Monthly Archives: March 2012

On that sentence.

From Rev David Syms, of ‘Six Principles’ Baptist Church, Baltimore, Co Cork.

“…We then see Paul Begley [Garlic importation tax evader] being sent to prison for a tax offence while paying back the money, leaving a wife and children to be alone for six years while he serves his outrageous sentence .

…I made a commitment to go on hunger strike from next Tuesday in protest against the injustice of sentencing in this country. I only hope that being a person who is not very strong willed I can do this for a reasonable length of time. I hope my faith can get me through.”

 

Irish Times letters

The four-minute video, in which the semi-naked Limerickman is clearly identifiable, shows him romping on a pool-table and engaging in explicit acts with the stripper in a side-room of the bar….

“…It is believed the sex worker is of East European origin, according to other sources close to the bar”

Pornographic ‘Sex Show’ In Limerick Pub (Anne Sheridan, Limerick Leader)

Thanks Niall O’M

Now, if you think that two black people are just as suitable parents for a baby as a white couple, then quite clearly, the Fianna Fail vote for equality of marriage is not a problem for you. But if you think differently: if you consider that a boy should be raised with a white mother and father, then the Fianna Fail vote is more than a difficulty, for it will legally prevent an adoption agency from even having an opinion on such matters.

 

The Blaxploitation Of Kevin Myers (Alan Flanagan, Parallelevision)

It has come to this.

From Trinity’s Communications Office:

Students complete the barista training skills workshop organised by Trinity’s Catering Department in conjunction with the Student’s Union and Lavazza Coffee.

Students signed up to a full day training course through the Student’s Union Facebook page. With only 25 places available the course was quickly over-subscribed. Five workshops were held and each day five students learnt how to make the perfect espresso, the basis of all quality coffee drinks, along with all the necessary skills to make premium quality cappuccinos, lattes and many more.

 

Barista Training Skills Workshop Aims to Help Students Find Summer Employment (TCD)

Thanks Daire Hickey

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hj27JY1gD0I&feature=player_embedded#!

Not in South Korea they haven’t.

Here’s how to grow a Leprechaun.

Michael Halloran writes:

Seeing as we’re only a few days from St. Patrick’s Day, I thought I’d share a link. I found this video posted by a fellow Irishman last year when I was teaching in South Korea and looking for an Irish-themed project to do
with the students

 

If we could understand what he was talking about.

On the flip side [Nick] Denton [Gawker founder] says that, “There are stories our writers are afraid to write because they’re afraid of jeers from the commenters.” In his business, being scared to write controversial content is a detriment to the bottom line.

The solution gawker.com is about to deploy to clean the comment wasteland involves making commenters responsible for their own content. Each comment can be spun off into separate discussions where the commenter has the power to lead the conversation.

“We want to create rights and responsibilities within threads,” Denton says. Another piece of this system is something Denton dubbed “fractional commenting”.

 

Seriously.

We literally haven’t a clue how this works.

But we’re stoked.

Gawker Gets Serious About Commenting (NowToronto)

They loved her.

No, really.

Niamh Ni Mhaoileoin writes:

Nancy Pelosi addressed Trinity’s University Philosophical Society last night and received its honorary patronage. She shared the podium with Senator Katherine Zappone, Senator David Norris, Laurence Donnelly of Democrats Abroad Ireland and Eoin O’ Liatháin, President of the Phil.

The theme of Ms Pelosi’s address was E Pluribus Unum (out of many, one.) She spoke a great deal about the importance, in both Congress and the Phil, of discourse, debate and radical ideas. Sadly, all three were in tragically short supply last night.

Thirty seconds couldn’t pass without the Minority Leader receiving rapturous applause for truisms which, if a student delivered them in a Phil debate, would be considered uninspired and deeply naive. Its omissions were far more striking than its inclusions. There was hardly any mention, for instance, of November’s elections.

Of course, Ms Pelosi continues to be a great inspiration. As Speaker she was probably the most powerful elected woman in history and did a huge amount of good, particularly in health care reform, which she discussed as the great achievement of her political career. However, anyone who had come to see a display of political intellect and insight could only be disappointed, on hearing instead niceties and saccharine repetition of commonplace political rhetoric.

Ms Pelosi spoke about the need for greater female representation in leadership, which she suggested would provide answers to the big questions of politics; economics, government and National Security. There was no reference to or criticism of the barriers to that empowerment.

She recalled Kennedy’s visit to Ireland, when he commended the Irish on their support for the UN’s nuclear non-proliferation treaty. Ms Pelosi then celebrated Presidents Reagan and Obama’s continuation of the effort for nuclear non-proliferation, an issue on which (allegedly) Republicans and Democrats are united. Cue loud and lengthy applause, led by Senator Norris. No question regarding the USA maintaining a vast store of nuclear weapons, and arguably using them to underwrite their dominance in on-going acts of military aggression.

Another gaping silence came, highly unusually, from Senator Katherine Zappone, who lauded the Irish and American constitutions as connected documents, promising equality and justice for all. To be clear, this is the same Katherine Zappone who is in the middle of large-scale legal proceedings, specifically because in the name of the Irish constitution she and her partner have been denied equality and justice.

The event fed a niggling suspicion that the special political relationship between Ireland and America is built on the exchange of platitudes and shamrocks, rather than ideas. In the end, Senator Norris did highlight the disagreements between the Irish and Americans, specifically referencing the Iraq War. However, he chuckled; there was no reason to introduce dissent into the evening. There would be plenty of time for that later after a few “convivial glasses”. It’s Ireland after all; have a drink and everything will be fine.

(Laura Hutton/Photocall Ireland)