“We’re approaching web summit, but on a national scale”, was how one TD expressed their concerns to me yesterday.
It’s a strange thing, to read on a public platform a statement from a very prominent person in Irish society that one should be “shunned everywhere by decent people”. Stranger still to see that the statement in question has been “liked” by around three and a half thousand people, and viewed over one hundred thousand […]
If every policy that had a good argument for implementation was simply implemented on that basis, we’d have no need for politics at all.
Many women – not all, but many – do not much like the new, post-revolution sexual order.
You probably will not have heard, by contrast, that when asked what country he wanted the Argentinian economy to most resemble, he said: “Ireland”.
If this country, as an independent nation, is not for the Irish people, and being Irish in the Irish nation doesn’t even confer some privileges, then what is the point of it?
In this case, it is fair to say, Ireland was not looking out for the person who gets up early in the morning.
The European Union’s new migration pact, it turns out, is structured in such a way that it will direct disproportionately more immigration towards Ireland.
In public relations, the concept of an “embargo” is used to guarantee maximum coverage of a news story at a time chosen by the people behind the story. How it works is simple enough: A media organisation is given access to a piece of news well in advance, and told that it may not run […]
the Taoiseach’s attack, dishonest though it may be, is a clear indicator of where Fine Gael intends to go at the next election
The good news is that a media that behaves like this cannot survive, long term.
These views run deep in the green movement, which is, at heart, an anti-human movement