? For making fun of your misplaced pride and your immense stupidity by being taken in decade after decade? Have you decided already to call me a fucking foreigner with no right to speak like that. I should be ashamed of myself and go back to the country I came from, if I don’t like it here? Are you getting ready to find out where I live, so you can bash my head in?  Well I live in Blarney and you’re welcome to come and find me.  You think, as of now I am a waste of space?  Well… same to you.

Have I hurt you in the core of your soul with my insults, and are you raging with anger? Good. Because you know, what I just wrote about you is what the government is thinking about you. So if you are raring to have a go at me, why are you not out on the streets having a go at them? Every day. Why should an unimportant foreigner get all the stick for basically voicing his thoughts.   Why are you not up in arms?  Are you afraid of derailing the economy of this country.  Well let me tell you they have been doing that all along, only to profit from it themselves by selling your natural resources to private foreigners,  lining their own pockets and satisfying the insatiable greed of foreign companies? If you have any real pride in yourselves, get up of your asses and go on the streets to protest, today and every day till the bastards and their sorts are out of power.  Stop fighting and squabbling among yourselves.  Get away from divisive party politics, clinging to some unattainable goal, wrapping flags and ideologies around you.  Get away from the herd instinct and start thinking anew, for yourselves.  Then and only then will you be able to sort yourselves out.

Corrib Gas Pipeline. In the most dramatic clash of cultures in modern Ireland, the rights of farmers over their fields, and of fishermen to their fishing grounds, has come in direct conflict with one of the worlds most powerful oil companies. When t…

Corrib Gas Pipeline. In the most dramatic clash of cultures in modern Ireland, the rights of farmers over their fields, and of fishermen to their fishing grounds, has come in direct conflict with one of the worlds most powerful oil companies. When the citizens look to their state for protection, they find that the state has put Shell's right to lay a pipeline ahead of their own rights.  Click on photo.

I am waiting for that one decent Garda
There is no point in demanding the arrest of a garda to his colleague,  it will fall on deaf ears. If you haven’t understood it by now, then you are too stupid to understand anything. The Gardai are paid to do as they are told, and although you are the ones paying them, really, it is the government that controls them, or put that another way the  Denis O'Briens of this world – aka the big corporations.
The Gardai are dogs on a leash, and who ever really owns the government, will own the gardai. They are not taught to think constitutionally, or independently. In fact they are taught not to think at all. They are human machines without empathy, corporeally programmed. They are a dangerous force, deployed to hit, scare and threaten people into submission. They fine, evict, protect the corps, threaten protesters, portrayed as the sinister fringe with criminal intentions.

I am waiting for that one decent Garda, who will indeed protect the people.  This should be his duty.  That one free thinker who will defend our right to freedom and democracy.  Who will exercise wisdom and understanding when things are happening. A garda who will think, not just about now but about his future and that of his daughters or sons, his neighbours, his friends, and his country. A garda with a conscience. They used to be around in abundance.

So are you still pissed off with me? Well as I said this is how the government is really thinking about you, if they are thinking of you in the first place.  Going by their actions to date they really don't think of you at all.  Personally I think you’re a great bunch to live amongst, but that doesn’t help you get your asses in gear, does it?  You cannot be OK with that. So direct your anger towards those bastards in Government.  We need a conscience in power. Our conscience.

For now.
 


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