Duffy trumps Nolan (sigh)

There’s a danger that I’ll become a phone-in obsessive so I’ll keep this brief.

This morning/early afternoon I posted a blog about the Stephen Nolan Show on BBC Radio Ulster (see below). I noted some good things about it but more that were not good – in fact, I said they were pathetic. So then I had my lunch and switched on Joe Duffy on RTÉ’s Liveline. Stephen, I take it all back. You were brilliant, certainly compared to Joe.

The entire Liveline phone-in was about, naturally enough, the killing of young Ronan Kerr in Omagh on Saturday – may God be good to him. But instead of engaging with the central issue – why did the people who killed him do so and what do we need to do to stop anything like it ever happening again? – Duffy gave around 90% the programme to lining up callers who would attack Sinn Féin. Why, you say, I thought Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams were on air condemning the Kerr killing unreservedly and calling on anyone with any information to contact the police? Have they changed their minds?

Not a bit. Joe’s callers were busy bashing the Shinners because the IRA once waged war against the British forces, including the police, and killed people. Duffy’s constant guest throughout the programme was the sister of Mary Travers, shot dead by the IRA during an attack on her father Tom Travers, a Catholic judge, in 1984. Naturally enough, the poor woman was carrying pain from the loss of her sister all those years ago. But to take the killing of young Kerr on Saturday, resoundingly condemned by Sinn Féin which has opted unreservedly for politics, into a sustained assault on the Shinners, on the grounds that they once supported violence, seems, well, frankly anti-Sinn Féin. Like Nolan earlier in the day, Duffy missed a golden chance to explore the Kerr killing and suggest strategies for coping with and/or preventing further such horrors.

As I say, I don’t for a moment underestimate the pain Judge Travers’s daughter bears from her sister’s death. But will we hear a similar Liveline phone-in attacking those who killed Pat Finucane? Or Rosemary Nelson? Or any on the dozens of families whose loved ones died in what many believe were British-loyalist murder gangs collusion? Not a chance. Meanwhile, let’s use Omagh as a platform for a bit of Shinner-bashing.

To paraphrase the words of W B Yeats to the Abbey Theatre audience, this time directed at J Duffy Esq: ‘You have disgraced yourself again’.

5 Responses to Duffy trumps Nolan (sigh)

  1. hoboroad April 4, 2011 at 3:58 pm #

    Duffy earned €408,889 in 2008. Its easy money if you can get it.

  2. Anonymous April 4, 2011 at 8:48 pm #

    I suppose another cross letter to R T E is in order.Did you get any response to the last one ?Did you think of ringing the Joe Duffy show yourself? Surely that would be the perfect counterbalance.

  3. Jude Collins April 4, 2011 at 9:19 pm #

    I LOVE hearing from you, Anon. Even though you don’t sign yourself any differently from other Anons, I know your tone immediately. Terrific – always with good advice. I really must get round to following it some of these days. In answer to your questions: (i) Nah, at least not yet. Bloody southerners, eh? (ii) Yep – thought of it, did it, got an answering machine, left a message. Did I do good? Yipeee.

  4. Anonymous April 8, 2011 at 7:23 pm #

    Nolan had on a so called IRA man who spoke like the thickest Paddy you ever heard and at one stage said Republicans wouldn’t stop until the British went back to the “Mainland”. I wonder does he qualify for the first IRA man to call it the Mainland award. Oh and by the way after he said it he immediately said “i mean England”. Yeah right Stephen dead on

  5. Anonymous April 22, 2011 at 1:47 pm #

    Jude
    Just fell into yer blog via the Irish Times. And right glad i am about it very informative, insightfull and funny. And fer a paddy Down Under its good to hear plain speaking of going on in the Black North. Your heading fer spring and we winter which i hopebodes well the Elections up yer way. Regards Eamon