Category Archives: Misc

trumpsupporters

dan

From top” Donald Trump supporters last month; Dan Boyle

Instead of addressing the reasons why anger has been produced, the successful political strategy now seems to be to ride this anger.

Dan Boyle writes:

For about fifty years not a lot has changed in the art of electioneering in Ireland. Most campaigning revolved around the after mass speech from an open deck lorry.

It was during the 1973 Presidential election that American style electioneering was introduced here with gusto. The late Seamus Brennan, then General Secretary of Fianna Fáil, felt that campaign needed some pizazz.

Balloons, streamers, buttons, printed t-shirts, even campaign songs were introduced to entice voters on whom the ever more faded oratory of the past was failing to move.

The 1977 General Election campaign, the one for every voter in the country election, completed this transformation. From then on everything American had to be adopted.

It has led us since to the politics of the lowest common denominator. One feature of this has been government by focus group. Killing any initiative, discouraging any out of the box thinking. If it couldn’t be approved by the marketing gurus with their groups of guinea pigs, it wouldn’t be worth running with.

This in turn has led to the rush to the centre, and with that the bunching of political parties to the point of being virtually indistinguishable from each other.

Bunching in the centre, and the near total reliance on focus groups, has increased the distance between the governed and the governing. Who needs informed consent when the straws in the wind can be gleaned through the best in up to date political technology?

At least that has been the theory. The distance created by the politics of the focus group has generated huge reservoirs of anger, an anger which may become the next trend US electoral trend we are about to follow.

Instead of addressing the reasons why anger has been produced, the successful political strategy now seems to be to ride this anger. Echo its incoherence. Never to verify its veracity.

Always to play upon difference. Vilify, demonise, objectivise, criminalise and especially dehumanise anyone who dares to speak, much less think otherwise. Dumbed down Trumped up politics. It’s coming our way soon.

It isn’t though a formula that is unique to the US. We are seeing it in the behaviour of the Brexiters, Le Pen in France, Wilders in The Netherlands, AfD in Germany and The Freedom Party in Austria.

However it is in the US now that we are seeing it at its most ugly, most blatant, and to its most obvious logical conclusion.

Conclusion is what will follow. But neither should we succumb to the political snobbery of upholding some Platonic ideal of restricting voting to those deemed to be educated enough. Informed consent through mass democracy is still our only hope.

Life isn’t simple neither should democracy be.

Dan Boyle is a former Green Party TD and Senator. Follow Dan on Twitter: @sendboyle

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvh1Z22-UTk

Via The Ireland Edition of The Times and The Sunday Times:

A new marketing campaign has been unveiled by The Ireland Edition of The Times, the digital newspaper, and The Sunday Times, Ireland’s leading quality Sunday newspaper, to let readers know that both products deliver a well-balanced and outward looking perspective on the national and international stories that matter.
The ‘Know your times’ brand campaign aims to demonstrate how The Ireland Edition of The Times and The Sunday Times ensure readers are not just informed, but well-informed, about the fast changing world we live in via an in-depth and authoritative mix of Irish and international news, business, politics and sport as well as insightful opinion and analysis.

FIGHT!

Thetimes.ie

improv-fest-ireland-2016

Neil Curran writes:

Improv Fest Ireland returns to Dublin in November with a sizzling line up of international acts from around the world. Showcasing a huge range of improvised theatre and comedy styles, the festival features acts from 13 different countries performing in 29 different shows

. The festival also features world-class workshops and master classes, international ‘mixer’ performances, as well as a nightly Festival Club. It’s a veritable feast of international talent, all under the same roof (in two theatre spaces) with all shows priced at an incredible €10.

ImprovFest Ireland

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From top: Taoiseach Enda Kenny addresses the all-island forum on Brexit; Michaél Martin

This morning.

Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, Dublin 8.

At the all-island forum on Brexit.

Fianna Fáil leader Micheal Martin criticised UK ministers for pushing a “crude and chaotic” Brexit agenda.

Urging Ireland to attempt to soften the UK’s exit from the EU, he said June’s “divisive and damaging” referendum result had profound short, medium and long-term implications for Ireland.

“Our agenda is the clear one of wanting to minimise the damage and division of Brexit and to maximise progress for all parts of this island,” he told the forum.

“Let’s explore radical ways of softening Brexit, but we also have to talk about the crude and chaotic Brexit which some in the London cabinet appear to be advocating.

“Unlike the Foreign Secretary (Boris Johnston), we don’t have the luxury of being pro-having the cake and eating it.”

Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams said the forum should “not be about a hard Brexit or a soft Brexit. It needs to be about moving beyond the consequences of Brexit and looking at alternatives”.

Fight!

Brexit poses significant challenge for Ireland – Kenny (RTÉ)

Rollingnews

Update:

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Gerry Adams (top) and Simon Coveney (above) at the all-island forum on Brexit.

Rollingnews