Conflicting messages
The Government now has two unpalatable options, and an unworkable one.
On last night’s episode of the Tonight Show an Irish Independent journalist claimed that there was “zero evidence” that any occupant of asylum centres in Ireland was “a danger to anyone.” Saying that the fear expressed by local people in towns and villages where the government has decided to establish asylum centres was “entirely misplaced” […]
It will, as progressives have done in almost every campaign over the last century, be an effort to guilt the public into voting against the alleged sins of their grandparents and great-grandparents.
The last time a Government lost the co-operation and consent of the Irish people to govern them, it was largely as a result of policing tactics like these, and the injudicious use of its monopoly on the use of force.
‘Radical change’ proposed
Racket Hall
‘No social contract on morality’
An explanation required.
Internal document
It is very likely that over the coming months, the public are going to be confronted with the spectacle of dozens, if not hundreds, of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael candidates for the county council telling voters on the doorsteps and on the local airwaves that their national party leadership is entirely wrong on immigration.
A quick scan of Irish headlines in relation to the deposit return scheme, due to be introduced from February 1st, shows that the Irish media have, predictably, been utterly fawning: