Ciaran’s Peculier [sic] Blog

A view of the world from an Irish hole

Category: older generation

Ya said wha’ Gay?

I know that we’re in the Silly Season but the idea of putting up Gay Byrne for president is just pushing the joke too far, For a start he’s passed it. I hear people bristling with indignation and the murmur of “ageism” coming from their skinny lips. I believe that the term refers to the incorrect belief that an older person cannot do the job of a younger person, or at least not with the speed or ability of a younger person. It is therefore wicked and immoral to say that a man or a woman of 60 or 70 cannot carry out the same tasks as someone aged 20, What is the requisite skillset of a president? Cutting ribbons, unveiling plaques and signing your name to legislation. As for sending it to the Supreme Court if it is “repugnant to the constitution” fuck that; it’s a waste of time as they always give it the thumbs up unless it’s about something like employment rights for cripples.  True there are also official visits to places like Kazakhstant but that’s not obligatory. You may also have to accept the credentials of ambassadors but that just takes a shake of the hand so there’s no hassle. These are tasks that could be carried out by a three- or four-year old child, as well as someone aged a hubndred-and-seven.

 You need balls to be President?

The framers of our constitution, in their urge to re-create a system as close to that of England as possible, did not want to imbue the office with any powers. In fact, they ensured that the holder of the presidency would be politically castrated. It might be said that old people are time’s eunuch, castrated by its unstoppable flow (Who said that? er me actually), so an older person fits the bill. The constitution stipulates that the president must be 35 or older and such a clause has long existed in the United States, which has a real executive president and not a wimp as head of state. Sadly there is no upper age limit.

Sin a Fianna Fail

Fianna Fail support for Gaybo is reasonable as they understand the essential impotence of the office. An old person, perhaps growing in infirmity, is castrated by time.  They may be able to rise to the occasion if their pension allows frequent access to the little blue tablets but otherwise they’re fucked – metaphorically. As a result the FFers have always seen the office as a comfortable and gilded old folks’ home, to be given as a reward to elevated party members as a reward for their service, or as a compensation payment for being shafted.

The roll of (dis)honour

  • Sean O Ceallaigh had every reason to expect that he would be named Minister for External Affairs by De Valera, but Dev kept the job and the kudos for himself throughout “The Emergency”, The pay-off came in 1945 when he was nominated for and elected president.
  • When he had served his two terms, what better way was there to reward the 77-year-old long fella than with the presidency?
  •  At the expiration of his term the presidency was thought a fittingly harmless role for the intellectually far too well-equipped Erskine Childers Jr. Poor Dr Childers was not a well man.
  • On his untimely departure from life’s stage he was succeeded by the learned Cearbhall O Dalaigh without an election. President O Dalaigh withstood the petty restrictions of the office, as well as the insults of the political cornerboys of the Fine Gael / Labour coalition until the publican of Monasterboice in a moment of sherry-trifle inspired tiredness and emotion called him a “thundering disgrace”, and he resigned.
  • The coalition, reading correctly that its days were numbered, did not oppose the nomination of Dr Patrick Hillery by Fianna Fail, who was thus being rewarded for his services to the party by a sentence of fourteen years in Aras an Uachtaran from which he was lucky to come out alive.

 The worm turns

 In 1990 Fianna Fail attempted the old strategy by nominating the visibly frail Brian Lenihan Sr. as presidential candidate. By this time Ireland had grown up and realised the Soldiers of Destiny’s cynical ploy. And now they’re at it again. At the Magill Summer School Micheal Martin tried to present himself as a forward-looking politician who had realised that the Irish people had meted out a just and long-deserved punishment on his party. By courting the likes of Gay Byrne as a candidate he shows that this was all bullshit and that he is deeply dded to the Fianna Fail past.

Name recognition

Apart from Gay Byrne’s age, there is also the fact that Fianna Fail has been rattled by the candidacy of my friend and fellow Cavanman Sean Gallagher who has gained public recognition through his appearance on the Dragon’s Den programme. The simpleton from Connemara, Eamon [O] Cuiv is not liked by the electorate – I wonder why? – so they needed someone with name recognition, but Gaybo is yesterday’s man. Gay Byrne has gone down in my estimation by even giving them the time of day, and all his assurances about his campaign being “autonomous” are about as sincere as a debutante’s commitment to her virginity.

 If Gay says no…

 ll is not lost for Fianna Fail if Gay refuses to play ball. I am assured that there are plenty of other broadcasting hasbeens out there who would jump at the chance to come out of senility for one last gig with the added bonus of a plushy pad and, let’s not forget it, the state funeral, so  Tom Carter could stick his funeral expenses policy and the charming carriage clock up his arse. Names that come to mind are:

  • Bunny Carr who charmed generations of Irish people with his quiz show for the intellectually bollixed Quicksilver and who then serenaded those same folk into a calm state before they popped their clogs along with Anne O’Dwyer in everyone’s favourite Going Off; How about
  •  Sonny Knowles? (age 78). He can’t sing any more (could he ever?) but he’d be able to take on most presidential tasks with ,, er … aplomb? 
    Q. What is thirty feet long, has ten teeth and reeks of piss?
    A. The front row at a Sonny Knowles concert. 
    How about
  •  Sean og O Ceallachain (age 88 – now we’re cookin’ baby); all the right cred with the Gah. a familiar voice associated with tranquillity on a Sunday night before the rigours of the week began afresh…  I’ve got it
  • Liam O fuckin’ Murchu (age 82), Bualladh bas agus pog mo hol agus … suck me dick etc.
  • Arthur Murphy (age 80 ish?) who must find life really sucks since they pulled Mailbox on RTE and he no longer had to read out badly spelled missives from irate clerico-fascists from sheets smeared with semen,
  • Donncha O Dulaing (age anyone, must be hitting 80). Very fir for his age. Who can forget his memorable walks in the footseps of O’Sullivan Beare or Eamon De Valera? What’s more, he’s politically safe
  • Brendan Balfe (age 65, not really old enough). According to contacts he’s really pissed off since he got the elbow from RTE. What’s more, he doesn’t seem to have a pension either.
  • Andy O’Mahony. Remember programmes like Dialogue? He’d be just the man in our troubled times. We’d forget we were up shit creek because he’d put us all to sleep.
  • Hal Roach (age 83). Swallow me I’ll be right behind you but … er…no.

Other names crying out to go forward are

  • Podge and Rodge, or their alter ego Fester and Alien
  • Dustin the Turkey
  • Bosco

Don’t be silly I hear you scowl, they’re puppets. So? That’s exactly what the president is.

One final name that springs into the fetid sewers of my memory is

  • Liam Nolan. I recall with nostalgia how, as an undergraduate in Trinity I used to listen to a then pirate radio station in Dublin. First would come Fr Michael Cleary who would give it between the eyes to all the shifty lefties and liberals, and then would give it between the legs to his housekeeper. I recall with fondness his attempts to spur his listeners to go to Knock on pilgrimages. “It’d be a great day out on the train. Ya could go with a flask o’ tea and a couple o’ sanbos, an’ after ya’d done with the prayin’ ya’d be back in De Citty before nightfall.”I recall how he was once telephoned by a distraught parent asking for assistance in tracking down her son’s skate bird. The next morning I met my friend Marc coming out of the Common Room. “I say Marc. A chap has lost his skate board and I was wondering where he might start searching.” “I’m awfully sorry old man but I haven’t the foggiest” he replied. Father Cleary  was followed by Liam Nolan with his mix of “easy listenin’” including Dianna Durban’s Greatest Hits such as “It’s foolish but it’s fun”. He would read from correspondence and it seemed to me that, while those listening to Fr Cleary had real-life problems, those who listened to Liam Nolan had fought the good fight and failed, after which they’d gone into homes for the bewildered. Ni fhecfimid a laethaid ann aris go dteo

Now if that far right birdbrain Dana Rosemary Scallon is thinking of runnng again, what is there to stop Johnny Logan (who won Eurovision one time more than Dana, back when it was worth winning) or Charlie McGettigan?

But honestly, Gay Byrne for President? Stop the shaggin’ lights Bunny.

Prescription charges

The Irish Department of Health has introduced a 50 cent charge on each prescribed item. When my 90 year old father heard this he couldn’t get to sleep,. His doctor prescribes him maybe a dozen items each month and he was horrified with the prospect of his miserly pension being swallowed up.

 Why is it that the ordinary old people of Ireland have to suffer in this way?

 Those right-wingers who inform the minister’s policy should bear in mind that you can hardly tell someone who is ninety years of age that they should get a job and stop being a burden. The alternative, which no doubt would be favoured by these nameless neo-cons, is to let the old and the sick die. That way the balance of payments will be healthier and strong, able-bodied, hard-working people will not have to deal with part of their hard-earned cash having to go to maintain in life those whose “best before” dates have long expired and who are only be kept alive by a misplaced sense of sentimentalism. Such views are akin to Nazism, and I think it is only fair to add that my father fought Nazism and nearly lost his life on numerous occasions doing so, whereas the parents of Mary Harnery’s officials probably had their ears glued to their radio sets listening to Lord Haw-Haw during World War 2.

 The cynical nature of these charges can be seen in the refusal of the Minister to make a waver for those who are terminally ill. The sick logic should be abundantly clear here. “Let them die”, and then if they’re dead they can’t vote against the government – but these people have relatives.

 Have these people no consciences?

Boycott Strictly Come Dancing

I am outraged that poor John Sergeant feels he must withdraw from Strictly Come Dancing because there is a possibility he might win it.

John has been subjected to a barrage of ageist comments from the superannuated pack of twits headed by Len Goodman (who is no youngster himself) who plainly see the Strictly experience as an opportunity to promote themselves and their friends in the professional dancing community. some of whom they obviously fancy. Poor John, being sixty-four and balding, just hadn’t a hope against some of his rivals.

The fact is that the Great British public have identified with John and laud his efforts, far more than they do with the likes of the fit (in all senses of the word) supermodels and rugby players whose “abilities” and antics only appear in the tabloid press.

What of those hundreds of thousands of people who have voted for John? Most of them are television licence hoders, and their fees help put on Strictly Come Dancing and pay the no doubt not inconsiderable fees of the judges.

The format of a dance-off gives the judges too much power. It wasn’t John Sergeant who bumped Cherie Lunghi off on Saturday; it was the judges.

So the message is that if you are over a certain age, and you’re not as fit as a flea, and you’re not able to dance to the standards of Len Goodman and co., don’t even think of applying to go on the show. Peter Mandelson take note.

For my part I’m never going to watch the show again. There are already enough programmes on TV promoting the egos of “celebrities”, most of whom Ive never heard of.

Strictly Come While Dancing

OK, so it’s cards on the table time. I have to admit to being an avid fan of one of the silliest and most intellectually banal programs on TV – Strictly Come Dancing. My money is on John Sargent and Siberian siren Kristina Rihanoff. Yes, John Sargent can’t dance for stirabout but each week he throws his heart and soul into it. He enjoys it and so obviously do millions of viewers. Many of those who vote for him are no doubt inspired by the thought: “There but for the grace of Godot go I”. They are probably middle-aged blokes who know they couldn’t do any better but who nevertheless congratulate his “Have-a-go” attitude. They identify with him far more than with the athletic prowess of rugby players. The ageist comments of judge Len Goodman on last Saturday’s show were rightly booed.

And remember: what’s white and floats over the floor?

Come dancing.

I Owe the above to a friend in Scotland who understandably wants to remain unknown…

The life of Brian

Pootr Brian oge. He was born with a silver toe up his arse and went through his existence always looking on the bright side of life. He never had to worry about being taught in a huge class full of little horrors fighting with each other or otherwise vying for the teacher;s attention. It was all going so well for him, and then he was given a speech to read, which he did, but never bothered to look at what he was saying. He was a bit like a fellow who makes the transition from the potty to the grown-ups’ toilet and can’t understand why nobody wants to know about his great success. He had obviously started to believe the crap about his great intellectual abilities, and never realised how he was being led by the nose into a quagmire. On the sidelines cheering him on were those in his party who feel he has risen too far too soon. But those two PD councillors in Galway really took the biscuit, resigning over medical cards, when it was their over-fed leader who egged on Brian in the first place.

Is there anyway back for Brian oge now? He’s eaten humble pie but it’s obvious he prefers filet mignon with a nice Medoc. He will forever be known as the guy who tried to nick the medical cards from the oul’ fuckers, many of whom had voted for his party just to get the cards in the first place.

My advice to him would be to consider an image make-over. That crue-cut, sharp, yuppie image is about two decades out of date. He should instead consider growing his hair long – real long, sitting back and taking a spliff, he could think of singing “Every Sperm is sacred” at a Spuc conference,  and next time he’s given something to read out in public he should politely refuse. This way he might just avoid getting crucified.

Back to school

The reaction to the changes in the medical card entitlements for over 70s have perhaps taken attention away from the idiotic cuts introduced in primary education last week, which will see teacher – pupil ratios skyrocket. The importance of lowering this ratio was recognised over thirty years’ ago by the then (Fianna Fail) minister John P. Wilson, but it seems that we are now rowing back in the gains of the past.

Any government that messes with primary education is deserving of a very large dunce’s cap, and they should be put out of the class altogether to stand in the hallway. The fact that we have in Ireland a well-educated population is the single most important factor of our prosperity in recent years – tax rates and “positive business climate” have very little to do with it, and if that goes we’ll just be another also-ran trying to attract inward investment. Primary education is the most important part of the educational system - screw it up and it’s very hard to make it right later on.

Brian’s Budget

Brian Lenihan Jr has delivered his first budget, and indeed there should not be a back anywhere in Ireland that isn’t smarting from the imposition of this financial haishirt.

I knew Brian Lenihan Jr at Trinity, the fact that he is minister for finance and that I am well here need not concern us now. Let’s just say he never came across as the sharpest tool in the shed; I remember how we both attended a table-quiz and sat at contiguous tables, and how the personnel on our table supplied more than one answer to the assembled legal brains gathered around Brian oge.

Of course he was once elected a Scholar in Law entitling him to free tuition, free board in Trinity and a free meal (if he could stomach it) for five years. This had nothing to do with the fact that his father was at the time a minister in the government upon whom the College of the Holy and Unidvidied Trinity was dependant for its funding. What a horrible thought! No more than was the decision to grant a Law Scholarship to a girl whose mother just happened to be Minister for Education in a later government.

Brian oge has said (though he denies it) that the decision to means-test medical cards for the over-70s is a “feye-asco” foisted on him by the Minister for Health. I honestly don’t think he knew about it. The same could not be said for his colleague, Mary Harney, who is on record as saying she would prefer to be in the cut-and-thrust free-market environment of Boston than in the pink, liberal, socialist environs of Berlin. She of course is a fan of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, that b*$ch who supped tea with the mass murderer Pinochet.

But the government hardly needs Harney’s support. She is one of only two PD TDs (one of whom is expected to show un-rat-like courage and rejoin Fianna Fail soon) and the FFers can comfortably rely for support on John Gormless and his pals for the considerable future. So why do they put up with her? Why don’t they make life easy for themselves by saying: “Look Mary, why don’t you do yourself and the country a really big favour and FUCK OFF to Boston!”

PS. I hope there are no members of Cavan County Council who think I’m belittling myself here? The fact is I like belittling myself: you could say it’s one of my hobbies.

Racism and Racists

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Racism and racists

Most people are by now well aware of how I feel about non-Irish people coming to work or live here. I welcome them unreservedly. I hope they have a good time and I also hope many of them will settle down and make their live here and maybe set up businesses. They don’t frighten me. They do not tweak some deep-seated insecurity. Some of the women are beautiful, even though I’m spoken for, thanks to a girl who is herself not a native of Ireland.

I suppose I can understand how the advent of difference upsets people, especially older folk. For so long they were used to people leaving Ireland in droves, so the idea of large numbers of people coming in the opposite direction. However, my dear and lovely mother, Mary Parker, who passed away this July at the age of 88, had no such feelings of insecurity. Perhaps like her son she knew that the people who really make you feel scared are your white neighbours.

These people are not bad or evil in themselves. Their fears though are played upon by wicked and mischievous people.

What I would say to any of them is: I understand how you feel, but I don’t agree with you. There is nothing to fear. I would also appeal to them to show some class and to eschew the cornerboy rhetoric. Alright, so you don’t like foreigners, but why refer to them with a rare flight of allieration as “fucking foreigners”? Or the other phrase which disgusts me because of its innate violence “black bastards”. If one quarter of the world’s population cause them such unease why not call them niggers or coons – equally offensive but not as violent and full of hate as the preceding. This type of language is meant to demean non-Irish people, but the only ones whom it demeans are the Irish people who use it. It’s the equivalent of calling people Fenian bastards, dirty Jews or enemies of the people. It leads inexorably in the direction of Auschwitz.

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