Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Mike Hogan 4FM, Richard Fahey, Neil Henderson, Simon Webb , Jane Last and Joe Donnelly
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Mike Hogan 4FM, Richard Fahey, Neil Henderson, Simon Webb , Jane Last and Joe Donnelly
Brandon Bryant, a former drone operator tells NBC’s Richard Engel that on his retirement from the US military he was given a certificate showing his involvement in the deaths of 1,626 people.
Former drone operator says he’s haunted by his part in more than 1,600 deaths (NBC News)
“In a country where we expect free wifi with our coffee, why shouldn’t we have it in our schools?” —President Obama in North Carolina today
— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) June 7, 2013
We are not questioning the legality under the Patriot Act of the court order disclosed by The Guardian. But we strongly object to using that power in this manner. It is the very sort of thing against which Mr. Obama once railed, when he said in 2007 that the surveillance policy of the George W. Bush administration “puts forward a false choice between the liberties we cherish and the security we provide.”
President Obama’s Dragnet (Editorial, New York Times)
The front page of the Huffington Post showing their feelings about the latest intelligence gathering revelations in the US. The New York Times also posted a critical opinion of their president. Ironically, Barack Obama’s office tweeted about providing wifi in schools earlier.
NSA taps in to internet giants’ systems to mine user data, secret files reveal (Glenn Greenwald, Ewen MacAskill / The Guardian)
Guardian pic via Simon N Ricketts
Previously: They’re Bugging Everyone








Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Enda Cunningham, Mike Hogan 4FM, Simon Webb, Nick Sutton and Joe Donnelly.
More to follow.
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Mike Hogan 4FM, Enda Cunningham, Joe Leogue, Simon Webb, Jane Last and Joe Donnelly.
A new campaign video has been released featuring celebrities and activists highlighting the plight of Bradley Manning.
With the commencement of Manning’s trial for leaking confidential information, let us remind ourselves of our own Eamon Gilmore.
And his briefing with CIA officials at the US Embassy, Ballsbridge.
“I think the Lisbon Treaty is dead. The Irish people have now decided in a referendum that they do not wish to have it ratified therefore Ireland cannot ratify the Lisbon Treaty and therefore the Lisbon Treaty falls.”
Eamon Gilmore, June 13, 2008
“There is no basis for believing that a second referendum would produce a different result which is any different from the first one.”
Eamon Gilmore following a meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, July 21, 2008
“Gilmore, who has led calls against a second referendum has told the embassy separately that he fully expects, and would support holding a second referendum in 2009. He explained his public posture of opposition to a second reference as ‘politically necessary’ for the time being.”
Ambassador Thomas Foley, in a cable sent on July 23, 2008
Previously: Wikileaks Day 2: Here Lies Eamon Gilmore
Gilmore ‘took opposing views in public and in private’ Irish Independent, June 1, 2011)
More to follow.
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Jane Last, Cathal McMahon, Mike Hogan 4FM and Joe Donnelly
No banker, politician, regulator or auditor has “been found guilty of any crime related to one of the worst financial crises in history, which led to a humiliating €67.5bn bailout in 2010”.
BUT
Blaming a narrow group of bankers and developers suits a Dublin government seeking aid from its European partners to recapitalise its bust lenders. But it underplays the depth of the fiscal crisis in which, regardless of the banking crisis, Ireland found itself.
…Under the “clientelistic” approach, encouraged by the political system, everyone was paid off. Tax breaks were handed out to political supporters in the property sector in 2002, when the overheated market began cooling. Personal income tax cuts were introduced even as public spending rocketed.
…A secretive “benchmarking process” was set up that awarded public servants an average 32 per cent pay rise between 2003 and 2008, with only lip service paid to reforms.
The 2007 election campaign became an “auction of spending promises” by the main parties. Individuals who spoke out were silenced or, in the case of one Department of Finance official detailed in the book, were told by senior colleagues to “cease and desist”.
Between 2008 and 2015, three-quarters of the increase in Ireland’s net debt will be accounted for by the budget deficit, as opposed to recapitalisation of its banks. In other words, the bailout may have been required even if the banks had not run aground.
A review by Jamie Smyth, Irish FT correspondent, of The Fall Of The Celtic Tiger by Donal Donovan and Antoin Murphy.
Ireland’s woes are more than a bank crisis (Jamie Smyth, Financial Times)