If he survives the transplant and died of covid it would have been the waste of a good heart. How can he not see this?
— Kevin Kelehan #MakeWorkPay #FBPE (@kelehan_kevin3) January 25, 2022
Um.
Last night.
KN writes:
What have we become?
If he survives the transplant and died of covid it would have been the waste of a good heart. How can he not see this?
— Kevin Kelehan #MakeWorkPay #FBPE (@kelehan_kevin3) January 25, 2022
Um.
Last night.
KN writes:
What have we become?
A SpaceX rocket is on a collision course with the moon after spending almost seven years hurtling through space, eggheads say
The boffins are saying that soon
A rocket will crash on the moon
And it will collide
Somewhere on the dark side
So that’s where the debris will be strewn
Nasa/Futurism
Tonight.
Sunset over Dublin.
Thanks Bobby Boucher
This evening.
Shepherd’s delight.
Or is it?
Thanks Rémi
Save Poolbeg
Update:
Ah, I just missed you. pic.twitter.com/bR0aRvQSzd
— Joe Culley 📝 (@TheRealCulls) January 25, 2022
Stop that.
last night.
D’olier Street, Dublin 2.
Revellers at ‘Swerve’ in Tramline nightclub and a balaclava-clad MC celebrate the return of clubbing.
Monday night yokage, no harm.
Damon Albarn at the 2015 Electric Picnic
Can @PresidentIRL please intervene now? @taylorswift13 is a poet. A writer of stunning, emotional, clever, sad, heartbreaking, joy-bringing songs. Her pandemic albums were masterpieces. The Last Great American Dynasty is a perfect song. One of many. Don’t hold back Michael D. https://t.co/XEtAav7Mbz
— Róisín Ingle (@roisiningle) January 25, 2022
Escalating.
Men are pigs.
Taylor rules.
More as we get it.
Thanks Vanessa
This afternoon.
Further to the Russian military drill planned for 240km off Ireland’s southwest coast.
Via Irish Times:
Irish fishing boats are planning to peacefully disrupt plans by the Russian navy to conduct military exercises off the coast of Cork next month.
Patrick Murphy, chief executive of the Irish South and West Fish Producers Organisation said that the area was very important for fishing and that they wanted to protect biodiversity and marine life.
Hmm.
Mr Murphy said:
“We’re entitled to go fishing here. It’s our waters. Can you imagine if the Russians were applying to go onto the mainland of Ireland to go launching rockets, how far would they get with that? It’s no different to fishermen, this is our ground, this is our farm, this is where we earn our living.
“Why should somebody be able to come in and do that in our waters? This is going to affect our livelihoods and the marine life. There’s seismic activity out there for years and it actually changed the migratory pattern of tuna at one stage.”
Fishermen plan to peacefully disrupt Russian drills (Irish Times)
September 15, 1999.
Moscow, Russia.
Then Taoiseach Bertie Ahern stares down then and still Russian Prime Minister Vladamir Putin.
It’s not a caption competition unless you insistzki.
Earlier: Cuddly Bear
From top: Don Baker; Lisa Lawlor; Úna Ní Bhroin, Seán Binder and presenter Orla O’Donnell
This afternoon.
The documentary strand Finné (‘Witness’) returns on February 2 for a fourth season to TG4.
Filmed over 12 months by Galway’s Tua Films and presented by RTÉ’s courts correspondent, Orla O’Donnell, Finné is a ‘warts and all re-telling of riveting first person testimonies’.
Deirdre Ní Choistín writes:
Finné delves deep and narrow in to one person’s story rather than giving a general overview of these events that made the news over the past 40 years. Here, we recount intimate stories of triumphs and traumas, of Davids and Goliaths, of dogged resilience and human frailties.
Week 1: Lisa Lawlor recounts how she was orphaned as a baby when her young parents died in the Stardust fire in 1981. She became known as the ‘Stardust Baby’, and in this episode, she recalls her experience of growing up as the poster girl for this tragedy that still haunts the North Dublin community of Artane to this day.
Week 2: Like many a blues man, Don Baker had a challenging upbring in the Dublin tenements of the 1960s, where he resorted to petty crime and eventually ended up in the notorious Daingean Reformatory School in Co. Offaly. He struggled with addiction throughout his life despite tremendous success as an actor and musician, but now at 70, he reflects on his career with a wisdom that only the distance of time can bring.
Week 3: In 1997, environmental activist Úna Ní Bhroin learned of Wicklow County Council’s plans to widen the road through the Glen of the Downs, and she took to living in the trees to halt the development. In 2000, she was among 12 protesters known as eco-warrios who were arrested and sent to prison for trespassing. 25 years later, Úna reflects on the campaign and whether or not it was successful in raising awareness of environmental issues in Ireland.
Week 4: Kerryman Seán Binder was arrested while working as a volunteer rescuer during the migrant crisis in Greece in 2018. Seán recounts his voluntary work on the island of Lesbos and the three months he spent in a Greek prison whilst fighting to clear his name. He is still awaiting a trial date for the charges which include money laundering, espionage and people smuggling, charges that still hang over him like a sword of Damocles…
Week 5: Rachel Moran spent 7 years from the age of 15 living and working as a prostitute on the streets of Dublin. She recalls in particular how various cultural and legislative changes drove prostitution indoors – into the hands of pimps and making the women more vulnerable to violence. Now an acclaimed writer and activist, Rachel reflects on her time on the streets, and chronicles her life-long campaign to criminalise the purchase of sex.
Week 6: Limerick man Roy Galvin grew up in Limerick’s inner city and became the first male ballet dancer in Ireland. Here, he reflects on his extraordinary career as a musician and professional ballet dancer, while also recounting his story of growing up gay in a very different Ireland.
In fairness.
Finné begins on Wednesday, February 2 on TG4 at 9.30pm.
Pics via TG4
Frank McDonald, former Environment Correspondent for The Irish Times
This morning’s Irish Times Letters
Oh.
This morning.
ESB writes:
If that’s not an Irish Times decision to publish an ad hominem attack on Frank because of bad blood, what is? Can you imagine if Una Mullally was targeted like that?
Anyone?