There should be zero tolerance of the abuse of priests by parishioners in every parish in the Diocese. Yesterday (13 December 2016) I was subjected to the vilest abuse by a man living in Enniskillen parish, a prominent businessman, now retired who is active in the Rosary group. His name is Gaby(Gabriel) Stewart. He […]
Sore head day?
There’ll be a number of people crawling out of bed with a literal and/or metaphorical headache this morning. Sir Henry Bellingham, Conservative MP for North West Norfolk, will be moaning a bit. He’s the MP who used parliamentary privilege to suggest that the Director of Public Prosecutions, Barry McGrory, was going all political in taking […]
Why Clinton Failed: Summary or Charge-Sheet? by Donal Lavery
During the final days before the election, I had a discussion which turned into a heated debate with one of my older American friends. She was and remains a devoted supporter and apologist for Hillary Clinton, so I imagine the result hasn’t fully sank in yet. I on the other hand, come from the young […]
THE TOP CATS’ PJ’s : MONGRAMMED and MONOGLOT by Perkin Warbeck
Pat Kenny hosted John Banville as guest on his DOB-funded Newstalk fm show yesterday. P and J discussed constructions from the architectural legacy of Dublin to the linguistic construction of Hiberno-English, that sorta thingy. About both topics P and J were in such accord as to be virtually welded into the one entity: PJ. PK: […]
PARLIAMENTARY REPRESENTATION 1874 – 1918: THE IRISH DIMENSION by Donal Kennedy
Following the BALLOT ACT of 1872 there were eleven General Elections in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland before Westminster’s Better Government of Ireland Act was passed in 1920. Previous to the Ballot Act, voting was not secret and pressure and bribery were used openly to influence the voters. I’m neither a psephologist nor […]
After the Troubles: how are we doing so far?
When Sinn Féin first went into power-sharing with unionists, Gerry Adams warned them it would be “a battle a day.” He was wrong. The battles haven’t been on a daily basis. But over the decades, it’s been a simmering distaste served on a daily basis. You might say “Unionists had reason and more for their […]
FRUIT GUM, FRUIT PASTILLE by Perkin Warbeck
. Just as there is the concept of The Fruit Gum Border and the Fruit Pastille Border, Esteemed Blogmeister, so also is there the concept of the FG treatment and the FP treatment by RTE when it comes to politicians from north of the Black Sow’s Border. The Hard Treatment, the Soft Treatment We […]
The Hunger strike by Joe McVeigh
The late John Montague, who died yesterday, wrote this short poem entitled ‘Hunger striker’ shortly after the death of Bobby Sands in 1981: This is a song of silence This is the sound of the bone Breaking through the skin Of a slowly dying man. This is the song of his death. This is the […]
TRUTH – THE FIRST CASUALTY OF WAR by Donal Kennedy
Phillip Knightley, an acclaimed journalist and the author of a book on war correspondents –The First Casualty – died recently and had a full page Obituary in THE TIMES. Its first paragraph I found ironic: “It was said that if a libel writ had not landed on his desk by Tuesday, Harold Evans, the Sunday Times […]
Burn, baby, burn
Form and content, style and substance – it’s mind-buckling how often we get the two mixed up, or allow others to mix them up for us. Take Arlene Foster. As you’ll know if you haven’t been living in an igloo in Canada’s Northern Territories, our First Minister has been under pressure to justify the […]
