Category Archives: Misc

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Kilkenny Castle, 1395

On the 18th of February 1366, 650 years ago today, the ‘Statutes of Kilkenny’ were enacted in Kilkenny Castle.

Via Historic Kilkenny:

In 1361, King Edward III sent his son, Lionel, Duke of Clarence, to Ireland to assess the situation there. After repelling an invasion led by Edward Bruce, the English hold over Ireland was weak.

Many of the English who had settled in Ireland had begun to adopt the customs and language of the Irish.  Consisting of 35 acts, the statutes attempted to stop the Gaelicisation of the English in Ireland.

These included

No intermarriage between Irish and English
– No adoption of Irish children or fosterage of Irish children to English households
No use of Irish names or dress
– English Common Law would be the law of the land rather than the Brehon Laws of the Irish
– Separation of Irish and English churches
– No ‘games which men call hurling with great clubs of a ball on the ground’

Unfortunately for King Edward III, the Statutes were never fully implemented due to lack of funds and manpower in Ireland. The English lords there strengthened their ties to the great Irish families. This Gaelicisation would not be challenged again until the early 17th century….

FIGHT!

Historic Kilkenny (Facebook)

Illustration: Kilkenny Castle 1395 by Daniel Tietzche-Tyler

Thanks Ruadhán

 

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjrS7XDOU9g

Eipic.

On TG4 at 10pm tonight.

The third episode of a six-part series.

Ciara Nic Chormaic writes:

“Eipic is a musical comedy drama about a group of teenagers who take over their local abandoned Post Office and start a musical revolution. Each week focuses on a particular character. This week it is Oisín and he has the mother of all house parties – pills, smoke, coke, the lot…”

YÓKESYÓKESYÓKESYÓKESYÓKESYÓKES

Eipic (TG4)

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Jimmythehead writes:

Came across this “job” posting (top) on the Film Network Ireland Facebook page, which has since been deleted. After a little digging I found a more official post on a well known industry website, IFTN (above).

Film Network Ireland do good work in bringing people together through collaboration, where everyone deserves an equal opportunity and cronyism is lower down on the agenda. Slavery on the other hand, is not encouraged.

Is that even legal?

Via Irish Congress of Trade Unions:

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Fair enough.

Illustration: ICTU

apology
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlhUg7Wd4do

A comedy.

Caroline writes:

 Here’s the latest cheapo comedy sketch from Brainy Films about Neighbours; not the TV show, the arsehole guy who lives next door. Stars Clare Monnelly (off of “Moone Boy”, and in “Big Maggie” in the Gaiety right now, Leaving Cert fans) and David Layde.

Previous Brainy FIlms:
Have You Any Spare Change?
Payday
Marathon Man
Julian

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Hibernians: Keith Redmond, Cormac Lucey and Eamon Delaney at the forum’s launch

The Hibernia Forum [advocacy group ‘dedicated to the principles of a free market’] will hold a press conference this afternoon to present a document entitled Ten Questions Our Politicians Must Answer.

Forum founder Eamon Delaney writes:

Not only are rash and reckless promises being made by all parties, despite the precarious global situation, but nothing is being done to address major structural long term problems in Irish society, such as the inefficient and high spending on health, the international threat to our low corporate tax and a massive future pension liability, which we cannot afford.

Public Pensions
Public pensions are accounted for on a pay-as-you-go basis. This means that pension contributions paid today do not fund investments to fund tomorrow’s liabilities: instead they fund today’s liabilities. This is the funding model of a pyramid or Ponzi scheme. If applied in the private sector it could result in the imprisonment of those responsible on grounds of fraud.

The Gap in PRSI System
A December 2010 actuarial review of the Social Insurance Fund carried out by KPMG for the Department of Social Protection concluded that the present value of the unfunded liabilities of the PRSI system was then €324 billion. Given that real interest rates have fallen significantly since 2010, it is likely that an updated actuarial estimate of this liability might be significantly higher than €324 billion.

The Gap in Public Sector Pensions
The total accrued liability in respect of Public Service occupational pensions was estimated at €98bn as at December 2012. Given that real interest rates have fallen significantly since 2012, it is likely that an updated actuarial estimate of this liability might be significantly higher than €98 billion notwithstanding the efforts of the Department of Public Spending and Reform to reduce it.

The National Debt
While reported national debt was about €183 billion at the end of 2015, the actual financial liabilities of the state were (if we add the unaccrued Social Insurance and Public Sector Pension liabilities) actually much higher at €636 billion.

Health spending
Relative to national income, Irish health spending is the second-highest in the world and yet we get a very poor outcome, as we know. We also spend a third more than the developed world average (9.3% of national income). The problem with Irish health spending is not lack of resources, but lack of management.

Political Reform
In order to promote the likelihood that general elections produce a stable government and in order to reduce the risk that governments may be forced to favour certain constituencies over others (in order to procure the votes of their Independent TDs) consideration should be given to reducing every Dáil constituency to just three seats.

Hibernia Forum

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Luas staff picket outside the Sandyford Luas stop this morning and Siptu video (above)

Noooooo.

Second 48-hour Luas strike under way (RTE)

Sam Boal/Rollingnews

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“When The Easter Rising starts the sweet shops are the first to be looted by the Dubliners living in the tenements. Noel and Tom race off and leave their mothers and sisters at home but the havoc of the next few days will come right to everyone’s door….”

Gulp.

A trailer for Irish Film Board-funded short film ‘The Cherishing’,

Directed by IFTA-winning Director Dave Tynan and featuring Ben Carolan (“Sing Street“) and Lauren Kinsella (“You’re Ugly Too“) the film was made under IFB’s After ’16 shorts Scheme.

The Cherishing will screen as part of the Audi Dublin International Film Festival 2016 THIS Sunday at 3.30pm in the Lighhouse Cinema, Smithfield, Dublin 7.

Details here

Thanks Dave Leahy