The stars of The Little Mermaid, this year’s Gaiety Panto

This morning.

Oh yes they did.

Boo, hiss.

Meanwhile…


Valerie Judge and Ava Kenny read Gerry The Giraffe Goes To Hospital in The Gutter Bookshop, Dalkey, county Dublin this morning.

 

This morning.

Dalkey county Dublin.

‘Gerry Giraffe Goes To Hospital’, a children’s illustrated book written by mother of two Valerie Judge during lockdown, demystifies the experience of hospital for child patients.

Via Gerry Giraffe Goes To Hospital:

Valerie Judge, a management consultant who has returned to her artistic roots, wrote and illustrated ‘Gerry Giraffe Goes to Hospital’ during the pandemic lockdown.

The book is inspired by Valerie’s daughter Anna Rose McKeever who trained in CHI Crumlin and is now a cardiac children’s nurse at Great Ormond Street hospital in London and knows all about the anxieties children may have when going to hospital.

Gerry Giraffe Goes To Hospital‘ is on sale from Amazon at €20 per copy. To find a copy, search in your browser for ‘Gerry Giraffe Goes To Hospital’ by Valerie Judge, or visit the Gutter Bookshop (at link below).

Gutter Bookshop

Pic: Sara Hanley

 

Yesterday.

Why is Covid ‘surging’ in Ireland despite almost 100 per cent vaccine uptake?

Via Sky News:

Waterford, in south-eastern Ireland, epitomises the country’s coronavirus conundrum. Why is there a surge in COVID-19 in a nation where around 92% of adults are fully vaccinated?

A huge 99.5% of over-18s in Co Waterford are double-jabbed, but the easing of restrictions and increased travel are thought to be contributing to high infection rates.

Speaking to Sky News, Immunologist Professor Luke O’Neill also added that the “primary goal” of jabs is to “stop illness and death” – not to eradicate the virus.

I’m Just going to throw this out there.

Could it be something in the  jabs?

*edges slowly from room*

FIGHT

Earlier: Get It In You

Meanwhile…

…Ireland’s National Immunization Advisory Committee (NIAC) has advised its government not to include healthcare workers in its COVID booster roll-out.

De Bara explained this decision to the Irish Times: “Most Healthcare workers have adequate immune systems, and it is unlikely they will need serial boosters as COVID doesn’t change at the same rate that flu does.”

This was a complete reversal of the government’s previous policy in January, suggesting it is undergoing a major rethink. Then, out of the first 94,000 vaccines that were administered, 71,000 (76 percent) were prioritised for those very same healthcare workers, over the elderly who were most at risk of dying from the disease.

The Irish government’s vaccine booster program is being made available for all over-60s—unless, it appears, they are frontline health care workers. This will now begin in January or February of next year as this third jab is understood to be most effective when administered five to six months after receiving the second one.

And the biggest take-up of vaccines in Ireland, particularly the second jab, took place during the months of July and August 2021, which were the very same months that fatalities began to rise again in Ireland.

Could there be a correlation between those two events?

Anyone?

Ireland Sees Rising COVID Cases and Deaths Despite Highest Vaccine Uptake (Andrew Davies, Epoch Times)

From top: Taoiseach Micheál Martin is flanked by British Foreign Secretary Elizabeth Truss (left) and United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Executive Secretary Patricia Espinosa (right) as he arrived for day two of COP26 on November 1 in Glasgow, Scotland; Eamonn Kelly

The week that was

Most people instinctively sense that when politicians start making promises they might as well be blowing up balloons. A politician’s promise has a half-life that can be counted in minutes and there is no reason to suppose that this will change relative to the importance of the issue at hand, in this case, climate change.

It would be nice to be optimistic, but with capitalism married to consumption and the majority of politicians in its back pocket, we are ultimately dependent on the largesse of a few billionaires to save the world, which is a whole new species of philanthropism.

Still, it was good to see the Cop 26 conference go ahead, even if Russia and China couldn’t be arsed sending a representative. But the fact of the conference taking place is a bit like the US having to acknowledge the possible existence of God. Even if they don’t believe in a deity, they at least have to cut their cloth to make it seem like they do.

So, in that sense the conference may serve some positive purpose. But realistically, what are we actually going to do to save the environment? Stop consuming? Sit in the cold and the dark eating cold beans waiting for the climate to right itself? Is anyone seriously going to do that?

But not to worry. The politicians are on the case, hoping to create new markets of consumption in the sale of electric cars, windmills and solar panels, continuing with the basic paradigm of capitalism, endless consumption, greenly tweaked by politicians.

Fine Words

Boris Johnson most likely has a team of researchers working full time to find the right things for Boris to say, which they then type up and put before him. But by the time the words move from Boris’s eyes to his mouth they invariably develop a patina of a sneer, and somehow, despite the fine words, Boris’s sub-textual message is always one of smirking insincerity.

He was at it again at COP 26, immediately turning the conference into Cop-Out 26. It’s Boris’s brand of cynicism that will likely finish us, because it’s everywhere, residing comfortably in high places.

Micheál Martin seemed delighted to be on the world stage at last, framing a first for a Fianna Fail taoiseach in setting out his stall to save the Earth. Prior to this they were happy luring multinational companies to set up base in Ireland. But Micheál is going for the big one before handing the reins back to Leo.

The Irish Examiner reported that Facebook is responsible for disseminating up to 90% of the climate denial rubbish that appears online, and the majority of it comes from less than twelve identifiable pages, which Facebook refuses to close-down because that might undermine their click-based business model. Mark Zuckerberg, estimated to be worth $98 billion, still apparently needs those few extra cents from fake news merchants.

Blackouts and Copouts

Facebook’s activities, along with Google, may also result in blackouts here in Ireland in the near future, because data centres are hogs for electricity and when push comes to shove the tax-free corporate giants will get first preference. It’s important that they safeguard your data to sell to advertisers because that’s the business model that helps sustain the economy, and the cost for you may be sitting in the dark while your data is being cooled by 24/7 computer fans.

Michael’s contribution towards saving the Earth might begin by paying a visit to Facebook down the road and maybe use the tax exemption deal as a lever to put some pressure on Facebook to close down those climate denial pages, and maybe reduce some of that data hoard and free up the grid for people to charge their new electric cars.

The problem with politicians managing the climate crisis, and with corporations pledging all kinds of reforms, is that both are winners in a capitalist system that relies on cynicism to make its sales.

You can have your markets for windmills and electric cars and solar panels, but until the cynicism that lies at the root of market capitalism is faced head on, all of it will be just the same old marketing spin, with advertising shaping up to sell a shiny, hollow version of environmentalism, without ever challenging the fundamentals of capitalism, such as perpetual growth and built-in obsolescence. Maybe it’s time to start fixing machinery again rather than dumping it. That would be something.

Turning Point

Cop 26, though it was peopled by many of the leading cynics of the corporate consumer system, sporting their spin, was also a positive gesture in the face of that cynicism, most notably in the figure and words of naturalist David Attenborough, and in its sincere attempt to put survival of the species on the agenda, ahead of apparently more important considerations, such as Mark Zuckerberg’s click profits.

David Attenborough, who, at 95, likely won’t be with us much longer, could see the conference in its historic perspective, in the way in which it might be viewed in 50 or 100 years, either as a turning point, or as a last missed opportunity.

Eamonn Kelly is a Galway-based  freelance Writer and Playwright. His weekly round-up appears here every Monday.

RollingNews

Afterbliss – Empty Spaces

Anthemic synth-rock, anyone?

Then check out Dublin newcomers Afterbliss whose debut EP Unknown Machines has just dropped.

The band comprise Evan Cassidy (vocals); James O’Gorman (guitar); Shane Waldron (bass); and co-founders Alex Burcea (guitar/synth) and Ally Pender (drums).

Nick says: Original synth.

Afterbliss

Oh.

The Opera site.

A €180m redevelopment project in Patrick Street, Limerick.

J Hodgkinson and sons tweet:

Another piece of Georgian Limerick gone forever…

Fat lady singing (out of picture).

Meanwhile…

This morning.

Glasgow, Scotland.

Earlier: Unrepeatable

Meanwhile…

This morning.

Sabrina Sheehan writes:

New Year’s Festival Dublin has announced the full programme of events for this year’s festival. Dublin City is set to come alive with fun filled New Year’s festivities as 3 spectacular countdown events will take place on New Year’s Eve at Dublin Castle and St. Stephen’s Green South – and on 1 January 2022, families and friends can continue the New Year’s celebrations by kick-starting 2022 in style at 3 very special New Year’s Day events in Dublin Castle and Temple Bar.

Tickets for New Year’s Street Party and New Year’s Day Concert Go On Sale this Friday at 9am

New Year’s Matinee is FREE event, book tickets in advance this Friday at 9am

New Year’s Festival

This morning.

Meanwhile…

Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney has said that he expects a decision in the coming weeks from Niac about extending the booster campaign to younger cohorts.

Speaking on Newstalk Breakfast, Mr Coveney said that he believed booster vaccines had a role to play in bringing down case numbers. On a recent visit to Israel and Palestine he had seen the dramatic impact a booster campaign had on the number of cases in hospital and intensive care.

As immunity waned, it was definite that booster vaccines had a role to play, he said.“This won’t be confined to the over-60s. It will extend to the younger cohort too.”

Coveney says booster campaign will extend to younger cohorts (Breakingnews)

Minister for the Environment Eamon Ryan

This morning.

Good times.

Ryan ‘looking forward’ to COP26 after negative Covid-19 test (RTÉ)

RollingNews

Meanwhile…

Broadsheet.ie