Tag Archives: MC

This morning.

AstraZeneca has pulled out from a meeting with the European Union scheduled for today to discuss Covid-19 vaccine supplies, an EU official said.

The Commission is demanding more information about the company’s projected 60 percent cut to the EU’s deliveries in the first quarter of 2021.

Via RTÉ:

The official added that the EU keeps asking the company to provide further explanations about its announcement to cut vaccine deliveries to the EU in the first quarter

The European Union has also asked the pharma giant to publish the contract it signed with the bloc on Covid-19 vaccine supplies after the company’s chief executive revealed confidential clauses.

Hmm.

Meanwhile…

Yesterday.

*cough*

EU says AstraZeneca pulled out of meeting over vaccine contract (RTÉ)

Getty

Last night.

Cruel sun holiday-shaming on RTÉ 1’s Prime Time.

Meanwhile…

Ooh. He’s so ‘ard.

Previously: Come Out You’re Back And Tanned

Clockwise from top left: Conor Dempsey, Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly and Dr Anthony O’Connor

This morning.

Further to the departure yesterday from Twitter of covid response critic Dr Anthony O’Connor after he received a DM from someone ‘close to’ Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly …

…Via Independent.ie:

In a Twitter direct message, seen by Independent.ie, public relations consultant Conor Dempsey wrote:

“I hope it does not offend you, but do you ever wonder if some of the scrapes you get into online undermine your reputation? I mean that in the sense that people may see you as being so stressed, which you are very entitled to be, that they might be concerned if they are then referred to you for treatment?

“I think you are so brave in your advocacy and understandably fraught with all that is going on, but maybe being so active online works against optimizing your clinical role? We need advocates like you to speak, but you are almost too transparent and informative one would wonder if I was referred to a doctor who appeared so distressed.

“I am guessing also that you find your advocacy cathartic and I also believe in the need to agitate for change. But maybe less can be more?

Gulp.

Meanwhile…

Mr Donnelly has previously confirmed that Mr Dempsey, whose LinkedIn profile lists him as principal at Dempsey Corporate, worked for him in a voluntary capacity during his first general election campaign.

Doctor quits Twitter after PR consultant claiming to be ‘close confidante’ of Health Minister said he was undermining his clinical role (Independent.ie)

Yesterday: ‘OK Lads, You Win’

From top: Natalie, who lives in a tent beside Dublin’s Grand Canal, featured in RTÉ Investigates Homelessness: Stuck In The Rough

In a way it was fitting that the RTÉ Investigates programme on homelessness used a golfing metaphor for its title, “Stuck In The Rough”. Because, like golf, the game of homelessness is played by a higher class of person than those unfortunates placed under the microscope in the RTÉ documentary.

There seems to be a core misapprehension in attempts to discuss homelessness. The problem is not seen as a symptom, but rather as a problem arising directly from character deficits in those who are homeless. There is of course a degree of truth in this, but the “blame” is often overloaded to such an extent that other contributing factors escape scrutiny.

The first half of the RTÉ programme concerned itself for the most part with the character deficits of the three homeless people it was studying. After an ad break and another bout of investigative questioning of an unfortunate woman called Natalie who was asked to the point of brow-beating to describe the experience of homelessness, she put her hands over her face in despair saying there are no words.

It was unfair. The woman is not a poet capable of articulating a profound human experience of suffering at the drop of a hat to facilitate the needs of a TV show. She’s just a woman with no home.

The motive for believing that the homeless caused their own condition, is perhaps society’s way of letting itself off the hook for not caring for them. Like “sinners” in another era there is a perceived moral debt due.

Commercial Reasons

Halfway through the programme something happened that should really have been the main thrust of the investigation, but instead was quickly bypassed, as if in embarrassment.

The presenter Kieran Dineen informed us that public expenditure on homeless services had risen from €10million to €22million in a few short years. The question was, where is the money being spent?

The programme had sent a Freedom of Information request to the The Dublin Regional Homeless Executive (DHRE) DHRE, but the request was turned down, the DHRE citing “commercial reasons”.

Mike Allen of Focus said that it would be interesting to see where the money was actually going.

There were many natural follow-on questions to pursue on this, but instead, the RTÉ Investigates team returned to the preferred, increasingly lurid, examination of the lives and character flaws of their homeless people “samples”.

The money angle was clearly too politically sensitive to be properly probed. It was much more comfortable to probe the homeless subjects instead.

What appears to have happened is that under Varadkar’s watch of privatisation and loosening of regulations, the homeless services sector has become a free-for-all, allowing private entities to easily siphon off public funds on the pretext of offering charity.

Agency Capture

In an article in Village magazine (August 2020) called “Agency Capture”, Mannix Flynn, citing Accountancy firm Mazars, wrote that there are over 75 housing and homelessness services in Ireland.

Mannix Flynn writes:

“…Not-for-profit does not indicate non-commercial. Scandalously, homelessness is a business like any other, except when it comes to accountability and transparency. Many of these entities have become fiefs in competition with each other for clients and real estate…”

“Clients” in this context means the homeless. Yes, to someone, usually private profiteers offering meagre services, the nameless homeless are important-sounding “clients”.

This is not to suggest that all homelessness charities are insincere. What appears to be happening is that private operators, alerted to the boom in public investment in homeless services, are flooding the sector with “help”, ably facilitated by the coalition’s ongoing support of neo-liberal privatisation of services, twinned with FG-inherited disdain for social housing.

But this fairly naked exploitation of the housing crisis is being concealed behind the idea that the homeless are the architects of their own condition, which is simply not true.

Recovery

In the second half of the programme Kieran Dineen spoke to a public body in Helsinki where the homelessness problem was solved by providing homes to the homeless – yes, this method actually works, along with the provision of social workers to assist those who may need assistance in getting back on their feet.

Here in this small section of the programme all the questions posed in the first half were answered. No, it’s not just alcohol and drug addiction on the part of the homeless that made them homeless. In fact, there is a more understandable idea behind drink and drug abuse by the homeless. That drink and drugs are often taken for comfort, a futile attempt to alleviate the misery of homelessness.

This idea of drug and alcohol dependency being comforts in homelessness was also put forward by Tony Walsh of Feed Our Homeless.

The conclusions reached by the Helsinki people were, like the public money for private services question, not really pursued to any satisfactory conclusion by RTÉ Investigates.

Nevertheless, what did emerge is that homelessness is largely due to a deficit of single-bed accommodation; and that a permanent home is the solution to homelessness, since permanency of tenure has the effect of drawing on the homeless person’s own capacity for achieving personal stability.

Helsinki found that problems such as drug use and alcoholism tend to dissipate once the formerly homeless person is in permanent accommodation.

To counter the argument that vagrancy is an insoluble problem, the city of Ulm in Germany, provides sleeping pods for the destitute.

Parking Blame

Sadly, the RTÉ Investigates programme kept bumping into the walls of its own political limitations, always bobbing back to the comfortable thesis that homelessness is caused by character flaws in the homeless.

By choosing to concentrate more on the personal problems of the homeless rather than on the inadequacies of the housing system, the programme, despite its best intentions, may have inadvertently cemented in the public mind the false idea that the homeless are the cause of homelessness.

The inescapable truth is that a huge industry, built on diverting public money in the name of homelessness, has evolved in the vacuum created by the established political parties’ unwillingness to build social housing.

The irony of all this is that there is so much business being generated by the housing crisis that actually solving homelessness must result in job losses in the homeless services sector.

And that right there is as neat an encapsulation of neo-liberal and Fine Gael social policy as you are likely to find: generate employment and wealth in one sector by cultivating immiseration in another.

Eamonn Kelly is a freelance Writer and Playwright.

Previously: Eamonn Kelly on Broadsheet

 

From top:, left to right: Minister for the Environment, Climate and Communications, Eamon RyanTaoiseach, Micheál Martin, Tánaiste Leo Varadkar; David Langwallner

The Irish Coalition Government, The Weimar Republic, and German Caricaturists

Ireland has  a coalition government of the two far-right-wing parties in a time of real national emergency. A recipe for putative stabilised disaster. Martin, deploying a Gay Byrne presentational lightness, with the more dangerous Varadkar, waiting for the succession and handover in 2022 which I predict will happen earlier for a variety of reasons. In any event, the tail is wagging the dog.

Sinn Féin excluded a pointless leftist opposition without any prospect of power or decision-making created to languish in permanent opposition as disruptors.  The non-entity Greens getting their pound of flesh and blood, though divided about how to apportion up the spoils or indeed how to peddle or create even a Green conservative agenda. The eternal assimilated Green coalition trap.

Now there has never been such a right-wing coalition government before as the parties have been divided on tribal and civil war lines, but what is even more sinister is that the hitherto divisions have receded and they have been replaced by deeply conservative corporate orthodoxy. In effect, the politicians are puppets on a chain controlled by the vested interests of ever more powerful corporate and business influencers.

This is a worldwide depression not even at its inception. Dark times. In fact, we are beginning to see the signs already obvious of stagflation and hyperinflation. A Weimar Republic meltdown. It is only an analogy for what is a collapse of civilisation and the neo-liberal model of the marketisation of human activity intruding into all sectors of life, and the virus has compounded all of these problems.

Of course the powerless and bought judges and politicians became part of that problem in The Weimar Republic as I predict they will be in Ireland, or are so already.

Much more revealing than any official texts of that period are many of the novels and the pictures which capture accurately what was really going on? Now in the film Cabaret (1972) the fictionally represented Christopher Isherwood is supposed to have left Berlin after he hears the Nazi youth sing Tomorrow Belongs to Me, an even more sinister version of The Horst Wessel Song.

In fact, in the book nothing quite as dramatic as that epiphany moment occurred in reality, just the gradual and growing persecution of the Jewish community, communists, dissidents and perceived degenerate races in a sedulous and incremental way.

The sense of unfolding chaos is well documented in Klemperer’s diary Let Us Bear Witness. He, in fact, was peculiarly well placed with a protected Christian wife and a Jewish convert to christianity but let go from his job. Furloughed. Perfect to bear witness in an objective way.

The sense of impending chaos in The Weimar Republic is also well documented by the caricaturist George Grosz, Otto Dix and others, of course. The essence of what the Nazis called degenerate art.

George Grosz, Pillars of Society/Shit for Brains (1926)

The picture above says more about how the Nazi judges and commissars worked hand in glove with their jackboot associates to precipitate the sense of impending disaster and undermine democracy in Germany.

Rather inelegantly it has been called Pillars of Society with the subtitle Shit for Brains. And if you look closely that is what you will see on one of the paragons of virtue.

Now this seems to me peculiarly relevant in Ireland today.

The following can be unequivocally said. In 2008, the double recession that hit the tiger economy led to NAMA and the bailing out and upholding of banking malpractice. The upholding of varied mortgage rates, the side deals of NAMA to uphold failed banks and speculators. The reneging on contracts and representations upheld by the courts and the persecution of whistleblowers who blew the whistle on all of this.

Now the Apple judgment, if not overturned, which it is at present but with an appeal to come, will lead the multi-nationals to decamp elsewhere as the entire economic model was built on tax breaks for multi-nationals ever since Haughey.

Conorovirus successively will destroy many small businesses, the pub and the leisure industry. And tourism is intrinsic to the Irish economy. How many can or will travel? It is a toxic time bomb except for the mega-rich and it is on the point of utter implosion as Ireland is put in another Level 5 lockdown. Economic unsustainability for many lives is very much on the cards.

Further, the EU as Varafakis recently indicated is likely sooner rather than later to collapse and, like a supernova, implode. And what do our corporate judges, bankers, lawyers and politicians do?

Well enforce further austerity and jackboot tactics and impose further shit for brains on a docile and far too accepting population. Socially distanced and self-isolated perhaps for the foreseeable future without a prospect of stability, a sustainable living structure or affordable rent or housing.

And what about our intellectuals?

Otto Dix, Portrait of the Journalist Sylvia Von Harden (1927)
,

Well, the Fintan O’Tools, David McWilliams, Feminist Pseudo Intellectuals of Caring Catholicism or worse still Nanny state secularism, well protected judicial mediocrities and fabricated café bar pseudo intellectual posuers seem, to me, to be evident in this relatively accurate representation by Dix (above) of bohemian non seriousness.

Powerless neo-liberal café side commentators and/or time serving survivors spectating on a society falling apart. The collective act of Nero fiddling as Rome burns or being like Heidegger in Germany selling out to the fascists to preserve their income structures. Our paper of record The Irish Times particular complicit in this respect.

And what do they see around them?

Otto Dix, The Match Seller (1923)

The homeless and deprived and disempowered of Dublin. There after all but for the grace of god go they and they will keep singing for their supper to patch up and appease their corporate paymasters until the ship is sunk.

Yes, boss. Yes, Leo, yes, we consent. Oh yes, Leo. Be careful what you wish for or consent to.

David Langwallner is a barrister specialising in public law, immigration, housing and criminal defence including miscarriages of justice. He is emeritus director of the Irish innocence project and was Irish lawyer of the year at the 2015 Irish law awards. His column appears here every Tuesday and Friday. Follow David on Twitter @DLangwallner

RollingNews

Dublin Airport at the weekend

This morning.

“Travellers are coming down very significantly. It’s down to quite low levels now in the last weekend.

“The majority would appear to be Irish people who went to went on holidays during the Christmas period … we need to clamp down on that.

“That is in itself a violation of the Level 5 regulations that we have in place.”

Taoiseach Micheál Martin announcing Level 5 will continue to March 5

So there.

Taoiseach confirms extension of restrictions to 5 March (RTÉ)

RollingNews

This morning.

Via The Irish Times:

More than 360 people were served eviction notices in the two months after the Government lifted a blanket ban on removing tenants last August, figures from the Residential Tenancies Board (RTB) show.

The number of eviction notices served increased significantly in the second half of last year after emergency protections for renters introduced due to the arrival of the coronavirus pandemic were lifted. Some 787 people were issued eviction notices by landlords between March and the end of September.

The board, which adjudicates on disputes between tenants and landlords, also saw a small increase in reports of illegal evictions from July onwards.

Over 360 people served eviction notices after ban lifted (Irish Times)

From top: Tuam Mother and baby burial site: James Charity, Cathaoirleach Galway County Council

This morning/afternoon.

Galway County Council has issued a formal statement including an apology by the Chief Executive Kevin Kelly and Cathaoirleach James Charity for the failings of the local authority in the operation of the Tuam mother and baby home.

Via Galway County Council:

“As Cathaoirleach of the County of Galway, on behalf of the Members, the Chief Executive and staff, I offer a sincere and humble apology for the failings of this local authority.

We are deeply sorry that this Council did not do enough to ensure appropriate care, compassion and protection to the mothers and babies who passed through the threshold of the Tuam Mother and Baby Home, and to those children who were born and died there.

We further deeply regret that Galway County Council did not ensure there were enough safe- guards and measures in place to guarantee and ensure that children boarded out from the Home were better cared for, protected and cherished.

To the shame and sorrow of all of us, this Council did not ensure that those who died in the Tuam Mother and Baby Home were afforded the dignity of an appropriate place of rest, which was the very least that they deserved.

We are profoundly sorry, that as a local authority, this Council did not have the foresight or courage to at all times to ensure the welfare of those entrusted to its care was paramount, and to be kinder, more compassionate, and more charitable.

To all those with a personal connection to the Tuam Mother and Baby Home, in particular, the frightened mothers and innocent children, to their families and to the people of County Galway, Ireland and beyond, this Local Authority is humbly sorry.”

Meanwhile…

“The Council acknowledges the commitment by Government to advance burials legislation to support the excavation, exhumation and, where possible, the identification of remains together with their dignified reburial. The Council has and will continue to actively assist the ongoing work to implement the Government’s agreed course of action and response for the Tuam site.

Kevin Kelly, Galway County Council CEO

Galway County Council issues apology following report on Tuam mother and baby home (Galway Bay Fm)

RollingNews

Thanks Breeda

On his first day in office, Joe Biden (top) banned discrimination based on gender expression

This morning/afternoon.

Further to Joe Biden’s executive order that would enforce the US Supreme Court’s 2020 Bostock v Clayton decision declaring that :

“Children should be able to learn without worrying about whether they will be denied access to the rest room, the locker room, or school sports…..All persons should receive equal treatment under the law, no matter their gender identity or sexual orientation.”

Via The Guardian:

The order, mandates that every agency must act to ensure the enforcement of this new rule within 100 days of 20 January.

Crucially, it states the Bostock decision should also apply to Title IX, the federal law that prohibits discrimination in federally funded schools, in keeping with Biden campaign promise that his Department of Education would investigate and address any violations of transgender students’ rights. States that fail to comply would risk legal action or the loss of federal education funding.

Last year, bills to restrict transgender athletes’ participation to their sex recorded at birth were introduced in 17 different US statehouses…

Joe Biden’s gender discrimination order offers hope for young trans athletes (The Guardian)

Alternatively…

In Bostock, the justices held that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited an employer from firing an employee on the basis of homosexuality or “transgender status.” Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for a 6-3 majority, took pains to clarify that the decision was limited to employment and had no bearing on “sex-segregated bathrooms, locker rooms, and dress codes”—all regulated under Title IX of the 1972 Education Amendments. “Under Title VII, too,” the majority added, “we do not purport to address bathrooms, locker rooms, or anything else of the kind.”

The Biden executive order is far more ambitious. Any school that receives federal funding—including nearly every public high school—must either allow biological boys who self-identify as girls onto girls’ sports teams or face administrative action from the Education Department.

If this policy were to be broadly adopted in anticipation of the regulations that are no doubt on the way, what would this mean for girls’ and women’s sports?

“Finished, done,” Olympic track and field coach Linda told me.

Joe Biden’s First Day Began the End of Girls’ Sports (Abigail Shrier, Wall Street Journal)

Getty/PA