
A rather superb portrait of Game Of Thones’ Daenerys Targaryen by New York based artist Sam Spratt.
Robyn Morton writes:
Thought you may appreciate the end result of some photographs I took last night, all from the beach at Shankill, Co. Dublin.
Meanwhile, also last night:
Dave G Kelly tweetz:
Blood moon over Dalkey Island.
These days the Internet of Things is getting closer all the time. Practically everything is wired and managing them all is somewhat a pain.
Liam Mac Namee writes:
As you know it is becoming increasingly difficult to keep track of what our children are accessing on-line and thus potentially leading to cyber bullying and exposure to content that is inappropriate for their age groups.
Our new product Skydog (we are exclusive Irish distributors) seeks to solve that problem by assisting parents to monitor their children’s on-line activity, prevent them from accessing undesirable websites and restrict the amount of time spent on-line on all of their devices.
Of course, there’s always the risk your kids will drug you to have more internet time.
No cash, favours, etc. were given for this post. Do you have an Irish start-up? Get in touch broadsheet@broadsheet.ie.
Watch This
atThree minutes over the shoulder of a Swiss watchmaker as he assembles a not inexpensive high-end NOMOS Glashütte watch.
Think, Venn…
at




The ‘Hive-Inn’ is a concept by Japanese architects OVA studio for a modular hotel composed of specially adapted shipping containers (emblazoned with high end advertising) which are slotted in and out of the structure by a dedicated roof crane.
The hotel shrinks and expands to suit demand and the container ‘rooms’ are envisaged as themed, branded spaces on the inside too.
A Good Day
atYesterday, Children’s Minister Frances Fitzgerald published the Children First Bill which will make it mandatory for professionals, including priests, to report situations where they believe children are at risk.
Further to this, retired parish priest Fr Gearoid O Donnchu spoke to Chris O’Donoghue on Newstalk and explained why he won’t break the seal of confession under any circumstance.
Mr O’Donoghue started by asking Fr O Donnchu how long he had been a priest.
Gearoid O Donnchu: “Since 1957, so 57 years.”
Chris O’Donoghue: “So I’m guessing in that time you’ve heard thousands of confessions.”
O Donnchu: “I’d say so yes, at least. Many thousands.”
O’Donoghue: “Father, in those confessions have people ever confessed a crime to you?”
O Donnchu: “That’s not a question I can answer.”
O’Donoghue: “Ok. The reason I was asking about that is because of what is envisaged in the Child First, the Child First legislation which we got a look at but we’ve known a little bit about beforehand. And it is envisaged it would be a law (sic) not to report a crime. And say if a crime is about abuse of a child or neglect of a child was told in confession. What’s your reaction?”
O Donnchu: “As far as I’m concerned what I hear in confession, I have not heard.”
O’Donoghue: “Even if that is about a crime?”
O Donnchu: “Even, no matter how bad it is.”
O’Donoghue: “But what if it’s about something that’s ongoing?”
O Donnchu: “I would advise the person that they should make it known publicly or come to me outside of confession. But anything I hear in confession, it’s as if I have not heard it.”
O’Donoghue: “Ok, but Father, do you realise why some people would be angry with that stance? Given that, potentially, people could be at risk. You could be hearing about people that are at risk?”
O’Donnchu: “Yes, but if somebody comes to confession, they come with the understanding that what they say is entirely privileged, there’s no mention of it, ever.”
O’Donoghue: “But I deduce from that though the seal of confession takes precedence over the law?”
O’Donnchu: “The seal of confession takes precedence over everything.”
O’Donoghue: “Even another person’s safety?”
O’Donnchu: “Even my own safety. If someone came and told me that they poisoned the wine I was going to use for Mass, I would still use it.”
O’Donoghue: “But Father, in the incidences of, and I don’t know, I mean, obviously, I’m not a priest so I don’t know how commonplace it is but presumably people who are doing bad things have guilty conscience and, if they are Catholic, they might try to ease that conscience by going to confession and those things could be ongoing like neglect or abuse of a child.”
O Donnchu: “That’s correct. And I think it’s the duty of the priest there to insist with the penitent to do something about the activities that we’re talking about.”
O’Donoghue: “Yes, you can insist in your advice or your counsel that, ‘you should go to the Gardaí’ or whatever that is.”
O Donnchu: “But if they don’t want to go then there’s nothing I can do about it.”
O’Donoghue: “Well there is, but you’re choosing not to?”
O Donnchu: “Oh definitely, I’m choosing not to.”
O’Donoghue: “Are you at peace with that Father, that you could be leaving people in danger?”
O Donnchu: “Completely.”
O’Donoghue: “You’re completely at peace with that?”
O Donnchu: “Completely at peace with it.”
O’Donoghue: “Some people might be livid to hear that.”
O Donnchu: “[laughs] That’s possible. When I say that I’d be completely at peace, I suppose that’s not quite a full statement. I would of course be worried, personally. But I haven’t the liberty to divulge that to a single person.”
O’Donoghue: “You would be breaking the law from now on?”
O Donnchu: “I wonder would I?”
O’Donoghue: “Well I suppose it’s more of a question, would you be breaking the law in what is envisaged here?”
O Donnchu: “I don’t know, I haven’t seen the law. But if the law says that what I hear in confession I should go to the guards with, then I’m prepared to break that.”
O’Donoghue: “Even if, at the core of the issue here, Father, is something that I genuinely believe you would believe is strongly in: protection of the child in all instance.”
O Donnchu: “Definitely, I would do everything I could to protect a child.”
O’Donoghue: “But not to break the seal…”
O Donnchu: “But not to break the seal of confession.”
O’Donoghue: “So you are keeping one thing above the protection of the child then?
O Donnchu: “I’m keeping one thing above the protection of myself, the child, the protection of anything.”
O’Donoghue: “But you see Father, in say, the analogy you gave about the wine, that’s personal choice, you’re choosing not to protect yourself in that instance. A child can’t choose, a child could be in a harmful environment and, as an adult, you now have essential information.”
O Donnchu: “In a way I don’t. The priest with whom he’s in confession has that information but that priest is not allowed to divulge that information to anybody. That’s the way, that’s the way I was educated, that’s the way I’ve lived, that’s the way I intend to continue to live, please God.”
O’Donoghue: “Father Gearoid, is there any, and I understand you won’t tell me instances of confession, but is there any working around this? I mean can you act, based on something that you have heard in confession, I don’t mean tip someone off, I don’t mean something that blunt but can you act to remove people from situations in your other duties.”
O Donnchu: “No.”
O’Donoghue: “You don’t do anything based on what you hear in confession?”
O Donnchu: “Not a thing.”
O’Donoghue: “Even if that is breaking the law from now on, that’s what you’re willing to keep doing?”
O Donnchu: “I’m not sure if it is breaking the law but if it is breaking the law, then I’m prepared to do that.”
Hardcore.
Listen back in full here
Related: Bill on mandatory reporting of child abuse published (RTÉ)

















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