Yearly Archives: 2016
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABz2m0olmPg
In case you haven’t seen it yet, this viral commercial for KENZO perfume – directed by the mighty Spike Jonze and starring apparently possessed actress Margaret Qualley – has very little to do with perfume.
You may recall Spike Jonze’ video for Fatboy Slim’s ‘Weapon of Choice’ featuring Chistopher Walken.
This one has a similarly spacious interior set, subtle camerawork and a rather excellent original track by Sam Spiegel & Ape Drums feat. Assassin – Mutant Brain.
Full screen and volume up highly recommended.
It’s good and twitchy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihJD-i52kGI
Dylan Finglas, aged three, from Dublin, lives with Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency (MSD).
MSD sees sufferers, over time, develop breathing difficulties, lose their sight, hearing, ability to walk, swallow and ultimately organ failure.
Most children diagnosed with MSD don’t live to see their 10th birthday.
Dylan’s parents, Michelle and Alan, are trying to raise funds for research into MSD – for a clinical trial for Dylan and children with the same condition.
To this end, similar to the Ice Bucket Challenge in aid of Motor Neurone Disease, Kiera Grafton has set up the Cream Pie Challenge (see video above) where those getting a cream pie rubbed in their face – donate €4 by text Dylan to 50300 -and, in turn, nominate others to get the same.
Thanks Kiera
This morning.
Leinster House, Kildare Street, Dublin 2
Emily Duffy (as Snow White) with an open letter signed By 10,698 people on behalf of campaigning group Uplift. To wit:
Dear Minister Noonan
Everyone has to pay their tax and that includes Apple, one of the world’s most wealthy corporations. When they’re allowed to avoid paying their tax bill, we all suffer.
As the Minister for Finance you have a duty to protect and safeguard the interests of every man, woman and child in Ireland. You claim you do not have enough money in the public exchequer to ensure quality healthcare for everyone; to properly resource our schools and universities; to ensure every worker has a living wage, to end homelessness. Apple’s tax bill would go a long way to solving these problems.
We, the undersigned, remind you that you have a choice and an opportunity to stand up for the people of Ireland over the interests of Apple. We call on you to not appeal the decision that Apple owes Ireland €13 billion. Don’t stand in the way of Apple paying what they owe.
FIGHT!
Earlier: Apple Green
Rollignnews
Oh My Prog
atEvery Friday we give away a voucher worth 25 messers (Euros) to spend at any of the 13 Golden Discs stores nationwide.
All we ask from you is a tune we can play at 5pm TODAY.
This week’s theme: ‘Prog’.
What track by a progressive act sets off your irregular time signature?
To enter, please complete this sentence.
‘The greatest prog song in my experience would have be_______________________owing to its______________________’
Lines MUST close at 2.45pm 4.45pm
Apple Green
atThis morning.
Government Buildings, Dublin.
Cabinet members arrive to discuss the Apple tax brouhaha.From top: Finance Minister Michael Noonan, Shane Ross and Finian McGrath; Katherine Zappone and Leo Vardkar
Apple tax ruling: Irish cabinet discusses appeal (BBC)
EU Commissioner Warns Other Firms Could Get Apple Tax Treatment (Fortune)
Earlier: This An Argument About Competition
Rollingnews
Stardbally, Co Laois this morning (11.19am)
John Gallen writes:
Breaking clouds…
Earlier: Meanwhile, In Stradbally
UPDATE:
1.10pm.
John Gallen writes:
The field is filling with tents (Joplin/Warhol), and the weather is holding. Mild, cool in the breeze, bit more than a zephyr now too :)
Islam Karimov, Uzbekistan President
Some people in Tashkent have said
Islam Karimov might be dead
But they’re all a bit scared
To have the news aired
So they’re leaving him there in his bed.
John Moynes
Pic: Associated Press
From top: The panel on last night’s Prime Time and Dr Aidan Regan, of UCD
Last night.
On RTÉ’s Prime Time.
The panel – Eoin Fahy, chief economist with KBI Global Investors, Minister for Housing Simon Coveney, Anti-Austerity Alliance TD Ruth Coppinger and Dr Aidan Regan, from the School of Politics and International Relations in UCD – discussed the Apple tax bill with presenter David McCullagh.
During the discussion…
Dr Aidan Regan: “This is the crucial point that really wasn’t picked up either, in the preceding interviews, the ruling that the Commission have issued basically states that Ireland should apply its tax laws, 12.5% consistently.
“It’s basically said that allowing Apple to set up a subsidiary, split it into two companies, allow them to transfer the sales profits to one of those companies, the head office, that is basically stateless, it’s in the cloud, ensures that they don’t pay tax – call it aggressive tax planning, call it corporate tax avoidance.”
“Now the point from the Commission’s perspective is that that’s perfectly legal and it has been legal. Now, the Government has since closed it. The argument of the Commission is that’s illegal state aid. So this is an argument about competition. The Commission is saying that Ireland has broke the laws of the European Union by facilitating a large multinational to have comparative advantage over its competitors in the market.
“So it’s not actually saying Ireland’s laws were wrong, it’s not about morality, it’s not about legality. They accept that was perfectly legal. They’re pointing out that it’s illegal to facilitate a company, like Apple.”
David McCullagh: “But that only applies if other companies didn’t get similar treatment and there doesn’t appear to be any evidence that if another company had come along and asked the same question that Apple asked, that they wouldn’t have got the same answer. In fact, it’s probably pretty obvious that they would have got the same answer.”
Dr Regan: “Possibly and this, I think, is what we don’t fully know. The full ruling is confidential and I would be very curious to see precisely what it was about those two particular tax rulings in 1991 and 2007 that clearly signal to Apple that it was OK for them to avoid paying the 12.5% by transferring their profits to another company and effectively pay zero.”
Watch back in full here
From top; Clodagh Hawe; Gary Gannon
A man can kill his partner and we care more about his ‘motives’ than her life.
Gary Gannon writes:
I was curating the @ireland account on Monday, when the story of the ‘tragic deaths’ in Cavan broke.
We heard in hushed tones how the police were ‘not looking for anyone else’ and how ‘the answers lay within the family home’, how five people had lost their lives unnecessarily like there had been some sort of unprecedented carbon monoxide incident.
In the aftermath of these ‘tragic deaths’, I learned that a man can literally get away with murder.
He can kill his partner and his children and we will still eulogise him. We will care more about his ‘motives’ than her life. We will even go so far as attribute some sort of nobility to his well-intentioned but unfortunately murderous actions.
You know what the worst thing is? Not just that the murder of a woman and her children becomes the footnote in a story about a man’s mental health, but that the woman is totally disappeared in all media discourse.
The Irish Times screamed ‘Wonderful children who will be greatly missed’. The Independent asked poignantly ‘How could he kill those boys?’
What about their mother?
Her name was Clodagh. She was a teacher. She had a life, thoughts, opinions. She mattered.
On Tuesday morning, I tweeted the Women’s Aid statistic that never fails to shock; one in two women murdered in Ireland will die at the hands of a male partner.
Men murdering women is unfortunately not unusual; an average of one woman is murdered every month and in half of resolved cases, it was by an intimate partner, someone she is supposed to be able to trust the most. In the majority of cases, this occurs in her own home.
By Tuesday evening, I was engaged in full blown @ireland Twitter rant about the media’s failure to name the murder of a woman and children as murder.
The support received was tremendous, from hundreds of people who were also sitting at home, wondering why Clodagh Hawe’s photograph was only just released when her husband’s face had been smiling at us all day.
Wondering why we knew about his job, his hobbies and his normal, everyday life, than anything about Clodagh. Wondering why we were so intent on minimising the culpability of the man who murdered Clodagh, and her children.
There was also criticism. Why was I speculating? Didn’t I know this wasn’t the time? Why couldn’t I wait until I was sure of the facts?
To these people, I ask – is there any other crime in which we hold the perpetrator’s reasons to be more important than his actions? It is not speculation that he murdered his wife but let’s be clear, it is the absolute height of a culture of violent misogyny that we are not allowed to say this.
In Ireland, our silence kills us. It enables us to lock women behind Magdalene walls, to force them to different countries for essential healthcare, to minimise the violent tendencies of abusive men and to allow coercive, controlling perpetrators of domestic abuse up and down the country to sleep easy.
In refusing to name the murder of Clodagh and her three children as the violent actions of an abusive man, we enable ourselves to reach the logical conclusion that this man was A Good Man, one who simply snapped.
We act like their murders were inevitable, that even Clodagh couldn’t have seen it coming. We let him, and all men like him, off the hook.
The reality is, many women living in abusive relationships do ultimately fear that they will be killed. Many can’t leave, because the coercive control exerted by their partners is so absolute, or because they are so isolated by silence, and a lack of support structures, that they see no way out. Heartbreakingly, for women who do leave, it is the most dangerous time for them.
The lies about ‘The Good Man Who Snapped’ allow us to continue to underfund women’s shelters and front line violence against women services.
We enable the horrendously stupid argument about USC cuts to dominate the airwaves in the lead up to the 2017 Budget. How can we afford tax cuts when we apparently cannot properly fund support services to enable women to leave abusive relationships? (I’ll leave the argument about political choices for another day.)
We can make Ireland the safest country in the world for women and their children. We can do this by facing the fact that one in five women experience domestic violence, and that for many of these women, this violence ends in their death and in cases like Clodagh’s, the deaths of her children.
In response to the murders of Clodagh, Liam, Niall and Ryan, we can and must pledge to properly resource the full and immediate ratification and implementation of the Istanbul Convention, as Women’s Aid, Safe Ireland and the National Women’s Council of Ireland have been screaming for, for years.
The Istanbul Convention leaves no room for doubt ; it is the obligation of the state to fully address it in all its forms and to take measures to prevent violence against women, protect its victims and prosecute the perpetrators.
There can be no real equality between women and men if women experience gender-based violence on a large-scale and state agencies and institutions turn a blind eye.
Gary Gannon is a Social Democrats Councillor on Dublin City Counicil for Dublin’s North Inner City. His column appears here every Friday before lunch. Follow Gary on Twitter: @1garygannon



















