Wednesday, July 1, 2026

‘Nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so’

This week’s column in The Kerryman newspaper.

Michael Commane 

A large crowd got off the train in Killarney. I was in the front of the train, it meant I could see all the passengers heading for the exit. Observing the milling passengers on Killarney platform I asked myself how does the word hold together with all the different shapes and sizes.


The previous day a BBC reporter conducted a vox pop in Norwich, asking people what they thought of newly elected MP for Makerfield, Andy Burnham, who is odds-on favourite to be next UK prime minister. Some thought he was great, some had no time for him. How had they come to their decisions.

How do we form our opinions? 


On Friday I had a discussion with a young man; there was no way I was going to change his mind on the topic. His certainty shocked me; I felt he was sticking to his view more on a hunch than on basing it on sound reasoning. He would not accept recognised statistics.


I was back thinking of the people at Killarney platform, wondering how they inform themselves.


Is the world of constant information saturating our minds? Those who cycle know what it means to be saturated.


Does an objective law, the idea that something is either right or wrong, no longer hold? Then again Shakespeare (1564 - 1616) raises the issue in Hamlet when the prince says: ‘There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so’.


There is a tendency to move away from binary thinking. I had first-hand experience of that when reading a Department of Education form for new teachers. The appointee is required to tick one of 11 boxes. It was a totally different world when I began teaching in the 1980s.


This is the question as it is presented on the appointment form:

‘Definition of Civil Status (As recognised under Irish national law):


Options that describe a person’s relationship in law with another, please tick:

Single/ Married/ Civil Partner/Divorced/ Co-habitant/ Judicially Separated/

Separated/ Former Civil Partner/ Widowed

Surviving Civil Partner/ Unknown. And then at the end it asks: ‘If Civil Status is not known ‘Unknown’ is selected until status is determined.’’


It is one example of how the world is changing. There are people who think those questions are relevant and there are those who will think they are ridiculous, another sign of the nonsense that is going on. They will say it’s the world of woke.


Maybe the best teacher/lecturer I have ever had would regularly say: ‘I know nothing’. When it comes to reality what actually do we know?


All those people at Killarney platform are a microcosm of the world, in other words a conglomeration of everything; one might even call it one big mess. Some might call it one big happy family.


Or is it that we always see the world from the vantage point from where we are at that moment? A young person walking in a park with a small happy child is going to see the world differently than an old feeble person sitting exhausted in a park bench? 


Cycling in that park last week, observing those two people, such a thought struck me; as did observing those at Killarney station.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

CEOs earning 500 times more than worker in office

 Pat Rabbitte, former leader of the Labour Party expressed in an interview fears growing economic inequality in society would threaten “the future of liberal democracy”. He believes governments must act to arrest the trend.

“I think we’re in very serious circumstances,” he said. “I mean, there was a time if the chief executive was earning 10 times what the guy on the floor was earning, that was a big story. Now he’s earning ‘500 times’ or more what the worker in the office is earning.

“When you have two people on decent, modest salaries who can’t afford to put a roof over their heads, liberal democracy and confidence in politics is at risk. And you can see across the water in the neighbouring island where there are doubts arising about the governability of the country.”

Monday, June 29, 2026

Pat Leahy’s excellent obituary of the Phoenix magazine

The piece below is an interesting obituary of the Phoenix magazine, written by Pay Leahy. It appears in the Weekend supplement of the weekend edition of The Irish Times.

This blog cast a not-so-cold eye over the long piece; it is an exceptionally interesting read.  

The writer of this blog appeared at least twice in recent years in the Phoenix. The short news items dealt with the High Court case between this author and the Catholic archdiocese of Dublin. The case is ongoing; resilience, patience and the belief in doing what is right.

What was reported in the Phoenix was accurate.

The great Daily Telegraph editor Max Hastings, while interviewing a potential recruit, was once asked by the candidate (‘an uncommonly feisty girl’) whether he thought journalism was a gentleman’s profession. ‘Absolutely not,’ Hastings replied, as related in his memoir. “It is a trade for cads and bounders.”

The closure of the Phoenix magazine last week after 43 years brings to an end a long and entertaining chapter in this tradition of Irish journalism.

It’s a chapter in which I played a very small part. I first walked through the green door at 44 Lower Baggot Street, with the Phoenix masthead on a brass plate, in 1996, not long out of university. At University College Dublin, I had founded and run a college newspaper (along with Dara Ó Briain, who went on to a less glamorous career in comedy and television), relishing the status of a Big Man on Campus. Now I was starting on the very bottom rung of real journalism life – editorial assistant at the Phoenix. I worked there for three years, inverting my title and becoming assistant editor (still the most junior member of the team, but progress all the same). I loved it, learned a lot and to this day owe a great deal to it and the journalists who mentored me there.

The magazine was founded in 1983 by John Mulcahy, its Phoenix rising from the ashes of Hibernia magazine and from Mulcahy’s period running the Sunday Tribune, itself established as a successor to Hibernia.

But if Hibernia was the journal of the leftist intelligentsia, the Phoenix intended to be more down and dirty – the magazine with the inside stories, that no one else would print, that the powerful and well-connected didn’t want you to read.

It was above all the creation of Mulcahy, the original “Goldhawk”. He was a singular figure in Irish journalism. Tall, angular, always impeccably dressed, with an impish grin and an unashamedly patrician air, he would bound into the magazine’s offices fizzing with lists of ideas scrawled on blue index cards. By the time I arrived, Mulcahy was in his mid-60s, and perhaps in his prime. He conducted editorial meetings with relentless energy. What about this? Had we looked into that? There must be a story here? Where were they getting the money? What politicians were on manoeuvres? Who is on the board? Someone knows something. He brushed aside objections. “Let’s go back at that again.” Ideas that would not qualify as one of Goldhawk’s “inside stories” were quickly dismissed: “Sounds like an end story”. His demand was that every story should tell readers something they didn’t already know. “Where is the new information in that?” he would ask.

He seemed genuinely surprised that anyone would take offence at what the Phoenix had written, despite much evidence to the contrary. He was a rigorous editor, returning copy – supplied into a tray in his office on printed A4 sheets – with a series of impatient corrections. He could spot a potential libel before you had written it. He dispensed advice in a kindly but firm manner and expected it to be followed. Get up early. Stay late. Go the extra mile. Talk to everyone. Get the story. Check it, and check it again.

The offices were almost comically cluttered, on the top floor of what was then Larry Murphy’s pub. Piles of newspaper clippings and files, official documents, Companies Office records, property searches, planning lists and all the raw materials of journalism before the internet were everywhere. Hard copies of the newspapers were put on racks and kept for months (no internet searches then); we kept our own index of files. Newspaper stories were photocopied and kept for reference and leads. There must have been several forests worth of paper there at any one time.

Mulcahy ruled from the corner office with an antique desk and the big table around which editorial meetings were conducted; beside him was Paddy Prendiville’s tiny, smoke-filled office. Paddy was a proper old-school hack – scruffy, conspiratorial, hard-nosed. He spent about 10 hours a day on the phone to a variety of well-placed sources, and wrote most of the politics and media stories, the beating heart of the magazine. He loved cigarettes, scoops and annoying people. He freely admitted his enthusiasm for Sinn Féin (this did not surprise people) and he hated the Brits.

He also loved annoying Vincent Browne, one of the Phoenix’s great bêtes noires. The magazine revelled in its feuds; the one with Browne was probably the most intense, but there were many others – with Eoghan Harris, the Sunday Independent, a succession of dodgy businessmen and chancers. One chancer had $100,000 in counterfeit notes planted in Mulcahy’s (not insubstantial) pile on the Sandford Road in Ranelagh, where he was a neighbour of Mary Robinson, and heroin planted in the Phoenix offices. The Garda did not believe Mulcahy was a drug dealer.

The deputy editor was Paul Farrell, who oversaw much of the business coverage, the humour section, the arts and racing coverage and much else besides. He shared Mulcahy’s interests and his attitude, and would become, as Mulcahy stepped back and eventually away completely in later years, the engine of the magazine. He was a wise and sympathetic mentor.

Occasionally callers to the office would arrive promising the most sensational stories. We were wary about granting access, because sometimes they had come to remonstrate personally about coverage that was not to their liking. Extreme violence was promised through the intercom by a famous singer one day. Other times, visits were more productive. One day a man arrived from Galway and with a story about difficulties he was having with his landlord, a Fianna Fáil TD. He was admitted, and told his story. He was unusual on two counts: he had a mobile phone and exotic facial hair. Luke “Ming” Flanagan (for ’twas he) is now an MEP.

All manner of the dispossessed, the discriminated against and the wronged contacted us to tell their stories. We did our best for them. Also a lot of cranks and nutcases got in touch. You had to develop a nose for it. “What does your solicitor say?” “Oh, I’m suing him as well.” “And what did the judge say?” “He’s in on it as well. They’re all in on it. I’m suing the judge as well.” Good luck with that.

Other stories were bigger. In 1996, the Phoenix broke the story that Charles Haughey had received more than £1 million from supermarket tycoon Ben Dunne. The magazine also reported that Fr Michael Cleary – a high-profile priest with his own radio show and a record of advocacy against things such as sex outside marriage (as we quaintly used to call it) – had fathered a child. Following on from the revelation that the Bishop of Galway Eamonn Casey had also fathered a child, and before the child abuse revelations destroyed much of the church’s moral authority, it was a huge scandal. Phoenix put a picture of Casey and Cleary singing on the front cover. The speech bubble read: “There is [music symbol] nothing like [music symbol] a dame!”

There were lots of other revelations and scoops. The magazine confessed an especial mission to report on Ireland’s wealthiest people and so there were endless stories about Tony O’Reilly, Michael Smurfit, Dermot Desmond, John Magnier, Denis O’Brien et al. In a profile to mark his 50th birthday, Phoenix wrote there was “more than a touch of Gatsby” about O’Reilly. How true that would prove. A piece about the Telecom Éireann scandal in 1991, which would lead to the resignation of Smurfit as chairman, was cleared by the lawyers but the printers – owned by, er, Smurfit – refused to print it and the magazine appeared with four blank pages. The Labour leader Dick Spring read the piece into the record of the Dáil.

Legal letters flowed from the great and the good alike. Having been stung more than once in the “Four Goldmines” (as the magazine called the Four Courts), the Phoenix was hyper-careful about exposure to defamation proceedings – more careful than anywhere else I have worked. It operated on the basis that every story could be the subject of an action, and therefore had to be watertight. Defamation actions were not unheard of, but they were rare.

Legal threats were more frequent. One arrived from solicitors acting for Anglo Irish Bank in December 2008 demanding that all copies of the magazine – which asserted that Anglo was “technically bankrupt” – be immediately withdrawn from shops. All manner of legal ruination was threatened. The magazine held firm. Anglo was nationalised the following month.

In its latter phase, the magazine became somewhat duller, less sharp, more given to opinion and ideological criticism of people and institutions than telling readers stories about them that they couldn’t read elsewhere. In recent years, it developed a bit of a fixation on the Israel-Palestine conflict and on the “undermining” of Ireland’s neutrality. It was more likely to criticise institutions than tell you what was going on behind the scenes in them.

Previously, people in places such as The Irish Times used to read the Phoenix to find out what was going on in their own backyard; that was less so in recent years. I’ll give one example of what I mean. When Conor Brady was made editor of The Irish Times back in 1986, beating staff favourite James Downey, the Phoenix was able to report from inside the first meeting between the new editor and his subordinates (who had backed Downey for the role). “Well,” Brady told them, according to the report in the Phoenix, “it could have been worse. It could have been Vincent Browne.”

Unfortunately – or fortunately for the leaders of such institutions – the magazine was less able in recent years to bring the reader inside those rooms and those meetings. That sort of insider feel became less evident in the magazine over the last decade. Too many “end stories”. Not enough new information; not enough reliable new information.

It has been common since the magazine’s demise to observe that it failed to adapt to the online age. That’s true, I think, but it’s not why it failed. The truth is that although the magazine continued to publish some excellent journalism, it no longer found enough of the inside stories that people were prepared to pay for to read – or felt they couldn’t miss.

There’s also another factor, one that Goldhawk would certainly dispute. The magazine’s heyday was during the period when private, moneyed interests wielded a significant influence over politics to their own advantage. People believed there was a well-connected, golden circle and there was a market for stories that promised to give its readers an insight into that secret world. Since then politics, as a result of the age of the tribunals, has been largely cleaned up. Not completely (that will never happen). But the idea that Ireland is irredeemably corrupt is not one that stands up to much scrutiny. That has been good for Ireland but it has not been to the advantage of the Phoenix.

The magazine had an extraordinarily loyal and engaged group of readers and subscribers, even if they weren’t, in later years, sufficiently numerous to ensure its survival. The great and the good loved the Phoenix and they hated it. More than a few of them were sources and contributors. Despite the (enthusiastically cultivated) mystique about Goldhawk’s sources of information, I’ve always thought it was possible to figure out its high-profile sources by reading the magazine for a year and seeing who wasn’t mentioned, or was featured in a vaguely complimentary fashion. I consider myself still bound by the confidences of my time there, even though I’ve felt the Phoenix’s lash plenty of times in recent years.

I always thought: fair enough. When you might be inclined to think of yourself as a gentleman journalist, Goldhawk was on hand to remind you to follow his example, and be a cad and a bounder.

This appears on their website:

Company Announcement 17 June 2026

After more than 43 years, we have made the difficult decision to cease publishing The Phoenix Magazine, effective immediately. The offices are now closed.

We are deeply grateful for the support, commitment, and community that have sustained our publication throughout the years.

We extend our heartfelt thanks to our loyal readers, customers, suppliers, partners and contributors who have supported us since our journey began in January 1983. We also thank our editors and staff for their tireless work and dedication. This publication would not have been possible without you all.

We are deeply conscious of the effect the closure will have on creditors and subscribers. 

For all queries please email penliq2026@gmail.com

You will be replied to as soon as possible.

Go raibh maith agaibh agus beannacht.


And below that, is this, which is dated: January 27, 2022 - Affairs of the Nation

THE RATHGAR INQUISITION

THE STRANGE case of the disappearing priest and other Church activists from the Church of Three Patrons in Dublin’s Rathgar in recent months has perplexed parishioners there. They were further baffled when matters came to a head with the removal of Father Michael Commane, its fondly regarded celebrant, as parish chaplain following the earlier transfer… Read more


Sunday, June 28, 2026

People are promoted until they get a job they can’t do


It is the headline on this story, written by Pat Leahy in The Irish Times Weekend edition, that caught the attention of this blog. How true and real. And then we have to suffer their nonsense for far too long. It happens in most places. The entire article is also well worth a read.

Here are four lessons for Irish politics from the fall of Keir Starmer and the rise of Andy Burnham:

1. Beware of Peter

Not Peter Mandelson (though all politicians should certainly avoid him), but Peter’s Principle, the management concept that says everyone rises through an organisation to a level at which they are incompetent. Starmer was a perfectly decent director of public prosecutions, an able frontbencher on Brexit and a successful leader of the opposition – successful enough to win a massive landslide in the last general election. But – like his four immediate predecessors – he has been a failure as prime minister, as judged by the public and colleagues alike. 

People get promoted until they reach a job they can’t do.Being prime minister (or taoiseach) is an extraordinarily difficult job requiring ability, temperament, judgment and conviction at levels beyond any ministerial job. 


As Fianna Fáil TDs contemplate life after Micheál Martin (the Examiner reported this week that the parliamentary party wants him to quit after the EU presidency, though we have heard the like of that before), they might pause to consider the requirements of the job.

The unhappy fate of Martin’s predecessor Brian Cowen should warn them that being a popular minister is not necessarily the recipe for being a successful taoiseach. As the candidates for the Fianna Fáil leadership begin to put up their flags in the coming months, TDs should consider themselves part of an interview panel for the hardest job in Ireland.

2. It really is (nearly all) about the economy

Starmer wasn’t great but his shortcomings weren’t the Labour government’s biggest problem. It was the lack of growth in the British economy – both as a result of Brexit and deeper structural issues such as low productivity – that hamstrung him. Welfare spending (expected to rise by a quarter between 2025 and 2030) and interest on the UK’s growing debt are monstering the public finances, leaving less money for investment, and therefore lower growth. Incomes have flatlined, while steep inflation – especially on food prices – has left households feeling poorer.Throughout the Thatcher boom and into the Blair/Brown years, Britain grew accustomed to growing steadily richer. 

For the past decade and a half, through austerity, Brexit, the pandemic and the inflation surge, that trend has stopped. This remains the single biggest factor in the constant upheavals in British political life. One of the qualifications for Downing Street that Andy Burnham touts is the economic revitalisation of Manchester while he was mayor.

The sustainability of Ireland’s economic model, and in particular the reliability of the corporation tax receipts, has been much discussed, here and elsewhere. Whatever your view on that, it is certainly true that an economic downturn and/or a shock to the public finances would plunge any Irish government into an immediate and probably terminal crisis. It follows that the highest priority of any taoiseach is to ensure that the conditions for continued economic growth, and multinational contentment, are maintained. Nothing is more important.

3. Volatility is the new norm

Traditional political loyalties have collapsed in Britain – and in Ireland too. The big parties, for so long accustomed to the largely automatic support of millions of voters, now find themselves in a five-way scrap with the Liberal Democrats, Reform and the Greens. The position is further complicated by nationalists in Wales and Scotland.The UK’s first-past-the-post election system (barmy, but it’s not going to change) magnifies the volatility inherent in this congested and jostling field. Starmer won a giant 170-seat majority in 2024. Two years later, at the recent local elections, Labour was massacred, losing 1,500 seats, while Reform won almost as many. Then Reform flopped at the byelection, and is under pressure from the insurgents on their right, Restore. It’s anybody’s guess what the political landscape looks like in 2029.

The same volatile dynamics are visible in the Republic. Fianna Fáil was almost voted out of existence in 2011; three years later, it won the largest share of the vote at the local elections. Sinn Féin was in the mid-30s in the polls between late 2021 and late 2023, unbackable favourites to be the biggest party in the Dáil and likely leader of the next government – then its support just collapsed.

The lesson for government and opposition? Support – and the lack of it – can come in waves. A government that sticks to its programme and delivers measurable improvements for citizens has a much better chance of being re-elected than one that panics (as Labour has just done in the UK) and tries, with questionable credibility, to reinvent itself.

4. The importance of a narrative

Starmer was an unconvincing narrator of his own story and purpose. Burnham is a better communicator and appears more relatable. But what matters most is not the style with which a politician communicates but the message that he or she conveys. Simon Harris and Mary Lou McDonald are better communicators than Micheál Martin, but voters at the last election preferred Martin’s “adult in the room” persona, his stolid and unshowy record and his message of incremental progress.

It is not clear that Burnham has a plan and a narrative but he will need them, and quick. Given the state of the UK’s public finances, the scope for what is possible is limited.

Restoring growth is a necessary prerequisite for social improvements. Successful left-wing leaders are those who realise that sound public finances are not the preserve of the right.

In Ireland, the challenge is not financial but operational. Voters will insist that whoever is offering to lead the next government can be relied on to safeguard our current prosperity. That will be the price of entry to the debate.

Thereafter, whoever has the most convincing promise to use our prosperity to improve public services, build much-needed infrastructure and improve the quality of life for ordinary people is likely to win – and maybe win big.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

US lawyer recalls words from his mother about the truth

 US attorney Ben Crump is the lawyer supporting the  commissioning an independent autopsy for one-year-old Kohen Wiley, who was shot dead by police in Mississippi.

In an interview on Channel 4 news Crump recalled his mother once saying that there is something worse than a lie and that is when people don’t believe you when you are telling the truth.


Friday, June 26, 2026

Quiz with the trams and low key with the electric buses

An Irishwoman's Diary in The Irish Times yesterday. But how come Alison Healy  did not introduce the reader to lowkenuinely, (a word on the lips of young people at present), having  introduced ‘low key’.

That’s what happens with living languages. Dogmental is a great word. What about; 'oh my God like, why has mammy become so dogmental like? What would AI say about it all?

By Alison Healy

Its a good story about words. was looking for something in this newspaper’s archive when an Irishman’s Diary column from April 1929 caught my eye. The diarist was observing how days could pass without encountering a monocle-wearer. “Then your tram will be carrying three gentlemen in monocles and another be waiting to board it as you alight.”

Indeed. We’ve all had those days when you can’t move on the Luas without being surrounded by monocle-wearers.

When the diarist had exhausted his exposition on the monocle, he began reflecting on a book he was reading. It explained the birth of the word “quiz”. According to the 1875 book Gleaning and Reminiscences by Frank Thorpe Porter, the word was invented by Richard Daly, who ran Dublin’s Smock Alley Theatre.

The story goes that, in August 1791, in a tavern in nearby Eustace Street, he placed a 20-guinea bet with friends that he could make up a word that would be in the mouths of the Dublin public within 48 hours. He then wrote a word on a series of cards and gave the cards and chalk to the youngsters working at the theatre.

They were told to spend the night writing the word on every door and shutter they passed until the sun came up. Dubliners awoke on that Sunday morning to the word “quiz” written everywhere. It was the talk of the town for days as people wondered if the word was political, religious or from another language. And the rest is history.

Or is it? The story has been debunked by people who point to the word being used in print for several years before this event took place. Before its current meaning was settled on, it was used to describe someone who was a bit of an oddball or, a nerd.

The broadcaster and actor Stephen Fry, who would be a useful team-mate in any pub quiz, said the Daly story was his favourite theory about the origin of the word “quiz”, but he also debunked it. He suggested the word was a contraction of “inquisition”.

Of course, two things could be true at once. Daly could have dispatched his underlings to write “quiz” all over Dublin back when it was not in general circulation, thus popularising the word on this island.

Fry has helped to popularise at least one made-up word. His friend, actor Hugh Laurie, invented a word “spoffle” to describe the spongy muffle placed over microphones. Fry has been championing it since.

This reminds me of my campaign to get “dogmental” into general usage. Coined by a small person in our house, it describes prejudging a dog based on previous experiences with that dog breed. I, for example, am “dogmental” when I see a collie approaching me as I have been bitten twice by such dogs.

The Oxford English Dictionary compilers invite the public to submit new words and the small person in my house petitioned them to include the word in the dictionary four years ago. Astonishingly, they still have not added this perfect word to the dictionary.

An internet search for the word merely throws up a dog trainer in Cyprus and a debut album by an American clarinettist. Perhaps I need to send my minions around Dublin with some chalk. Or enlist Fry to champion it.

In return, I would happily champion his proposal for Fresh Phrase Day. On this day, any newspaper, writer, commentator or public figure who used a phrase that had been used before would be fined with the money going to the Oxford English Dictionary. Perhaps then they could employ more people to add new words to their dictionary.

Fresh Phrase Day would be even better if it included a heftier fine for people trying to normalise the use of American phrases in Ireland.

I realised how urgent this was at Halloween when a teacher told me his second-class pupils were talking about all the candy they would receive. No mention of sweets.

Another acquaintance got a new job and has been talking non-stop about “onboarding”. No, he’s not getting on a boat. He is joining a company. Let’s hope he doesn’t find himself walking the plank before his probation period ends.

If you have been within earshot of a teenager lately, you may have noticed how enthusiastically they have embraced the phrase “low key”. It started as slang, to mean slightly or somewhat, as in “I’m low key obsessed with carrying my giant water bottle everywhere”, but now it’s appearing in every sentence for no good reason.

I’m like low key also blaming the Americans for this. Was it for this the 1916 Rising leaders sacrificed their lives? Bring on Fresh Phrase Day now before it’s too late.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

In 19-year period this blog as had 1.23 million hits

In recent weeks this blog has informed readers of the hits it receives and where it is being read.

There has been a steady increase in readership all over the world; in the last 24-hour period there were over 8,000 hits across Russia. In that same period it was read in at least 40 countries around the world. But in that same period the analytics say that there have been no hits in Ireland. That’s difficult to understand, as in that same period it was actually read in the country.

It often happens when the analytics show heavy readership around the world, the same table gives zero readership for Ireland. And if there is a low readership around the world, then Ireland will be top of the list.

Confusing, at least.

There have been 1.35 million hits on this blog since it first appeared in 2007.

And the Irish Dominicans would never ask the author of this blog to place a full point on an envelope; more confusion. But maybe a badge of honour.

A prison chaplain stresses in an upcoming article in Conversations that it’s only through our brokenness  that the cross and resurrection can be grasped in faith.

That makes sense.

IT fault brings every train across Germany to a stop

German rail network comes to complete halt due to IT malfunction. 

And not a word in the Irish media about this.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crm0ek4z7ggo

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Celebrating two years of West Kerry Local Link

This week’s column in The Irish Times

Michael Commane

It’s easy to criticise and complain. On the other hand, do we ever realise how good most of us have it on this little island on the edge of Europe? Yes, there are unemployed, homeless people, people who have little chance from the day they are born. But as nations go, it’s not a bad place to live.


I often think it’s the little things that so often catch us out; issues that could so easily be fixed and cost little or no money to correct.


On the scale of things my criticism/complaint this week is really a first world problem.


I have in the past written about public transport, indeed, I think the last time I did so was in praise of the Local Link bus service that was introduced around the country over two years ago.


Castlegregory in West Kerry has five buses every weekday, plus a weekend service; before Local Link it was one bus a week. It is a fabulous service.


But it could be so much better.  Transport for Ireland is responsible for all public transport, including taxis, in the State. They could do a much better job than they are doing.


In the Bus Éireann waiting room in Tralee there is an electronic timetable, telling passengers the departure times of all Bus Éireann services. But guess what, no mention of the departure times of Local Link services from the same complex. Of course it makes no sense. 


And if you say a word, you are immediately told this facility is only for Bus Éireann passengers or customers as the world of branding likes to call the travelling public, more nonsense.


Why can’t Transport for Ireland change that system? No doubt they would come up with jargon words that would be meaningless.


There is a small paper Local Link timetable stuck on the window at the Bus Éireann waiting area but it does not inform passengers in real time of any impending delays or unexpected detours.


The area where the Local Link buses stop is depressing and again no information where the stop is and certainly no timetables of any sort.


Ok, I can see you saying I have little about which to complain. But it could be so much better; why can’t we go for the best? 


Then there is the never-ending issue of Local Link, Bus Éireann and railway services, not working in tandem; again that could so easily be fixed.

T

his Wednesday, June 24, 2024 the Local Link Tralee Brandon service came into being. Over the years I’ve often heard people complaining about how difficult it was to get from Tralee to Castlegreogry, Cloghane and Brandon. 


That’s all changed. But from my use of the service I keep asking myself why are there not more people not availing of it. Its main patrons seem to be students, walkers, Travel Pass holders, indeed, I’ve actually heard someone say, it was for the poorer people. From my observations, there’s something in that. Isn’t that shocking.


If it is withdrawn at the end of its five-year contract, I’ll know who to blame.


Snobbery and all that sort of nonsense is alive and well in Ireland and maybe even getting worse. God love us.

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‘Nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so’

This week’s column in The Kerryman newspaper. Michael Commane  A large crowd got off the train in Killarney. I was in the front of the trai...