Ciaran’s Peculier [sic] Blog

A view of the world from an Irish hole

Category: Local government

The prize for failure

I see on the newst section of the Northern Sound site that those Cavan County Councillors who were rejected by the electorate at the recent elections are entitled to a gratuity amounting to 110,000 euro. This is only payable to people given a complete thumbs down. Those councillors who lost their seats at county council level, but who were nevertheless considered eligible to serve at town council level won’t get a cent.

At a time of economic hardship these payment, and what’s more their receipt, is not only outrageous but immoral. The electorate must recognise that members of our political elite still control what little money there is, and they will make sure that they have first call on it. And don’t forget, this money is tax free and not subject to any means test.

Those luckier to get elected though have the opportunities not only to grab scarce financial resources but also to provide jobs for family members and relatives; as one of them would put it: “Ah sure ya might as well.”

As for the great majority of people in the country, many of whom have no jobs, they must grit their teeth and accept being treated like trash, and maybe having what little they are entitled to grabbed from them by the evil, semi-literate pen-pushers of the Department of Social, Community and Family Affairs. But they are doing it to please the rabid bitch who sits at the department’s helm.

Traffic calming and Cavan County Museum

I have read in a recent number of the Cavan Echo how that stalwart defender of the hard-working white people of Belturbet, Councillor John Scott, has called for “traffic calming” measures in the vicinity of the town’s Fair Green and St Bricin’s School. Might I suggest that a good way of effecting this would be for Cavan County Museum to move to the site. Not only would this mean that Councillor Scott’s insolent scut of a son wouldn’t have to go so far to work, but as the museum attracts so few visitors traffic calming would be guaranteed. Maybe the museum might move to the vicinity of the Ballyhugh Heritage Centre, so that the members of the Ballyconnell Heritage group wouldn’t have to travel so far either.

I need hardly add that the above ought to be taken au leger, while what follows must be taken very much au serieux – that’s your actual French that it.

I have never envied Scott’s son his job in Cavan County Museum. Councillor Scott is no doubt justifiably proud of him, but would he be proud if he had brought up his son to be a jealous coward, who sought to insult and slight me without reason? But then I suppose a disabled person like myself is an easy target.

I have never met Councillor Scott – a situation I have no desire to rectify. He may no doubt wonder at my hostility towards him. Well now he knows how it feels.

May I take the liberty to observe that if he is anything like his son he may not be worthy to be a public representative.

I know that my style is not to everyone’s taste. There are those who pretend to be offended, but I don’t think anyone can doubt my honesty. If I don’t like someone tit is clear from the contents of my posts. I don’t engage in the nasty habit of whispering about people behind their backs, or indulging in character assassinations.

This is the last time I will ever refer to that duo Scott junior and senior, on my blog, either seriously or in jest. I just can’t lower myself to deal with filth. They can anticipate fate by going to hell. The same goes for that sad institution Cavan County Museum. It can go on being a costly white elephant providing employment to the families of local politicians, while vital services are curtailed and those providing them are given. I don’t care. Its miserable walls can dissolve into talcum powder, or it can be vapourised by aliens and its collection of toilet seats brought off to plant Zag.

I wouldn’t be surprised if, following Councillor Scott’s election (which seems almost certain), I don’t receive notice of some vexatious legal action against me – all of which I would be more than willing to respond to. This would be proof of the evil that I see myself as having to counter.

Let me just add a note of genuine apology to Mr Frank Gibbons of Cavan County Council. He won’t be troubled by any more of my hoaxes. I’ hope the museum can remain open, though purged of the arrogant scum that has accrued in it. I must add that I don’t think it’s my fault if people in Cavan are so gullible.

Piles of problems for election candidates

Piles of problems for electioneers

Yesterday I passed by a hoarding displaying an election poster – I couldn’t see who it was for. It featured portraits of five candidates – four men and a woman. This put me in mind of a TV ad from over thirty years ago which featured a sequence of photographs. The voice-over went (if I can remember it):

All these people have one thing in common – they all suffer from haemarrhoids. They have something else in common – they’ve all got relief with Preparation H.

Missing the boat

I wish these aspirant councillors would stop plaguing me for my vote. The fact is they are now wasting my time, as I’ve already voted. You see one of the few privileges of being a cripple in Ireland is that you have a postal vote, and are thereby freed from participating in the polling booth pantomime.

 

How did I vote? Does anyone really expect me to vote and tell? In the European elections I voted for Susan O’Keefe, a talented and brave campaigner. I also voted for Joe O’Reilly. This is a personal vote and must not be seen as displaying any support for Joe’s party, but I will never forget the fact that Joe attended my mother’s funeral. This was something I can never forget, nor can I ever thank Joe enough for.

 

And then there was the County Council election. I’m not going to tell who I voted for, except to say that I voted for the only out-going member of the council who had the courtesy to attend the launch of my book last October, an event he really enjoyed. I sent invitations to all the other councillors. Now Joe O’Reilly contacted me from Strasbourg to apologise for not being able to get to it, and Anthony Vesey was in Baku. As for the rest …

 

I only voted for one person, but that was all I was able to vote for. The ballot paper was printed on rather bright red paper which made it difficult for me to read the names of the candidates. I’m sure if I looked too long at the paper it would have given me a headache. Those who will have the task of counting the votes will have hellish difficulty, as the mark of a pen appears almost indistinct and you have to peer closely to see the choice(s) made.

 

The Town council ballot paper was printed on pink paper, and the colour photographs of the candidates made them look as if they had a temperature or had just emerged from a sauna. I’m not saying who I voted for, but I will definitely identify the party I did not vote for and the reasons. As a recipient of a blind pension I, along with all other pensioners, will not receive a Christmas bonus this year, a “hard” decision made with glee by the Lady Bountiful minister for Social Welfare (Mary daughter of Des Hanaffin). The amount was small, but Fianna Fail, along with their green tale, have shown themselves to be nothing more than a group of shameful scrooges.

Electioneers

In spite of my warnings not to canvass my home in Cavan, some aspirant councillors nevertheless chose to ignore my warnings. I was genuinely sorry to have missed Brian McKeown and Des Cullen. Des is a good lad and his mother unfortunately has MS.

 

Other candidates put in “material” which should really be submitted to a comedy contest. For example, I quote from the Fianna Fail document. In the section headed “Disability Services” we read:

 

“Fianna Fail is committed to improving services to make them more accessible for people with a disability, including physical access to buildings, health services, public transport, training and employment” – how sweet!

 

There is a pub / restaurant in Cavan town, jointly owned by an outgoing Fianna Fail member of Cavan County Council and a Fianna Fail member of the senate. The restaurant is on the top floor, but as there is no lift, this is inaccessible to people like myself who are confined to a wheel-chair. Now some buildings are old, and those operating restaurants only rent a portion of them; so resources for installing lifts are limited. This particular building received extensive renovations before the opening of the restaurant, but the local planners obviously didn’t insist on a lift. No doubt they, along with the premises’ owners, consider that “cripples” are too poor to patronise the restaurant – and certainly the political party to which they belong is determined to make them even poorer. I recall a story about a shop-keeper in the American “Deep South” who was subjected to insults because he allowed “niggers” into his premises. He responded: “The colour of their skin may be black, but their dollar bills are as green as the next man’s”.

 

As for their commitment to improving employment possibilities for the disabled, it is the same as that of Fine Gael – it goes no further than making sure that any of their family who are disabled have nice jobs.

 

I know that once the election has passed the masks will slip. Instead of being nice and courteous as they seek my vote they will resort to being as hostile and indifferent as in the past. Perhaps they may be even more hostile, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I’m not threatened with vexatious legal action by some of these scoundrels.

Cavan town’s hall of shame

Cavan Town Council have established an exhibition to celebrate the hundredth anniversary of the construction of the Town Hall, which didn’t open until January 1910. It goes without saying that I wasn’t invited, but then as the semi-literate jackass was going to be in attendance I wouldn’t have gone anyway. But I was in good company, for while the usual suspects (the councillors, the town clerk and the county manager) were invited, the plebs, the hoi poloi (that’s your actual Greek that is), the fuckers and whingers of the electorate were not.

The people of Cavan should reflect on this and bear it in mind when these people come fawning on them looking for their votes in the coming elections, like second-hand double-glazing salesmen or Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Who am I to expect an invitation? Well, I wrote a booklet about the council ten years’ ago. But then maybe the town council and councillors didn’t know about it. They should do – they asked me to write it. Then I wrote an article for the Cavan Echo about the building of the town hall. At least one man, who is in possession of a trowel used on the original construction, gate-crashed the event.

And then of course there was an item on RTE’s Nationwide program. I’ve been on that three times – and never got paid once. If they wanted somebody who knew what he was talking about, and could do it in an entertaining and light-hearted way, they could have asked me, but then a Tim O’Leary wannabe in a wheel-chair wouldn’t set the right tone would he? Were they afraid that I might be indiscrete? That I might make a pass at the gorgeous Mary Kennedy? I might have referred to the story long current round the town about the sumptuous “Town Hall Ball” held at its opening, when, according to some wags the food was so rich that some of the Cavan lads were still on the jacks at the outbreak of World War 1! Maybe they were afraid that I might mention the opposition on the council in the early years of the twentieth century to the building of the town hall on land donated by Lord Farnham, and how this could be interpreted as placing the council and its members fairly and squarely in the pockets of the landed aristocracy. But they didn’t stay there for long, for it was not rebelliousness against the injustice of the landlord system that prompted the council to use the then Lord Farnham’s land for the celebrations accompanying the return of the victorious 1947 team to Cavan without his permission. No, it was just plain bad manners.

If only I had known about the exhibition on Tuesday evening when my house in Cavan was visited by the first cock-suc…. council candidate, an out-going member. As it happened I hardly bade “it” the time of day, being somewhat appalled by its unctuous manner. Fool that I am I regretted my brusqueness. I might consider it a form of pond-life but I thought it had a grudging respect for me. Then I heard about the exhibition launch and the Nationwide feature, and I came to the conclusion that he doesn’t respect me, so all bets are off. I find “its” actions insulting and disreputable. It is seeking the electoral support of the people of Cavan, a lot of whom are facing financial difficulties and unemployment. What’s does “it” say? No doubt crocodile tears and sympathy, while arranging for one of “its” nephews to be taken on “temporarily” as a council employee – and like military juntas of old “temporary” can become permanent. The lad is very able ad well qualified, but when it comes to employment with organs of local government in Cavan (and no doubt throughout the rest of the country) the only qualification that matters is a familial relationship with a council member.

So here’s a message for all out-going members of Cavan Town Council who are seeking re-election, regardless of political affiliation. Don’t’ come near me or any member of my family. (I hope Councillor Conaty who has long been a good friend of ours respects what I’m saying), but as for the rest – they are worthless, self-aggrandising scum, a human form of algae.

A

Ministers in the sky

The Irish people have learned that our dear, grasping and incompetent government ministers have spent 1.6 million euro in travel by air force helicopters and planes since last October. Ireland is not a big country and distances are not great, so it seems rather ostentatious.

God be with the days when they were satisfied with being “lorried around” in state cars (usually Mercs or Peugeots) driven by a member of the gardai, or if they deputy ministers, a relative. The state car was a worthy political prize in itself, as a Dail Deputy returning to his constituency after gaining ministerial promotion could exhort his constituents to come out and “see the state car”. There was one junior minister who reportedly had his state car modified so that the calves couldn’t lick the back of his neck when he was bringing them to the mart – they wouldn’t fit in a helicopter.

I recall the story about the late Sean Lemass who, when taoiseach, got lost while driving in the Kerry Mountains. Seeing an old man standing beside a ditch he told his driver to ask him for directions. The guard rolled down his window and asked:
“Excuse me, do you mind telling us where we are?”
The man looked quizzically back at him and, after a few moments replied: “Sure aren’t u in a car.”
Lemass burst out laughing, adding “That is the perfect answer to a Dail question: It’s short; it’s entirely accurate; and it gives absolutely no new information.”

Our ministers no doubt quail at the idea of having to travel on the ground, alongside all those horrible, scruffy, shitty, poor people known as the general public. I know for a fact one person on the list always used two words for such people in the past. These were “whingers” and “fuckers”. Sadly, they are known by others as “the electorate” and they are, when all is said and done, these ministers’ employers. Travel by air allows them to stay out of touch and not to see the mess they, their friends and relatives, are making of the country.

But air travel suits the superstar image they have of themselves. Word may have got round that oral sex is so much better when you’re off the ground, not to mention sniffing white powder.

I remember a friend of mine from long ago called John Buckley who still owes me two pints – I never forget things like that. Well on one occasion a friend of ours called P.J. was annoying John. P.J. had just started to learn how to drive and John said to him: “Ya better mind yerself P.J. or it won’t be drivin’ lessons you’ll be takin’ but flyin’ lessons.”

Anyone know where I can lay my hands on an old Sam 7?

Regrets

 

I wish I weren’t disabled. I think back to the days when I could walk for miles or strut my stuff on the dance-floors of smelly, over-heated nightclubs.. I wish I could recognise people’s faces.

 

But you know I don’t think I’ve done too badly.

 

Regrets? Sure! I’ve got a few – who hasn’t? I regret having stayed on at university to get a doctorate. I also regret coming back down to Cavan in 1995 and getting in with a bad crowd, though as they were my employers I could hardly help it. But as we haven’t mastered time travel and going back in time, regrets are stupid.

 

Some may think I’m angry – surely none but a person steeped deeply in anger could write such forceful denunciations of the bandits and thieves who think of themselves as our leaders.

 

But I’m sorry to disappoint. I’m not angry, certainly not with my disabilities. Who should I be angry with? God? I’ve never been a believer in a vengeful and wrathful deity delivering his displeasure by life-shattering thunderbolts. I see divine intervention in my life as far more benign. God could have made me less imperfect, but the reasons he didn’t have nothing to do with punishment. If anything they are challenges for me to overcome – on my terms, not on someone else’s.

 

Maybe it’s a cross to bear, but then this makes me feel immensely privileged. Maybe Jesus is giving me the opportunity to carry his cross and share in his sufferings for mankind. I think it was Edith Stein who wrote: “Sufferings endured with the Lord are his sufferings.” But listen – I’m no Jesus freak and I wouldn’t like the powerful holy joes to feel they had competition.

 

But I’m not the only one who’s privileged here. I have never believed that there is a hierarchy of illness – that I’m sicker than someone else, and therefore deserving more soup and sympathy.

 

I don’t feel angry or resentful of “able-bodied” people. We’re all members of the human race, Some people are just luckier, that’s all.

 

I do feel angry – very angry – at the responses of society and government to the disabled. They claim they want disabled people to feel included and to pursue the removal of discrimination. In fact they don’t give a damn – they never have done. What they give (or rather promise) with one hand they take back with blooded claw on the other. I am incandescent at being sidelined, looked down upon and discriminated against by shitty little people leading shitty little lives who think that their proximity to bodily perfection places them in positions of unassailable authority over me and countless others.

 

I am livid with being expected to blend into the wall-paper of society, and then being ostracised because I have never wanted to be imprisoned in the world of low (or no) expectations. Along with other disabled people I have so much to give to the world, but we have been told by many (including many of the voluntary organizations supposedly pursuing our welfare) that the highest occupations we can aspire to are telephone operators. I dare to say that not everything in the garden of disability (only partially accessible to people in wheelchairs) smells of roses, but that quite a lot stinks of human piss.

 

Amongst the most craven in our world are those who preen themselves as being friendly to the disabled, who initiate expensive schemes accompanied by lavish publicity, to investigate the needs of the disabled, but which never lead to anything except the short-term enrichment of their organisers.

 

God gave me a brain, which he expects, nay demands I use. He also gave me the means of expressing my thoughts and I am so thankful to be able still to use them.

 

I am really, really happy. I live with a beautiful woman, safe and secure in her love, in a beautiful spot. I have so many truly wonderful friends.

 

Sometimes I wonder what I’ve done to deserve such happiness. At other times I fear that my happiness consists of fibres of a rug which can all too easily be precipitously withdrawn. I know how fragile my happiness is and how it can so easily be destroyed by the bloody-minded actions of others. I have made many enemies among the “powerful” who are just itching to get back at me.

 

I have my dignity; this is very precious.

 

But you know life is for loving. I believe in the present and the future. The past can take care of itself.

 

But I don’t know why I’ve written this. There will be those who’ll understand. Others will just scoff, maybe seeing it as the belly-aching of an arse-hole, as I was once described by a fellow member of an online forum for the partially-sighted.

A boy doing a man’s job

I hate appearing to be a hyper-critical know-it-all. Some might be surprised and a little disquieted at the way in which I seem to have founded upon the intellectual banality of a fellow Cavan historian. There will be murmurings of “Why don’t you pick on someone your own size Parker?” but the individual who has been the object of my scorn has not been content with inflating himself to the level of my equal, but has sought to portray himself as far superior. I would not have said anything, had not this individual, Dr Brendan Scott, Research Officer of Cavan County Museum, gone out of his way to belittle me. I have never had the “pleasure” of meeting him. Nobody could accuse me of spreading vile comments about him as I know nothing about him. I know he hails from Belturbet where I think his father is a town councillor. He went to St Pats (to which I went for a short period too), He has a PhD from the National University of Ireland in Galway, and I think this is on some aspect of seventeenth-century history but I’m not sure – but that’s the extent of what I know about him. He no doubt knows far more about me, but does he ever ask how much of it is true?

It is as if I don’t exist. He has never contacted me, even though there was a time when I would not have been averse to hearing from him. I heard that he had published a book on the subject. I endeavoured to send him a message asking for a copy that I might review for my Echoes of the Past column, but I never received any reply. No doubt my humble scribblings are too far below the ken of his exalted intellect. I was never been invited to any of the talks he has arranged. I don’t go to those sorts of things much, but it would have been nice to be asked.

But yet to organise a conference on the history of Cavan which included a medieval section and not invite a person who has written numerous articles and who has studied the period for over two decades was a definite snub. And what was Dr Scott’s defence of his actions? There had been trouble between me and the museum, but it was before his time. This rationale wasn’t delivered to me personally of course. I was unworthy of any reason. In the same way as I wasn’t entitled to a reason for the abrupt ending of my employment in the museum twelve years’ ago.  It sounded very much as if he had been listening to every little drop of bilge water spread by the flat earth element of the Cumann Seannchais Bhreifne.

I ask one favour of those who are going to spread lies about me. At least meet me once before doing it. Try to get to know me. Meet me in the flesh; don’t call me late on a Friday night. I’m always puzzled by those who say upon meeting me. “I never realised you were such a nice guy Ciaran” to which I jocularly respond “What exactly did you expect?”

My protests at being snubbed were met by comments from one of Scott’s friends who scoffed at my absurd “attestation” to be an expert on the history of medieval Cavan, while another commentator, who claimed to have expert knowledge of me said that the decision to snub me was my karma for my lack of generosity. (It goes without saying that I don’t believe Scott knew or approved of these comments.) I’ve been writing a column for over two years’ now for the Cavan Echo, in many of which I place my research of anyone who is bothered to read it. I have never claimed copyright protection on it, because it is of little value in Cavan, and I’m accused of being ungenerous? While blogs may be written by crazy people, those who respond to them are crazier.

But the worst response of all was from Cavan County Manager, Jack Keyes, Dr Scott’s boss, to whom I sent a mildly worded letter expressing my disbelief at what had occurred. Mr Keyes in the best spirit of the Irish Public Service never deigned to even reply. No doubt he had been provided with golden opinions of me. I know he has not enjoyed the best of health, but all he needed to do was reply, even with a brief acknowledgement saying something that there was nothing he could do. By his arrogant non-reply he identified himself fully with whatever motivated Scott, and he cannot say that he was on a frolic of his own. Mr Keyes has been quite public in his support of initiatives to help those with disabilities dealing with the County Council, but what prevents me from saying that I was deliberately victimised because I am disabled? But then as a disabled person I should know my place, and keep my mouth shut.

“Oh inti bowld Jools?”
“Sometimes he goes too far. He’ll need Cavan County Council before they’ll need him” – the f£&k he will!

The time I spent working in Cavan County Museum is something I remember with a mix of joy and frustration. He was a decent man having to operate in a shitty situation alongside shitty people. We had many a laugh together, as he was a rich reservoir of Australian slang. I often sensed that if he were a free agent he’d have been off like a shot. The last thing I want to do is contribute to the whispering campaign against him that’s been circulating for years.

Looking back, it often appears to have been a constant struggle against a plethora of hangers-on and relatives of council staff who were saw the museum as a cash cow. The curator asked me to find a job for one girl. As there was often little enough work for me to do I prevaricated, but said I’d find something for her. A week passed and the curator again asked me to find her a job. This time I came up with something that didn’t really need doing, and I was compelled to there and then telephone the girl offering her the work. She did it well and I was grateful, but I got a shock when the issue of payment for her arose in discussion. The curator proposed giving her far more money than I was getting. (Actually, to be fair to him, he didn’t actually know how little I received.) And then I remember the time when the curator, tired of the hectoring of the then county manager, threatened to resign. All of said to him: “If you go, we’re going too.” I told this to a very good friend of mine, and she said: “And do you think he’d do the same for you Ciaran?” Less than six months were to pass before I discovered how prescient my friend was. But I honestly didn’t expect him to.

One of the joys of working for the Museum was working alongside people on the FAS scheme, the form of cheap labour used by local authorities throughout Ireland for such projects. I think it worthwhile to remind people that I wasn’t the person who initially said the FAS people were not to be invited to the opening by President Robinson. If that decision had been gone along with I wouldn’t have been seen dead at the opening. The curator thankfully put his foot down as well. He asked me to draw up a list of people I’d like to invite, but not one person on my list got an invitation, and for all I know it ended up in Brian Johnston’s toilet. On the day of the opening there wasn’t a stone for more than fifty miles from under which some creepy-crawly hadn’t emerged. I say without any fear of contradiction that if it wasn’t for the people on the FAS schemes over the years there would be no museum, but yet for years they’ve been shat upon, whether by the County Council or by FAS itself.

Some might say this is all “Fart-and-tell”, the ultimate touch-stone of the scoundrel. I just want to show people I worked bloody hard in the short period I was there, but it is as if I never was in the place, and whenever my name is mentioned in the context of the museum eyes incline towards the floor as if someone had said “fuck” in earshot of the vicar. I became a “non-person”, airbrushed out of existence; credit for my work was taken by others. This is no doubt what Scott meant when he said there had been “trouble” between me and the museum, but maybe he is genuinely unaware of the work I did. Somehow I doubt it.

A lot of this happened long ago, and a lot of water had passed under my personal bridge. But I was truly distressed to find that, even after more than ten years, there were those in the Museum who still bore me ill-will. It really reopened a lot of sore memories for me.

But why am I still the black sheep? I can stand, hand on heart, and say I have nothing to be ashamed of. I was born with one disability which I attempted to overcome. The good Lord in his wisdom saw fit to saddle me with another, the degenerative disease of Multiple Sclerosis which I have also attempted to deal with, and I think, all things considered, I’ve done fairly well. I’ve never looked for sympathy, but a bit of respect wouldn’t be out of place, but then I know I look in vain for respect from people who don’t respect themselves.

No doubt all this will engender a response. There will be those who will pooh-pooh my “outburst”, but you know I don’t care. I do hope (for his sake) that Dr Scott doesn’t emulate his predecessor in the job in the museum, who once rang me up threatening to sue me and who was verbally abusive to my late mother – God be good to her – and sister. On that occasion I had, that very day in fact, received formal notification that I did indeed have Multiple Sclerosis, so I suppose I could have been forgiven for ignoring such a provocation. I would not be so passive now.

One last thing – after which the rest will be silence. I wish local politicians would stop belly-aching to me about the Museum, how much it is costing and how little it is taking in. It’s got nothing to do with me. It’s not my concern – it’s yours.

Arson in Australia

The fires that have wrought such havoc in Victoria are truly horrific. History has been peppered by such blazes, such as the Great Fire of London of 1666. It seems incredible that with all our sophistication and technical wizardry humans can still be consumed by a force of nature.

But perhaps the most galling aspect is the knowledge that in Australia, that most destructive of media, fire, did not burst out by itself. Bush fires have been a phenomenon in Australia for thousands of years – from before the continent was inhabited. They erupted spontaneously, often spurred by a chance bolt of lightning. They had a role in the regeneration of forestry. Man understands the positive role that controlled fires have in ecology. When they are caused maliciously their impact can only be destructive, as witnessed by the devastation in Victoria. We do have to ask what type of people would do such a thing?

As we see in Australia arson is one of the most frightfully murderous of activities. The numbers who are killed and maimed can be enormous. It would be hard for someone to carry out such mass murder with conventional fire-arms. Apart from the difficulties occasioned by re-loading they might have to hear the screams and wails of their victims. The arsonist is more like the person who plants a bomb, but then that’s a risky business. It may go off in your hands. Some arsonists like to fool themselves that they are not insidious lunatics and claim that their pyrotechnics are motivated by a cause. They say that their objects are inanimate objects like buildings, but they cannot wash their hands of responsibility, as fire can spread, and then what about fire-crews who risk their lives in extinguishing fires?

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd had equated arsonists with mass murderers, and anyone who deliberately sets anything alight shows no regard for human life. They may often have deeper-seated psychological issues and so they need psychiatric intervention. However, if there is such a thing as society, they should be shunned by it, or at least made to feel in no uncertain terms that society wishes to respond in the most negative terms to their actions. They should not be brought to society’s (even local society’s) bosom; they ought not be given titles which may further exacerbate their sense of self-importance; they shouldn’t be allowed to ingratiate themselves with local elites who in any case should be able to see through the base flattery they use towards this end; and what is more, no right-thinking person should give any heed to anything they say, especially when it involves character assassination of blameless people.

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