‘sup?
Malcolm writes:
I know you don’t normally do this but I’ve just found a little dog on Parnell Street [Dublin 1], nearly got hit by a car. No collar, etc.
Anyone?
This morning.
At the Embassy of Cuba on Pearse Street, Dublin 2, this morning.
President Michael D Higgins, accompanied by his wife Sabina, signs the book of condolence for the former president of Cuba, Fidel Castro, who died on Friday night, aged 90.
Earlier: Misplaced Fidelity
Pics: Sam Boal/Rollingnews
€1,500 to €1,900
€1,700 to €2,800
People are receiving notice of rent increases as the two year #freeze begins to come to an end.
T.51551 pic.twitter.com/OWsmE4HMJX
— Liveline (@Liveline_RTE) November 28, 2016
Ugh.
Related: Rent increases in private rented housing (Citizens Information)
Previously: Certainty In A World Gone Mad
It’s that time of year again.
Fupp!
Yay!
Eliot Loudermilk writes:
You’ve been very kind to feature my top-notch present Christmas shopping site for the past two years (in 2014 and 2015). It troubles me that people might actually put thought into their presents this year, so I’d be very much obliged if you could feature it again, as I’m sure the shopping stress season has well begun.
Oh, and in an obvious attempt at pandering, look what occasionally comes up as a suggestion.
*Blushes*
HINT, HINT: The Broadsheet Buke of Unspecified Things That Look Like Ireland (edited by Aidan Coughlan, New Island €5) Some still in stock!
Earlier this morning.
At the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican City.
Taoiseach Enda Kenny and his wife Fionnuala met Pope Francis.
Mr Kenny gave the pope a print of a stained glass window by Harry Clarke while the pope gave Mr Kenny an etching of St Peter’s Basilica.
*It’s not a caption competition until you say so.*
Issue of silenced priests expected to be raised by Kenny at Vatican meeting (RTE)
Pics via Tony Connelly
UPDATE:
Pope Francis has confirmed to Taoiseach Enda Kenny that he will visit Ireland in August 2018 for the World Meeting of Families in Dublin.
Children protesting at the Kinsale Road Direct Provision Centre in Cork in September 2014
…Of €16.
Kitty Holland, in The Irish Times, reports:
Over 1,000 asylum seekers will get their Christmas “bonus” this week – of €16.23 for adults and €13.26 for their children.
These asylum seekers are among 1.2 million welfare recipients who will get the “bonus”, worth 85 per cent of their weekly allowance, along with their regular payment, between now and Friday.
According to figures from the Department of Social Protection, some 1,170 recipients of the direct provision allowance – of €19.10 per week for adults and €15.60 for children, will be entitled to the “bonus”.
Christmas bonus for asylum seekers in direct provision is €16 (Kitty Holland, The Irish Times)
Previously: Gifts Direct
Alan Currie writes:
“Early on Saturday morning, I decided to shoot the sunrise over Greystones and surrounding area in Co Wicklow, Ireland. I was lucky enough that the forecast fog didn’t appear.
Only hampered by three very friendly labrador dogs which appeared and I had to more or less wrestle them to stop them from walking in front of the camera.
When I checked the footage the only thing that invaded the scene during the incident was my backside. I’ve edited that part out for your convenience, enjoy!”
Music by Aaron McClelland
From top: Castro tribute; President Higgins arrives at the Cuban Embassy this morning; ; Derek Mooney
The human rights abuses in Cuba are not some historic inconvenience that can be poetically euphemised.
Derek Mooney writes:
There are several immutable rules in politics. One of the most important ones says: when you are in a hole: stop digging.
The rule applies outside the rarefied atmosphere of the corridors of power. It even extends to those residing in 18th century palatial residences in the Phoenix Park.
Trying to pretend that President Higgins’ statement on the death of Fidel Castro was anything other than fawning and unbalanced is to toss aside the silver shovel and bring in a JCB.
Defending the President’s statement from criticism a spokesman said that the statement had clearly referred to the price paid for social and economic development in terms of civil society and the criticisms it brought.
Clearly? Really?
The relevant sentence reads: “The economic and social reforms introduced were at the price of a restriction of civil society, which brought its critics.” Twenty (20) words in a statement that was about 430 words in length. That is hardly balanced, especially when you consider the passivity of the language employed.
Styling the use of murder to acquire and maintain power as just a “restriction of civil society” is naive dissimulation at best and an insult to defenders of human rights at worst.
While some may question the scale of the horrors Castro inflicted, like Stalin or Mao he had absolutely no compunction about lining up thousands, if not tens of thousands, of men and women in front of the infamous ‘paredón’ (the wall) for summary execution. These included former revolutionary comrades such as William Alexander Morgan.
The human rights abuses in Cuba are not some historic inconvenience that can be poetically euphemised. They continue to the present day. In its 2016 report on Cuba the noted human rights NGO Human Right Watch states:
Human Rights Defenders: The Cuban government still refuses to recognize human rights monitoring as a legitimate activity and denies legal status to local human rights groups. Government authorities harass, assault, and imprison human rights defenders who attempt to document abuses.
Check the President’s twitter feed and you will find that President Higgins’ eulogy to Castro came just two hours after posting a link to his Mansion House speech given on Thursday last as part of the inauguration of the first global memorial to murdered human rights defenders.
What a contrast. How incongruous. Side by side on the President’s media page is a speech praising human rights defenders and a statement eulogising a man who systematically oppressed human rights defenders.
I do not for even one second doubt the sincerity of the President’s ongoing commitment to human rights or of his lifelong work in this area, but I do question his judgement.
He damages these causes when he puts his simplistic and romanticised notions of the Castro legend ahead of the more complex reality – even under the guise of “de mortuis nihil nisi bonum” (don’t speak ill of the dead).
Castro was a divisive figure. To some he was the “scourge of the west” and the great liberator, to others he was a megalomaniac autocrat who preached socialism while living like a king with his own private island.
The fact is that he was probably both.
Sadly, our President does not see it this way. So, instead of issuing a statement that observed the diplomatic niceties by extending the sympathies of the Irish people to the Cuban people on their loss and noting Castro’s place in world history, our President opted to go much further. He decided to internationally proclaim a glowing and lengthy tribute – and all in our name.
President Higgin’s finished off his homage to Castro with an effusive flourish, stating that:
“Fidel Castro will be remembered as a giant among global leaders whose view was not only one of freedom for his people but for all of the oppressed and excluded peoples on the planet.”
I can understand how many young people in the 1950s and 1960s initially fell for the idealised version of Castro. He overthrew a corrupt, puppet regime in the face of US opposition and introduced massive agrarian and education reforms.
This was also the golden age of photojournalism. The early black and white photos of Castro and Guevara are iconic, portraying two young men standing up against the odds.
But there comes a point when you get past the bedroom poster version of world politics and see things as they really are. The real world is not so photogenic. It is murkier and less stark with many confusing shades of grey. In the real-world politics is conducted in prose, not in poetry.
I don’t like seeing our President, or more correctly his views, being compared with those of Jeremy Corbyn and I don’t like that it is our President who has put himself in that position.
The Áras brings many privileges, but they come at the price of the loss of many personal freedoms. This includes having to temper your own personal views and recognise that when you speak you no longer do as just a private citizen.
While the President has seemed not to grasp this point on several occasions in the past, something usually dismissed as Michael D. being Michael D., this time he has strayed further across the line.
This is not a resigning matter – but it does make one wonder if we want another seven years of these particular lines being tested?
Derek Mooney is a communications and public affairs consultant. He previously served as a Ministerial Adviser to the Fianna Fáil-led government 2004 – 2010. His column appears here every Monday. Follow Derek on Twitter: @dsmooney
Pic 2 via Tom Moran
In this week’s episode, Our hero Match-head reaches breaking point…
Joe Dole is a weekly webcomic with a continuous storyline.
Previous parts here