Ciaran’s Peculier [sic] Blog

A view of the world from an Irish hole

Month: October, 2009

The final frontier

Beam me up Scotty!

Beam me up Scotty!

As a result of the shenanigans in the Dail, andf the elevation of Captain Kirk to be Ceann Comhairle  today the four-seater constituency of Louth has been transformed into a three-seater.

Now that’s magic, as Paul Daniels would say.Where's Debby?

Where’s Debby?

The Fianna Failers believe that Dermot Ahem will get in by virtue of his position on the ballot paper. During my time in TCD there was a professor of Geography from Norway called Freddy Aalen. Political parties would have loved to recruit him. They should be satisfied with two seats, given that there is a hard core blue vote cenered around Dundalk while Arthur Morgan would be able to get in, either on his own volition, or with the ubiquitous Bell-line transfers.

 But does it really matter who is elected? They’re all such impotent fuckers.

Belturbet

Belturbet is one of the nicest towns in Ireland. It sits at a spot where the fast0-=flowing Erne seems to be embraced by sylvan

The town bridge, Belturbet

The town bridge, Belturbet

wonder of the countryside. To stand either on the main bridge in the town, or on the old railway bridge further south, is to be overcome by the simultaneous coming together of so many paths, of either land or water. One looks north along the river as it winds its way towards Fermanagh, or south as the fluvial highway leads south towards Putiaghan and Lough Oughter.

 The sense of location is never far away in Belturbet, for it was its strategic location which attracted the Anglo-Normans to build their motte, surmounted by a long-vanished bretesche, on Turbot Island.

 The town’s subsequent history was marked by tragedy, as when its inhabitants were massacred during the Ulster rebellion of 1641, as well as by a degree of riotousness, exemplified by the brief bacchanalian excesses accompanying the reopening of Dickson’s distillery in 1848m an even covered by me in my7 very first Echo of the Past for the Cavan Echo in 2006.

 For centuries Belturbet has been known for an indefinable buzz which has set it ahead of other towns in Cavan. There certainly seems to be a greater community spirit about the place. This is exemplified by projects such as the restoration of the old railway station and a length of the railway line between Straheglin and the railway bridge. When I have walked – or more accurately been pushed – along its length, no matter what the season, I am entranced by the proximity of nature. I also think of how much could have been done with lengths of surviving railway bed throughout the country.

 Belturbet’s liveliness is still reflected in the vigour of the town’s many shops and businesses. I doubt that it is possible to find anywhere a better butcher than Raymond Johnston while those looking for a bed upon which to rest their weary limbs should go to Tommy and Tania McMahon’s furniture emporium on  The Lawn. In the town’s off-licences one can buy items like authentic Lithuanian wheat beer, Wyborowka vodka and Belgian biere blonde. Although I am far fron being a pioneer I have not frequented many of Belturbet’s pubs,. though I can testify to the warmth and friendliness of The Yukon. For such a relatively small town there is a surfeit of fine places to eat, such as The Captain’s Table restaurant in The Harbour, my beloved Rendezvous, Mico’s on the Lawn, and the Seven Horseshoes where the welcome of Francis Cahill and his staff is as warm as the blazing log-fires which burn there throughout the autumn and winter. Some miles from the town sits one of Ireland’s finest Indian restaurants.

 Among those illustrious sons of Belturbet who have carried the lamp of learning far and wide was William Hearn, one of the founders of Australian Political Economy and an early professor at the University of Belturbet. The town’s rich history is often described through the generous scholarship of George Morrissey, truly a gentle giant amongst geniuses.

 The beauty of Belturbet’s surroundings have attracted many visitors over the years, some of whom have settled down there. Their integration has been aided by a genuine friendliness, openness and spirit of community.

 But alas there is a small, unrepresentative clique who are the very antithesis of the qualities I’ve just mentioned. These people are far from welcoming and what’s more they make up their minds to dislike people without ever getting to know them, and then pursue their cowardly jealousies through the spreading of vile rumours without any basis in reality. Regretfully some of them are able to do this scott free. Happily their nets of shame are so manifestly nasty that they are easily avoided.

Knees up Mother Hernia

I’m still confused about Mary Hernia’s lavish expenses, especially the fee for the most luxurious suite in a five-star hotel which came with a private pianist. I’ve heard of Tina Turner’s “Private dancer” but a pianist?  I love piano music, especially Debussy and Chopin, but even four-star hotels have CD players, so that  if I hadn’t brought my discman with me, I can wallow in the tinkling of

A ministerial favourite?

A ministerial favourite?

the old ivories through popping a disc into the machine. But I somehow feel that Mary Hernia’s tastes in music don’t extend much beyond Phil Coulter and Richard Clayderman.

 I’m trying to picture the scene though. There was fatso and her fat parasite of a husband Brian and some of the FAS boys having an old singsong ‘round the Joanna – and all at the public expense! Jaysus, wasn’t it only fuckin’ wonderful! I wonder what they were singing? Maybe “Roll Out the Barrel”, or maybe they each did their party piece, with Mary’s being a very physical rendition of Chris De Burgh’s “Patricia The Stripper” as well as the Olivia Newton-John number “Let’s get physical”– enough to bring tears to the eyes of even the most cynical FAS bloodsucker.

 Not taking up for hairy Mary, I feel that she may not be wholly at the fault for the withholding of her expenses. In fact she is by now so blasé about living it up at the public expense that she doesn’t mind if the truth seeps out. She believes she lives a charmed live. She’s a minister, used to hobnobbing with the world’s important people, and the fact that it’s being paid for by Ireland’s little people should be seen as an opportunity for the dirty, scummy, stupid hoi poloi to share in her glory.

 Her department were at first hostile to admit anything about the minister’s expenses and tried valiantly to shield her from any harmful criticism by mud-slinging journalists. This was the Department of health’s Freedom of Information unit, which showed itself dedicated to preventing access to as much information as possible. Throughout the Irish civil service there are similar Freedom of Information units whose role is to stand in the way of the free flow of information. This oxymoronic set-up reminds me a bit of the joke about the restaurants in the old Soviet Union which always closed for lunch.    They initially said that the decision as to whether to release the expenses details had to be made by a Deciding Officer; only he was at an interminable meeting, and then, as fate would have it, he had to attend to an urgent personal matter – his male budgie had dropped an egg. Faced with such obvious obfuscation the Mail on Sunday then contacted the minister’s personal advisor, and like magic, the situation changed from interminable winter into brilliant spring. It was, as if once the minister had been made fully aware of the problem, the foot-dragging response of her officials, disappeared, and their natural nastiness gave way to a need to please, as well as an admission that they had indeed broken the law, but they were civil servants, so it didn’t really count. Maybe their ‘phone manner was also transmogrified, from a typically curt and Alsatian-like gruffness into a mild-mannered, indeed sugar-coated insouciance.

Where in the world?

 

People may recall Theresa Lowe from Where in the World? She seems to have disappeared off the telly this long while, and I’m not going to repeat any of the dreadful rumours I’ve heard why. Last year my mate Gary was heading back to Meath on the late bus out of Busaras when he saw her. He was going to sidle up beside her and ask: “Is it yourself Theresa?   an’ tell us why don’t we see ya on the box anymore? And what about that patsy Frank ya married? I always knew ya were too good for him. I for one never believed for one minute all that shite about ya hittin’ the jar…”

Bitch2    

The maharishi

The maharishi

 What was Minister Panafin doing in India anyway? Maybe it stemmed from her strict upbringing at the hands of the authoritarian Des, who, following Church teaching, frustrated her love of The Beatles. She may have long had a desire to visit some of the sites frdeque3nted by John Lennon during his visit to the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and spend some time at his grave.  It is only now that she can finally realise her ambitions, and at the Irish taxpayers’ expense. Alternatively, she may have wished to visit some of the sites associated with Mother Theresa of Calcutta, that poor woman who strove3 so heroically on behalf of the poor and unloved of her adopted city, and who has been so shameless taken over by the rats of the Catholic right, such as Opus Dei and the Knights of St Columbanus, even though they would have been the first to spurn the poor of Calcutta from the doors of their mansions had they sought alms or help there.

 There are discrepancies between Minister Panafin’s version of events and the evidence provided by official receipts. To my mind this amounts to fraud, yet this from a minister who never shirked from getting up on her hind legs to boast of how much her departmental squadristi had uncovered in welfare fraud. There seems to be some double standards here. Why is Barnie from Ballinacurra who does the odd nixer with the brew guilty of fraud while the minister for social and family affairs isn’t?  Barnie would need to have multiple claims before the amount he gets would approach the minister’s expenses. Or maybe minister Hernia told about the great food to be got in India. Well actually the best Indian food is to be found in the British Isles.

 Our government ministers seem to love foreign travel, yet it is not the game show of the late ‘80s I’m reminded of, but RTE’s more recent offering for travellers – No Frontiers. Certainly there are no frontiers to the greed  and arrogance of our rulers for squandering other people’s money.

It’s a sin to tell a lie

 

This weekend’s revelations about ministerial beauty treatments in five-star hotels, trips on elephants to India etc., show us one thing. Not only are our rulers robbers: they are also shameless LIARS! But then, I suppose what better type of person to have at the head of that crowd of liars the HSE.

And then there is Minister Parafin in India. I for one wouldn’t mind if she was participating in a suttee ceremony. Maybe she was on a fact-finding mission after which she would have told social welfare recipients about the joys of lying on nails.

But you know, if I were an employer trying to fill vacancies there are things which would automatically exclude certain candidates. If they had to deal with money I would certainly not employ anyone about whom there was even the whiff of dishonesty, while anyone with criminal associates would definitely not be taken on. But even though our government ministers are supposedly – theoretically – our servants, we can’t get rid of them. In fact we are being held hostage by a criminal clique And anyway those waiting so eagerly in the wings to grab power are as bad if not worse than those already here.

In the past I have referred to the Minister of Health as Mary Hernia. I think a far more apposite name would be Hairy Mary.

As for the Greens, I wonder whether John Gormley remembers what Michael Collins said after signing the Treaty in 1921? Clue: it was something about death warrants. Well gormless Gormley has not only signed his own death political death warrant, but that of the Green Party as a whole. As they say in Italy. Chi va con lo zoppo impara zoppicare.

Let’s have an election!

Would an election solve this country’s problems? I doubt it because the really big problems are inherent and structural. The legislature is no more than window-dressing on a public service which, at national, regional and especially local level is fundamentally rotten. This putrefaction infects the whole system. When parliamentarians imbued with the highest ideals and committed to lofty standards are elected to anything, whether it’s a county council or the Oireachtas, they are confronted with this stone wall of corruption which has grown up over generations, referred to usually as “the system”. If they want anything, they have to play by the system’s rules, and rule number 1 is that the system is unquestioned. After all the system’s personnel are permanent, where their so-called political masters come and go like the weather. Acceptance of the system has its rewards, such as favours that can be used by politicians to buttress their electoral support, as well as jobs for politicians’ family members. They have been performing a clever confidence trick whereby they infect politicians with their grubbiness, while presenting themselves as motivated by the highest standards of probity. It doesn’t matter an earwig’s fart whether the politicians are Fianna Fail or Fine Gael.

 However, an election would be a welcome wake-up call for a government which seems to have forgotten that it owes its ultimate mandate to the people, aka known by one serving cabinet minister as “the hoors”. Elections are won not in the cosy executive lounges of Ireland’s Five-star hotels where they rub shoulders with THE people, but on the doorsteps of working-class housing estates or at farmhouses where the aspirant TDs have to evade malicious-looking dogs. November is really a great time for an election: it’s cold and wet and the days are short – too short for effective door-to-door canvassing. It’s not like those balmy election campaigns of May or June.

 An election at this juncture might be useful, as I cannot imagine the Fianna Failers campaign having a snowball’s chance in hell unless they formally and unequivocally reject the McCarthy report, which so many of them have taken to heart as a type of holy writ. If they don’t they might as well rename themselves the Kamikaze Party. Imagine going to someone’s door and saying: “If we are elected we will fuck you up the arse. Yes it’s tough and causes us as much pain as it does you, but it’s good for you, but you’re probably too stupid to realise that aren’t you. And what’s more, that’s what you’ll get from the other side, so don’t blame us for being honest. Now, get those pants down punk!”

Eat your Greens

When the Green Party entered government, the late Seamus Brennan is alleged to have told them. “Yez are playin’ senior hurling

Gormless John

Gormless John

now lads.” Since their entry into cabinet the Greens have shown themselves not worthy of inclusion on  an Under-21 B selection.  They have often shown the aptitude of a group of convent girls in a whorehouse.

It’s all very well making pronouncements from the sideline about issues such as Roddy Mollooy’s hush money , and the need to bring Seanie Fitzpatrick to justice, but the Greens are supposedly at the centre of power – why can they not stop this?.

 But maybe Gormless John Gormley should look closer to home before he throws ethical brickbats. The Department of the Environment is possibly the most corrupt government department. Part of this is due to its involvement with local government. and Gormley has done nothing to clean out this Augean stable.

Common decency

John O’Donoghue has received a nice fat severance payment, plus pension, PLUS his TD’s salary, after looting the state’s coffers. Given the economic straights we are in, would it not be decent of him to give some of it back, or preferably make a donation to a charity or charities? I think it would be, but then decency is a quality in short supply among ALL our rulers, of whatever political party. The vast majority have been educated in denominational schools, whether by religious orders or their dioceses. Any attempt to limit the sphere of the religious in education is met with howls of indignation by the Catholic hierarchy. Admittedly I attended a Church of Ireland secondary school, the Royal School in Cavan, which, for reasons best known to its headmaster, is now ashamed to consider me a past pupil. Nevertheless, I still pride myself on knowing right from wrong and I can say with my hand on my heart that I have never stolen anything. 

 I don’t think though, they have much to be proud of. These schools have not produced better or more ethical people. Instead its products are greedy, nasty, narrow-minded hypocrites who however, are by and large willing to afford the Church a far wider influence than its dwindling numbers deserve.

O’Donoghue always showed what a nice Catholic boy he was when he’d start each Dail session with a prayer and a Sign of the Cross. This show reminded me of how classes were begun in the Catholic secondary school I attended for three months. There would be the recitation of the Hail Mary, with the l line “Seat of Wisdom Pray for Us” tagged on at the end;  if little Padedy or Micky wasn’t able to answer a question to the teacheer’s satisfaction he could look forward to receiving a coff on the ear – and that was from the lay teachers. But sure it made men of them - men who would think nothing of cheating on and beating their wives or abusing their children.  

More than ever I believe that I am in a kleptocracy, rules by thieves and scoundrels who are busily devising schemes of how much more they can steal from the little I have.

Through the chair

The race is now on to find the replacement to fill the stinking void left by John O’Donoghue as Ceann Comhairle. The choice will not be dictated by affability or competence, but by electoral strategy.

 One of those being mentioned is Mary Hernia aka Michelinwoman. If she were moved away from health it would rid the It must have been someone I ate

  It must have been someone I ate

government of one of its biggest electoral embarrassments. Since taking on the job the health service has become even more incompetent, inefficient and corrupt, and there were those who didn’t think it possible. What’s more Mary Hernia’s raison d’etre at cabinet is difficult to justify. Her party, the Venereal democrats (VDs) disintegrated under her. She was inherited by Pretty Boy Cowen from Bartie but he’d love to move her, in fact he’d love to be shot of her altogether. Her prospects in the next general election are far from rosy, as she represents a Dublin constituency whose voters are notorious fickle.

 Were Mary Hernia to be moved from health, Pretty Boy would be faced with the problem of who to replace her with in health. This isn’t so much a poisoned chalice as a big mug of steaming shit, both human and animal. Really the problems of the health service are too big for any mere human, and I don’t McIvor’s around anymore,. The problems lie in the health service itself, and cannot be solved without some serious root-and-branch purges. The HSE should be abolished and its senior and middle managers sacked. They shouldn’t get big golden parachutes, and as far as a car was concerned I’d give them a second-hand Lada. But no politician of any stripe, has the balls to do this.

 Other names being mentioned as Ceann Comhairle are Finian McGrath, the Dublin TD who can’t quite decided which side of the fence to lean against, while the possibility of re-appointing Father Dougal Maguire’s father is being considered. This is being increasingly seen as the only way for Fianna Fail to hold on to three seats in Cavan-Monaghan. What about Michael Lowry? I think that it is own manky political correctness which would see any obstacles to the top post in the Dail being given to an egregious liar and tax cheat.

 But maybe it’s time to think outside the box on this one, or rather inside the box. Why should the government not appoint someone who’s dead, like the3 late Tom Fitzpatrick or Cormac Breslin. True, there might be a bit of a small, but it wouldn’t be any worse than appointing Mary Hernia.

 

Roll of honour

RTE news yesterday (October 6th) carried the alarming story that kids attending a primary school in Carrigaline, County Cork, were being asked to bring their own lavatory paper, as the school could not guarantee an adequate supply due to budgetary constraints. I fear that this is a problem faced not only by the school in Cork but by many others throughout the country. I also fear that it will only grow worse once the government starts to implement the “tough” decisions dictates to it by the McCarthy report. I don’t think I am being alarmist when I prophesy that our children may well have to huddle together, wrapped tightly in layers of clothing, being school classrooms won’t have any heating. What’s more, over the coming winter classes may well have to be curtailed by the shorter days, as teachers will be dependant on natural light for teaching purposes.

 Now Carrigaline lies just to the south of the constituency of Batt-an-eyelid O’Keefe, the current regime’s minister for Education. When Padraig Pearse wrote about “the murder machine” did he ever envisage that in the state which ha gave his life to establish, children would have to bring their own bog-roll to school?

 Carrigaline itself is in the constituency of Cork south central, served by Minister for Foreign Affairs Miicheal Martin. I’m sure he could have rustled up a few rolls for the school while he so busily engaged in organising a “yes” vote, but then he is so busy attending EC summits and lusting after Madame Sarkozy that he just hasn’t the time to worry about such a humdrum issue as the lack of paper in a school’s jacks in his constituency.

Other government ministers should be called upon to do their bit and ensure that, at the very least the pupils of the Carrigaline school don’t have to hold it in until they get home. They could volunteer undistributed copies of the last Fianna Fail manifesto – let’s face it, wiping your arse is all it’s fit for, while the Greens could make a similar gesture with their electoral manifesto, printed no doubt on recycled paper.

This is but one more opportunity for ALL members of the Oireachtas to show solidaritty with those they’re shitting on from on high. The bathrooms of Leinster House are groaning with vast reams of toilet paper. Should Pretty-boy Cowen, instead of behaving like a chimp with haemarrhoids, donate these unusud rolls to schools around the country facing similar problems? This could be combined with a resolution enjoying all-party support, that whenever a member of the Dail or Seanad needed a crap he or she woul nip across the road to Buswells.  

But this wouldn’t do much for Brian Cowen. Let’s face it, whenever he opens his mouth all that comes out is shite.

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