Nobody wants to be the journalist who says “Dublin is a Kip”, only to see Justin Barrett, or someone only vaguely less awful, win a City Council seat on a “Dublin is a kip” platform.
Apocalyptic language simply does not translate.
And the fact that our tax laws are set up to ensure that only the very rich can afford to receive a gift from a living parent should be of great concern to a socialist such as Deputy Bacik.
How can you oppose this, as many on the left do, and at the same time wish to decriminalise and regulate prostitution?
By indulging her public suffering and despair, did we really help her? I’m not sure the answer to that question is “yes”.
The Green Party in Cork posted an extremely aggressive tweet making it clear that they are extremely vexed over the “fuckers” not realising that the world is burning down around our ears, as we speak.
A broken clock is right twice a day. Such is the case with the New York Times.
“Cancel culture”
Whether this curriculum, full to the brim with nonsense, gets enacted is a matter entirely of how much parents care to stop it.
The push to make electric vehicles (EVs) mandatory is heating up. If the Irish government has its way, there will be 945,000 electric vehicles on the country’s roads by 2030. By 2035, diesel and petrol cars will be phased out entirely. The phasing out, we’re told, is something to be celebrated. After all, diesel and […]
This is important because it goes to the very basic question about whether you, as a member of the public, can trust the things you read.
there is one person employed by them for every three households accounted homeless in Dublin