Royal Canal at Newcomen Bridge [North Strand Road], Dublin 1, from a German Magazine, Geo, in 1986.
Via Brand New Retro
Royal Canal at Newcomen Bridge [North Strand Road], Dublin 1, from a German Magazine, Geo, in 1986.
Via Brand New Retro
We could live without the audio but here’s an incredible 360 degree view of the interior of the Sistine Chapel.
Wow, as Pope Julius II might have exclaimed.
Thanks Jack Jones.
I don’t have a mortgage and I don’t know this couple. But I’m wondering where are we going to draw the line in relation to condemning people on their mortgage debt?
While a couple who bought 21 properties might not elicit sympathy, I don’t think it’s right to use them as a scapegoat for our mortgage debt crisis either.
I certainly didn’t feel comfortable watching them being dragged from their home, albeit palatial and being paid for by the taxpayer. And while I can understand the feelings of anger being hurled at them, I feel it’s dangerously distracting taxpayers’ attention from what we should really be debating – and that is the bank guarantee and debt forgiveness.
We all know banks were throwing cash at people during the boom. I was earning €21,000 in 2003 and was constantly getting letters from my bank (Bank of Ireland) telling me I was approved for a substantial mortgage.
A guy on [RTE’s] Frontline earlier this week admitted he was given a loan worth 10 times his salary with no questions asked. We don’t know what this couple’s earnings, or company profits were – so we don’t really know what their income was relative to those loans.
And more worryingly we don’t know what rules IBRC, or NAMA, are following, if they’re following any at all, as neither are under FOI. So who is to say who next will be evicted? And how can we know if it’s a fair move? How can we know others who perhaps ‘should be evicted’ aren’t?
In November 2010 [Economist] Morgan Kelly predicted a Mortgage War between those who took out mortgages and those who didn’t.
He said: “The gathering mortgage crisis puts Ireland on the cusp of a social conflict on the scale of the Land War, but with one crucial difference. Whereas the Land War faced tenant farmers against a relative handful of mostly foreign landlords, the looming Mortgage War will pit recent house buyers against the majority of families who feel they worked hard and made sacrifices to pay off their mortgages, or else decided not to buy during the bubble, and who think those with mortgages should be made to pay them off. Any relief to struggling mortgage-holders will come not out of bank profits – there is no longer any such thing – but from the pockets of other taxpayers.
He also said: “If one family defaults on its mortgage, they are pariahs: if 200,000 default they are a powerful political constituency. There is no shame in admitting that you too were mauled by the Celtic Tiger after being conned into taking out an unaffordable mortgage, when everyone around you is admitting the same.
“Ireland faced a painful choice between imposing a resolution on banks that were too big to save or becoming insolvent, and, for whatever reason, chose the latter. Sovereign nations get to make policy choices, and we are no longer a sovereign nation in any meaningful sense of that term. From here on, for better or worse, we can only rely on the kindness of strangers.”
(Eamon Farrell/Photocall Ireland)
I thought the Killiney eviction was bad but this is what I woke up to to (yesterday) morning [at Clarence Mangan Road in The Tenters, Dublin 8]….and she has a wee babbie!
Mmf.
We’ve seen this kind of thing before.
We are encountering some Cloudflare issues. We are unable to upload images at the moment.
Damn hipster content delivery network system.
Normal service will be resumed shortly.
Apologies.
Meanwhile, here’s a dog on top of a car in Arranmore Island, Donegal in 1979:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4IvYj4vqmo
In 1998, a mortgage with Irish Nationwide was registered by the couple in respect of an apartment at Burleigh Court, Burlington Road, Dublin 4; an apartment at Abbeyfield, Milltown Road, Dublin; an apartment at Simmonscourt Castle, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4; an apartment at Wynnfield Park, Charleville Road, Rathmines, Dublin 6; an apartment at Capel Court, Capel Street, Dublin 1; an apartment at The Waterside, Charlotte Quay, Dublin 4, and an apartment at Deanscourt, Christchurch Square, Dublin 2.
A number of separate mortgages with Irish Nationwide were registered during 1998 and 1999 in relation to 34 Eglinton Road, Donnybrook, Dublin 4 (the couple’s address before the Killiney address). These were satisfied in August 2011.
And there’s more.
Evicted Pair Own Large Property Portfolio (Colm Keena, Irish Times)
VODAFONE IS to refund nearly €2 million to more than 50,000 customers who it overcharged to access a range of premium-rate services including telephone sex lines and so-called psychic phone lines over a period of more than three years.
The company said the billing error only emerged after it carried out an internal audit of premium-rate numbers.
Labour: 13% (-6%)
Fianna Fáil: 14% (-1%)
Sinn Féin: 21% (+6%)
Independents: 14% (+3%)
(Irish Times Ipsos/MRBI poll conducted on Monday and Tuesday)
And Eamon Gilmore?
Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore has seen a seen a steep drop of 14 points in his rating over the past six months from 41 per cent to 27 per cent.
Oh.
Government Satisfaction Rating Down 14 to 23 Per Cent (Irish Times)
(Mark Stedman, Laura Hutton/Photocall Ireland)

So, Harry’s on his way to Galway?
Hmm.
From today’s Galway Advertiser:
“I have kept in touch with many of the people I met during the last event [Volvo Ocean Race] in 2009, some of whom know Prince Harry personally,” [Fine Gael Councillor Padraig] Conneely (above) told the Galway Advertiser. “It was suggested to me that he would warmly welcome the opportunity to come to Galway for the finale.” Cllr Conneely subsequently made enquiries through the British diplomatic service and was in contact with the Taoiseach’s office to notify them of the circumstances. Since then the Fine Gael councillor has learned that there has been “engagement at the highest diplomatic level, and it is just a matter of protocol before a visit is confirmed”.
However, Rival paper, the Galway City Tribune, contacted Buckingham Palace today and it appears Cllr Conneely is the excitable victim of a royal hoax. The Advertiser exclusive, we understand, was based not so much on discussions “at the highest diplomatic level” but apparently on correspondence containing “a fake letterhead”. Ouch.
Prince Harry Visit to Galway Report Is A Royal Hoax (Galway News)
Thanks Allan Cavanagh