Monthly Archives: June 2012

Louise McSharry (photographed as a Heinz title-winning toddler in 1984) writes on her blog:

My dad died when I was 3 (the year after the above photo was taken). He had cancer, and he’d been sick for a long time, but that didn’t make it any less heartbreaking for my mother who was 28 and alone with two kids. As a result, things did not go so well after that.
She drank more and more, until she became the kind of person who passed out in pubs resulting in the staff ringing around to get someone to collect us…

…Eventually she decided the answer was to move to America, where it would be more difficult for people to annoy her and she could drink in peace. Predictably, once in America things got worse.

…When the Department of Child and Family Services found us, my aunt and uncle were there to step in and take custody.  Eventually they adopted us, and they’re who I now call my parents.

The reason I’m writing about all of this, is because we were lucky.

…If it weren’t for them [Louise’s aunt and uncle] we would almost certainly have gone into care as many children do.  Children who in their young lives have already been let down in a deeply profound manner by those who are meant to take care of them.

 

More here: There But For The Grace Of God…(LouiseMcSharry.com)

Earlier: Of The 36 That Died In Care

 

The Criminal Justice (Corruption) Bill proposes penalties of up to 10 years imprisonment and unlimited fines, as well as giving the courts power to remove public officials from office and exclude them from holding office for up to 10 years.

The Heads of the Bill also include a recommendation from the Mahon Tribunal which would create a new offence of making payments knowingly or recklessly to a third party who intends to use them as bribes.

One academic specialising in the area, Dr Elaine Byrne of Trinity College, said, if the Bill is not watered down, it will be one of the most radical pieces of legislation internationally on corruption.

ie. It’ll be watered down.

Government publishes wide-ranging bill aimed at tackling corruption (RTE News)

(Will St Leger street art pic: Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)

Anon writes:

I work as an art facilitator in a residential nursing home. Yesterday I called in for a chat with one of the participants of the art sessions I give once a week. He was very excited to show me a medal he had bought in commemoration of the Eucharist Conference in Dublin (above).

However, he was terribly disappointed when he took the medal out and
realised there was no way to fix the medal to a chain. Sure, you could thread a ribbon through it but he thought that would cheapen the beautiful thing he had just paid close to €50 for. FIFTY EURO!

But he didn’t mind the price because he had been told it was very limited edition, I didn’t have the heart to point out the number on the accompanying card – 285 out of 1000.

Now it’s just sitting in a cardboard box on his bedside locker instead
of around his neck with his other holy medals.

Mmmf :-(