capture

The Planning and Development (Housing) And Residential Tenancies Bill due for debate has been pulled from today’s proceedings.

A Government comms person writes:

We are not in a position to take the Planning and Development (Housing and Residential Tenancies) Bill 2016 today, and now propose to take the Road Traffic Bill 2016 (AT 10AM THIS MORNING) which did not conclude last night

Panic Fight!

Watch here.

 

Update:

friday

It’s back on.

donald-trump-michael-morell-cia-nyt-compressed
dan

From top: Donald Trump; Dan Boyle

We may yet sink deeper into this anti-intellectual morass. We may linger longer than we expect, and most certainly need to. But flames need to be kept lit.

Dan Boyle writes:

“I’m, like, very smart,” The Donald has stated to criticisms that he has chosen not to take briefings from the US intelligence services.

To be dubious of what such briefings might contain, should be a character point in his favour. After all dissembling is a raison d’etre for such ‘intelligence’ agencies. However to forgo any such briefing, because you already know what you believe you need to know, truly is ignorance writ large.

“A wise man is someone who knows what he doesn’t know,” that is a saying attributed to the Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu. It seems, in its apposite meaning, to perfectly not encapsulate The Donald. His total lack of self awareness has been seen by enough of those who support him, as reason to have him become their pin up boy. His certainty being seen by his defenders as confidence. His confidence being seen as strength.

In this he has become emblematic of the post modern world. This world of the simple truth. A world without nuance. A world where complexity is an inconvenience to be ignored.

Instinct, not influenced by the organised thoughts of others, but developed through bias and prejudice, is the sad standard bearer of truth in these ever deluded times.

The simple truth is confirmed by surrounding yourself with those who share your worldview. To question is to invite derision amplified through abuse. It is the behaviour of an ever indulged child whose faux confidence should be more properly recognised as bullying.

This is the world where we have had enough of experts. Where scientists are the conveyors of hoaxes. Where shouting louder makes you more ‘right’ than anyone else.

Those emboldened by this celebration of ignorance now hold sway throughout the ether, on the airwaves, and in our collective consciousness. Those of us who choose to think differently (or indeed to think at all) could decide to remove ourselves from this madness. Instead we should listen. We should try to engage.

We may yet sink deeper into this anti-intellectual morass. We may linger longer than we expect, and most certainly need to, in this thoughtless swamp. But flames need to be kept lit.

Liberal complacency has certainly contributed to this ongoing political coup against logic. Liberal surrender would make its victory complete. Think on that while we are still able to think.

The further or deeper The Age of Donald persists, the more antagonistic the treatment will be towards thinkers/questioners. In the US the preferred form of abuse by the rabid right is a slight on the mental capacity (but more insulting on those with special needs) of those who won’t rejoice at this new golden age. This abuse should become a badge of pride.

The slogan towards enlightenment should be ‘Libtards of the World Unite’.

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

url

Free Sunday?

The Come Here To Me history website’s annual celebration of all things Dubbelin.

Donal Fallon writes:

The fifth CHTM Dublin Songs and Stories night takes place this Sunday in The Sugar Club [Leeson Street, Dublin 2_. Fiddle players, football managers, theatre directors and artists are on the bill, with all profits going to support a young woman who needs to raise €80,000 for a life-changing operation in the United States….

Come Here To Me

dunkirk-poster

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTUCKGNHWr0

What you may need to know

1. The new film from Christopher “just give me a god-damn Oscar already” Nolan.

2. He changed superhero movies (possibly peaked them) with the Dark Knight Trilogy and re-energised smart science fiction with Inception (2010) and Interstellar (2014); Nolan is back now with this surprisingly conventional-looking World War II drama based on the Battle of Dunkirk in 1940, when hundreds of thousands of British and Allied soldiers were stranded at the northernmost tip of France. Surrender was on the cards, until a flotilla of fishing boats, yachts and merchant vessels set sail from across the south of England to mount a daring rescue. It’s known as “the miracle of the little ships”.

3. Brexit: the movie basically.

4. The events were previously dramatised in Joe Wright’s Atonement (2007) with this extraordinary 5-minute tracking shot.

5. Good showing for Ireland on the cast, which includes Cillian Murphy – a regular member of Nolan’s troupe – and Love/Hate cat killer Barry Keoghan.

6. Yes, that’s One Direction dreamboat Harry Styles at .48. Now that the pop career has started to dry up, he’s decided to try his hand at acting…and landed a role in the biggest film of the year by the biggest director in the world. How jammy can one kid be? All while Dancing with the Stars and I’m a Celebrity… beckon for the other four. The other three? Whatever.

7. Nolan has been gunning for an Oscar for years. The Dark Knight was denied a richly-deserved nomination in 2008 (the snub eventually led to an increase in Best Picture nominees); Interstellar was in there in 2014, but never had a hope of winning. The director is clearly heeding Ricky Gervais’ advice to Kate Winslet.

8. The production spent $5m on an authentic former Luftwaffe fighter, with the intention of strapping it with an IMAX camera and then crashing it. You’d wonder what is the point in the age of CGI everything, but there you go. Might be a load of guff too, for that matter.


9.
It’s a somewhat underwhelming trailer to be honest. That said, it’s the first film Nolan has made without any science fiction or high-concept elements (other than the good-but-not-great Insomnia (2002)), so that’s what is missing. Knowing his propensity for going big on the psychological elements of his characters and stories, one expects that Dunkirk will be just as concerned with personal battles as explosive ones.

Verdict:
War, what is it good for? Absolutely Nolan.

Release Date: July 2017

screenshot-111

An all-star assortment of Irish artists converge on the rehearsal spaces on Castletown Rd. in Dundalk to mark the 2017th birthday of an immaculately-conceived superdude that was his own dad *and* a spooky ghost.

Among them are Robocobra Quartet, Jinx Lennon, Trick Mist and Bleeding Heart Pigeons.

Because someone had to counteract fupping Fairytale of New York at some point.

Graham Patterson

nli

Hush now.

A missing photo from yesterday’s 1916/2016 web archive awards ceremony at the National Library of Ireland, Kildare Street, Dublin 2.

The team behind the library and its extensive archive, which now includes your comments/analysis, our in-depth reports and Leather Jacket Guy.

Top from left: Maria Ryan (2016 Web Archivist), Ger Wilson, Dr Sandra Collins (NLI Director), Della Keating and Joanna Finegan.

And not a noisy man among them.

Shhh.

FIGHT!

Yesterday: Thank You Very Much

Thanks Orla Sweeney

Broadsheet.ie