‘sup?
Cork’s bog-biting rodent.
A vital superstar!
Deasúin MacBroin tweetz:
Tomorrow in the Cork Evening Echo – Cork’s new global celebrity.
Previously: Squealy Bum Time
‘sup?
Cork’s bog-biting rodent.
A vital superstar!
Deasúin MacBroin tweetz:
Tomorrow in the Cork Evening Echo – Cork’s new global celebrity.
Previously: Squealy Bum Time
Glenn Fitzpatrick, above, is a trade unionist and a former student activist.
He’s also currently studying for an MA in Political Communication.
Today he launched a new blog, The Young Celts, to offer Ireland’s younger generation a platform for debate.
He writes:
There is an inconvenient truth here but it really shouldn’t be all that inconvenient. Millennials are not saying directly to our parents and elders that we attribute the blame directly to them.
Rather, it is the policies enacted in their name that are precisely the problem.
That should not be a hard concept to grasp. It’s only very recently that I became comfortable with using the term ‘ladder-pullers’ to describe the generation above us.
This particular kind of ‘I’m alright, Jack’ can be found in every pub in Ireland on a Friday night resting safe in the knowledge that he and he alone has done a hard week’s work (unlike the lazy generation coming up behind him trying to take something for nothing).
Cold, hard facts don’t sit well with him. Instead, he likes to talk about how our generation will not be a generation of homeowners because ‘that’s how it is on the continent’.
Bear in mind this gentleman probably accessed social housing when he was my age. He went to the council and got a free gaff on a peppercorn rent. Eventually he had the chance to buy that house for next to nothing.
This ideological state apparatus is part and parcel of the institutionalised ageism that has plagued generation after generation not only in Ireland but across the world.
Last year’s #PresRef was a prime example of how keen Irish society was to ensure that our citizenry remains a second tier one and this was justified along the same lines.
The default picture these ladder-pullers have of us is precisely the frame that saw the Jobseekers’ cut made in 2013.
It wasn’t even up for discussion that someone under 35 might be allowed on the ballot paper (Which was all the question was. No one was being asked to elect a 21 year old on that day). Instead, ladder-pullers united and kept that extra bit of democracy for themselves.
The inter-generational disparity continues across employment, education and of course the very planet that we are inheriting. Would it really so hard for the ladder-pullers to simply express some inter-generational solidarity?
Give up just a smidgen of their privilege so that our generation can live with some dignity?
They should be holding the door open for us. Instead, it’s almost like this is the natural order. Once we’re 40, it will be our turn to go into self-preservation mode, our turn to ignore the plight of the generation coming up behind us.
What is evident is that we are almost at the stage where much of this will be irreversible. We are headed directly for generational conflict. Why on earth would a generation left behind see any merit in their taxes going towards services for the elderly?
And is it any wonder why politics is met with such cynicism? It must be comforting for the ladder-pullers to attribute our apparent apathy to a laziness that so clearly plagues us.
In reality, 15 years ago, young Irish people leaving college had a chance. This is no longer the case for far too many of my fellow millennials.
I christened this blog page ‘The Young Celts’ for a couple of reasons. In recent months I, like many others, have been following the Bernie Sanders campaign closely and The Young Turks offers hard-hitting, unapologetically biased coverage of the US Elections that satisfies my anti-establishment urges.
Whatever you think of the format, the personalities and the content, there is no doubt that The Young Turks exists as a reaction to the feral beast that is US mainstream media.
Shoot across the Atlantic Ocean to our shores and it is very hard to see how young people can be adequately represented by a mainstream media that has for so long tried to pigeon-hole us as good-for-nothings, a mainstream media that works its ass off to protect the status-quo.
I certainly do not have the resources or the wherewithal to replicate what Cenk Ulgur and Ana Kasparian have done but the need for an alternative narrative that our generation controls is not up for debate.
In the interim, I will try and add my 2c to current affairs when I can on this blog.
It would be great to link up with like-minded people, young people with opposite views and particularly people au fait with creative media to see just how much of a counter-narrative we can put out there.
Maybe then the ladder-pullers will feel a little guilty and give us a dig-out.
This afternoon.
Richard E Grant in Sligo.
Meanwhile, earlier…
The Giant’s Causeway. Grateful to still be breathing after all this brutal loss of creative lives pic.twitter.com/jNY5YaWcuJ
— Richard E. Grant (@RichardEGrant) April 22, 2016
Mmf.
Pic: Tourism Ireland
Spectacular shots of waves in natural light on the New South Wales coast by Australian photographer Warren Keelan. Sez he:
I’ve always had a fascination with nature, especially the ocean and its ever changing forms, and I am compelled to capture and share what I feel are special and unique moments in the sea. I love the raw, unpredictable nature of water in motion and the way sunlight brings it all to life, from both above and below the surface. For me, the challenge is creating an image that hopefully tells a story or leaves an impression on the viewer.
People being deported from Greece to Turkey by Frontex officials on April 4
Further to President Michael D Higgins’ speech on Monday in which he was critical of Europe’s response to refugees and migrants who are continuing to travel to Europe…
A petition calling on the next Irish government to demand an end to the EU/Turkey deal states:
Since early March, the EU-Turkey Deal has been implemented against refugees and migrants. This deal designates Turkey as a safe third country, something it patently is not. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 16 people, including three children, were killed by border guards as they crossed into Turkey this year.
Amnesty International has reported on such killings, predominantly of Syrian refugees, since 2013. Not alone this, but Amnesty has also documented that Turkish authorities have been expelling groups of around 100 Syrian men, women and children to Syria almost daily since mid- January.
This mass expulsion of people to a war zone is illegal under Turkish, EU and international law. The registration process in Turkey is also deeply flawed and conditions in the camps there are often unsafe and present multiple health hazards.
…The EU must recognise that people will continue to flee war, danger and precarity, and that these measures are just driving them to make ever more dangerous journeys. Thousands of children have disappeared in Europe, almost 6,000 refugee children and minors were reported missing in Germany last year.
European Union estimates that at least 10,000 child refugees had disappeared after arriving in the continent were “very likely to be underestimated”, according to a senior official at Unicef. Children and vulnerable adults are being preyed on by traffickers and criminals.
The amount of money spent on policing and militarising this crisis could help to resettle the people in need of asylum, this is clearly not a financial issue.
We are witnessing the greatest displacement of people since the Second World War and this time we can see it unfold on our TV screens and computers. The response of the EU is shameful, inhumane and wrong.
Will the next generation look back on this time and wonder how it happened, how we let it happen?
Ireland has responsibilities to these people as it plays a role in their displacement due to the use of Shannon Airport by the US military.
The wars that refugees are fleeing from resulted from invasions, occupations and deliberate aggravation of pre-existing tensions by the US military that we have been supporting at Shannon for the last 15 years.
Ireland also has a proud history of humanitarian activity, let us take a stand now to do the right thing, to play a positive and decent part in this crisis.
Call on your TDs to demand the suspension of the EU/Turkey Deal and for Ireland to accept more refugees. The resilience, courage, solidarity and community they manage to create despite these terrible circumstances could immeasurably enrich our societies.
Let’s be on the right side of history this time. Demand the human rights of migrants are upheld and that there is safe passage for all.
Anyone who wishes can sign the petition – which will be sent to the signee’s local TDs – here
Previously: ‘Is Our Response To Be Defined By Barbed Wire, Tear Gas And Rubber Bullets?
Comedian David McSavage outside court this morning and his handwritten statement
Further to comedian David McSavage saying he wouldn’t pay for a TV licence because of his dislike for RTÉ’s taste in humour, he appeared in court earlier today.
Breaking News reports:
A TV licence inspector told Judge O’Neill that he called to the entertainer’s [David McSavage’s] home on May 7 last and McSavage confirmed he lived there and was in possession of a television set but had no licence.
However, a licence was taken out on March 31 this year leaving arrears of €115, the inspector told the court.
…Judge O’Neill adjourned the case until June 16 and told him that if the arrears were paid by then he will not have to attend the hearing and the case will be struck out.
After court McSavage told reporters he has not bought a licence and he did not know who had got it for him.
“Unless,” he added, “Ray D’Arcy bought one for me, he said he would.”
Previously: ‘The Rubberbandits Are Now As Mainstream As Ryan Tubridy’
Pics: Tom Tuite
Update:
Ray D’Arcy talks with David McSavage this afternoon post-trial.
A short video of Wednesday’s tribute to Howard Marks outside Leinster House, Kildare Street, Dublin 2.
Proceedings are lead by Paradise Paddy (in hat) , former Irish tour manager for Mr Nice, and members of Norml Ireland, Irish cannabis community open group.
Previously: Tolikn’ Bout A Revolution
Journalist William Campbell (above) tackles Sunday’s Census 2016 in the latest episode of his excellent Here’s How current affairs podcast series.
William chats with Tony Downes, of Census Publicity at the Central Statistics Office, about the religious portions of the census and asks: “Do you know what a leading question is?”
Fight!
Listen here