Monday, January 26, 2026

Mark Carney's speech at World Economic Forum in Davos

In the midst of pending great darkness a man appears on stage, the prime minister of Canada, Mark Carney.

https://youtu.be/btqHDhO4h10?si=_0yZurmfld-nkjWz

This is his speech at Davos. And an Irishman to boot.

There is another person on the world stage, who is also worth listening to; Pope Leo XIV.

Below is the full speech given by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz at Davos.

The world might well be fortunate today to have  Carney and Merz. Merz reminds us of what raw power inflicted on his homeland.

https://youtu.be/7HplCqi2JY8?si=iYAGTN9bK9qJPT-_


Sunday, January 25, 2026

A little gift tells the real story of how the environment is seen

The Irish Times offers an

excellent early morning home delivery service.
Instead of delivering the paper in a plastic covering they give the household a pouch, which they leave outside their door and the paper is popped into the pouch. It’s a clever idea and good for the environment.

The Irish Times regularly writes about the environment and it’s clear to see the newspaper is on the side of the environment and with those who are environmentally friendly.

On Friday the newspaper placed a complimentary chocolate in everyone’s pouch. 

Just look at the size of the chocolate and the bag it is in and on top of that, chocolate; none of it environmentally friendly. 

When it comes to advertising, money, branding, who really ever cares or thinks about the environment?

Of course it is a paid for advert by Lindt but could The Irish Times not have done a better deal with Lindt before that waste of paper? But written on the tin is: ‘A Gift from The Irish Times'.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

A tough journey for all commuters

The letter below appeared in The Irish Times yesterday. Similarities with yesterday’s post on this blog. 

Sir, – Before commuters rejoice at hearing that affordable housing is only 2½ hours away in Newry, I think every sitting Minister should be encouraged to make use of existing public transport infrastructure so they have critical hands-on experience (“Newry is evolving into a commuter hub for Dublin. The strain is already showing,” January 18th).

I’d like to see a Minister sweating on an overheated, overcrowded Dart at 8.15am while it has to mysteriously stop for 10 minutes at Grand Canal station. Add a buggy with a fractious toddler who is heading to the only childcare they could find with places for additional points. Extra points also if it’s lashing rain, or the train is delayed because of leaves on the track.

On the way home, the Minister can only leave the office at 5pm but must collect the kids from the creche, minimum 13km away from the office, by 5.45pm. Extra points if the creche is in excess of 15km away from work.

I’d like to see a Minister attempt to get to a 9am meeting or lecture on time by taking two buses to cross the city – they can choose whether they’d prefer to start in Blackrock and get to DCU, or start in Phibsboro to get to Belfield.

Points deducted for being late. Extra points if they have to wait more than 10 minutes for the connecting bus but still make it on time.

After this, we can see how they can live in Clare but commute to work in Cork, or Athlone while living in Leitrim. More challenges can be submitted by commuters across the country. Diary of a Minister on public transport could be the next Irish Times sensation. Give the people what they want. Then we’ll all move to Newry. – Yours, etc,

ALISON TREACY,

Glenageary,

Co Dublin.

Friday, January 23, 2026

A rarified priesthood has little chance of doing the job

Part of the mission of the Dominican Order was/is in mixing with  people, who will see by their lives and work that there is something wonderful in the story of the Gospels.

Observing commuters rushing to and from work on a daily basis one is tempted to ask where do priests, sisters and brothers encounter people in their daily lives.

Mixing and engaging with people exclusively when talking about God and the Gospels can be a rarified  experience.

When one thinks about it when exactly are priests engaged with the public? Do they meet them in the workplace as equals, do they travel with them on crowded trams, trains and buses, do they meet them cycling on cycle lanes.

Religious sisters are at the vanguard of being in the workplace, sharing the ups and downs of the people.

The idea of the working priest in France was potentially a possible way forward. Why did it fail? Then again, why is priesthood as we know it today failing in the western world? Yes, it is still in some aspects attracting ‘the converted’, it also is attracting zealots. Does priesthood today speak in any real way to the commuter class of society?


Thursday, January 22, 2026

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz speaks prophetic words

 In Davos German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said a world in which only power counts was a dangerous place – first for small states, then for the middle powers and ultimately for the great ones.

“I do not say this lightly. In the 20th century, my country, Germany went down this road to its bitter end. It pulled the world into a black abyss,” he said.


A religious sister says the institutional silence was absolute

The Union of Catholic Asian News reports on an Indian religious sister’s stand against abuse and institutional power.

Below is the link to the article in the current edition of UCA.

https://www.ucanews.com/news/an-indian-nuns-stand-against-abuse-and-institutional-power/111651

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Not impressed with comments of judge & haulier on cyclists

This week’s column in The Kerryman newspaper.

Michael Commane

’You never know with cyclists what they are going to do or anticipate what they are going to do.’

Words spoken by Circuit Court judge James O’Donohoe at a sitting where he reduced by 80 per cent the damages awarded to a cyclist, who was involved in an accident with a motorbike and suffered brain injury. The injured cyclist ended up with €10,000 compensation. The cyclist had no lights on his bicycle nor was he wearing a hi-vis jacket.


The judge’s words have caused an outcry across the country; the cycling community crying foul and the hauliers saying the judge was spot on.


The judge had no sooner opened his mouth when the media discovered the same judge was fined €600 for not providing a breath sample back in 2012. Judge O’Donohoe has made many unusual comments, putting it mildly. In 2024 he was accused of using inappropriate and derogatory language.


Counsellor Karl Stanley of the Dublin Cycling Campaign appeared on RTÉ News on Tuesday evening criticising the judge but I did notice on the clip that RTÉ showed, Mr Stanley was not wearing a helmet, while cycling. Cyclists are not legally obliged to wear a helmet but surely it’s wise and safe to wear one. 


On that same news deputy vice president of the Irish Road Haulage Association, Eugene Drennan agreed with what the judge had to say. Mr Drennan said that cycling lanes had empowered cyclists to feel entitled.


The comments/behaviour of the judge, the cycling campaigner and the road haulage deputy vice president have left me in a state of bewilderment, indeed, shock.


Judge O’Donohoe’s comment are pure nonsensical, Mark Stanley’s words are fine but his not wearing a helmet leave me speechless and Eugene Drennan’s words were almost non-words; a style of gobbledegook.


I’m cycling 71 years and I know first hand how dangerous it is to manoeuvre a two-wheeler the length and breath of Ireland.


Of course some cyclists behave appallingly as do some car and truck drivers, and the behaviour of all three is getting worse by the day, indeed, more dangerously by the night.


I’ve experienced chaotic and absurd design failures on a number of cycle paths but I’ve also seen cyclists behave extremely badly. Every day I see cars driving through red lights and I’ve seen trucks and vans travelling at dangerous speeds.


It’s close to jungle territory out there, it really is. 


Obviously there is not adequate policing but there is something more than that happening. Is it that we are getting to a stage where each one of us actually thinks and believes we can do what we like, we know best?


And that sort of arrogance has spewed out on to our roads? I wonder when did the judge or the haulage deputy vice president last cycle across the city and for the life of me I can’t understand what Karl Stanley is doing cycling without a helmet.


The government is talking about making the wearing of helmets mandatory for those on e-scooters. What about electric bicycles? Why not make helmet-wearing mandatory for all cyclists?


It’s all one big mess and all the current hullabaloo is pure proof that people are talking out of both sides of their mouths at the same time.


What’s new?

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

US cardinals call for a genuine moral foreign policy

Three US cardinals call for the United States to have a genuine moral foreign policy.

Below is from Vatican News.

Three US cardinalsThree US Cardinals released a rare joint statement on Monday regarding American foreign policy, picking up several themes from Pope Leo XIV’s Address to the Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Holy See.

The statement was signed by Cardinal Blase Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago; Cardinal Robert McElroy, Archbishop of Washington; and Cardinal Joseph Tobin, Archbishop of Newark. (Read the original statement here)

“In 2026, the United States has entered into the most profound and searing debate about the moral foundation for America’s actions in the world since the end of the Cold War,” they wrote.

The Cardinals said recent events in Venezuela, Ukraine, and Greenland raise “basic questions about the use of military force and the meaning of peace.”

They highlighted the sovereign right of nations to self-determination, saying this principle appears increasingly fragile in the current conflictual geopolitics.


Efforts for just and sustainable peace have been subjected to partisanship, polarization, and destructive policies, despite peace being crucial to humanity’s well-being, said the three Cardinals.

“Our country’s moral role in confronting evil around the world, sustaining the right to life and human dignity, and supporting religious liberty are all under examination,” they noted.

Given this situation, the cardinals said Pope Leo’s “State of the World” address on January 9 offers a “truly moral foundation” for international relations and a pathway for American foreign policy.

In his speech to diplomats, the Pope lamented the weakness of multilateralism and the failure of diplomacy to seek dialogue and consensus among opposing sides.

“War is back in vogue and a zeal for war is spreading,” said Pope Leo. “The principle established after the Second World War, which prohibited nations from using force to violate the borders of others, has been completely undermined. Peace is no longer sought as a gift and desirable good in itself… Instead, peace is sought through weapons as a condition for asserting one’s own dominion.”

Cardinals Cupich, McElroy, and Tobin recalled the Pope’s reference to Catholic teaching, which he said must protect the right to life since that right serves as the “indispensable foundation for every other human right.”

With him, they called for wealthy nations to provide humanitarian aid in order to safeguard human dignity of those who suffer, and lamented the rise in violation of conscience and religious freedom in the name of ideological or religious purity.

The American cardinals therefore called for a “genuinely moral foreign policy for our nation,” expressing their desire to build “a truly just and lasting peace,” which Jesus proclaimed in the Gospel.

“We renounce war as an instrument for narrow national interests and proclaim that military action must be seen only as a last resort in extreme situations, not a normal instrument of national policy,” they said. “We seek a foreign policy that respects and advances the right to human life, religious liberty, and the enhancement of human dignity throughout the world, especially through economic assistance.”

In conclusion, the three cardinals said Pope Leo has offered the United States a prism through which to overcome the “polarization, partisanship, and narrow economic and social interests” that currently inhibit the country’s debate on its own moral foundation.

Monday, January 19, 2026

Five full pages + about Tubridy in The Irish Times

On the front page of The Irish Times on Saturday there was a large picture of Ryan Tubridy with a story; in the Weekend section four pages were given over to the former RTÉ host.

Is it of public interest whether or not Mr Tubridy is attending a therapist and that it is helping him?

Is that the sort of news that makes the newspaper good value at €4.50 on Saturday?

And did The Irish Times mention the story of the detective garda, who received a suspended sentence for attacking his wife/partner? Any mention that he is currently suspended from the Garda but still a member. Is he on gardening leave? Any of this covered in the newspaper on Saturday?

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Lidl’s holey bread is something of a holey show

Lidl have over 180 shops in the Republic and are
Lidl’s holey bread

planning for further expansion.

They opened their first shop in Ireland in 202o.

The company’s bakery counter offers a large selection of breads.

Their current sourdough brown sourdough loaf costs €2.99. 

The in-store slicing machine is a helpful facility, especially if you want to freeze the bread.

It’s tasty, maybe cheaper than other shops, but what about the holes. Any chance of discount for the holes.

This holey bread is something of a holey show.

Worker who heckled Donald Trump gets donations

The piece below appeared in The Irish Times on Friday. The vulgarity, rudeness and crudeness of the US president. The idea of world leaders paying homage to this man is obscene. Even his money is vulgar.

If any of Hitler’s generals failed he would immediately castigate them and call them fools and cowards. Greenland - Sudenentland, Gdansk, then Danzing.

"Tens of thousands of dollars have been raised for an autoworker at a Ford plant in Michigan who was suspended without pay after heckling Donald Trump.

TJ Sabula is said to have called the president a “paedophile protector” as Mr Trump toured the automotive giant’s River Rouge complex on Tuesday.

Mr Trump then appeared to give Mr Sabula the middle finger, according to a video published by celebrity news and gossip site TMZ, which claimed the US president also yelled obscenities prior to making the gesture.

In an interview with the Washington Post, Mr Sabula said “as far as calling him out” he had “definitely no regrets whatsoever”. But he said he was concerned about his job security after the incident, claiming he had been “targeted for political retribution” and for “embarrassing Trump in front of his friends”.

“I don’t feel as though fate looks upon you often, and when it does, you better be ready to seize the opportunity,” Mr Sabula added in the interview. “And today I think I did that.”

A GoFundMe was created on his behalf to help cover lost income from the suspension. has raised more than $150,000 (€129,000), with purported donors including the band the Dropkick Murphys.

“TJ is a father of two young children, husband, and is a proud United Auto Workers Local 600 line worker. Funds donated will support TJ and his family to cover expenses during this time of uncertainty,” the GoFundMe campaign states. Ford did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Middle finger

The White House communications director, Steven Cheung, did not confirm whether Mr Trump flashed his middle finger, but argued in a statement to the Guardian that the president had given an “appropriate and unambiguous response” when “a lunatic was wildly screaming expletives in a complete fit of rage”.The United Auto Workers criticised Mr Sabula’s suspension, and vowed to fight it. – Guardian"

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Irish Rail is no friend of St Brigid's Bank Holiday Weekend

No doubt most people who work

nine-to-five jobs, Monday to Friday are looking forward to the St Bridgid’s Bank Holiday Weekend, which this year runs from Friday January 30 to Monday February 2.

It’s a long weekend  with a free Monday in the middle of winter and no doubt many people are thinking of travelling within Ireland.

What does Iarnród Éireann do? It will be carrying out track work on the Dublin Cork/Tralee line. It means rail journeys between Tralee and Dublin Heuston will take anything up to seven hours 12 minutes.

The 11.05 ex Tralee Casement Station will arrive in Heuston at 18.17.  The 17.05 ex Tralee arrives Heuston 00.00 with three changes.

The scheduled rail travel time between Tralee and Dublin is three hours 58 minutes.

There are shorter delays on the Cork Heuston service.

Bus transfers are in place for sections of the journey over the weekend.

Why not hire in buses for the entire journey? Bus time from Tralee to Dublin is under five hours. 

Ryanair charges €20 for a Kerry Dublin seat. Why does Irish Rail not use Rayanair for the weekend?

Irish Rail regularly carries out track work on bank holiday weekends, there are occasions  they close lines during this work or hire in buses for sections of the route. But has there ever been an extra three hours plus on a journey time?

What a way to treat rail passengers on St Brigid’s Bank Holiday Weekend? 

It’s an insult to Irish Rail passengers. 

There’s still time for the company to change this insulting behaviour.

Friday, January 16, 2026

What did Zena, Mike, Kimiya and Oleg say to one another?

NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke, Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platonov returned early to earth yesterday. The early return is due to health problems with one of the team.

The teamwork between the two Americans, the Japanese and Russian surely is something about which to cheer.

It would be interesting to have been a fly on the wall listening to the everyday conversations between the team. What did Oleg have to say to Zena and Mike as Russian guns pummel Ukraine?

If we can work in outer space together, what about trying here on earth?



Thursday, January 15, 2026

1939 Czechoslovakia loses sovereignty, Ukraine 2026?

Eoin Burke-Kennedy’s Prague Letter in The Irish Times on Tuesday, January 13 is a standout piece. The comparison is scary.

How history repeats itself. Is Ukraine going to be another Czechoslovakia?

‘For what I have done, the nation will call me a traitor”: the words reputedly spoken by Czech leader Emil Hácha after he signed away Czechoslovakia’s independence in 1939.

Hácha was the epitome of coerced compromise, later viewed as collaboration, the fate of many liberal politicians in the 1930s. An elderly academic with a heart condition, he agreed reluctantly to become head of state after his predecessor resigned over the Munich Agreement of 1938, which allowed Germany to annex the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia.

To save his country from a brutal invasion, one it had little hope of repelling, he capitulated to German demands to turn the state into the German protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and his administration into a Nazi puppet government in the process.

Hácha’s compromise (or surrender) was the starting point of a recent tour I attended of Prague’s second World War sites. The city’s old town in midwinter is a shimmering maze of cobblestone streets and perfectly preserved medieval architecture, a fact that owes much to Hácha’s decision not to resist the Nazi onslaught.

Our guide held up a colour- coded map of the first Czechoslovak republic (1919-1938) before the Nazis annexed Sudetenland, before Slovakia and Ruthenia seceded, and before Poland and Hungary exploited the state’s vulnerability to annex bits of their own.

Next, he held up a photograph of the four political leaders who brokered this evisceration – Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, British prime minister Neville Chamberlain and French prime minister Édouard Daladier – while highlighting the lack of any Czech involvement in the process.

He didn’t need to emphasise the obvious parallels with a similar border redrawing exercise taking place not far from where we were standing. Ukraine’s western border is about 500km from Prague.

US president Donald Trump’s special envoy to the region Steve Witkoff went to Moscow six times last year, but not once to Ukraine. Washington’s continual browbeating of Kyiv, combined with its adoption of Russia’s war demands, is a dismal reflection of the zero-sum politics going on above Ukraine’s head and Europe’s enfeebled position in this global power play.

Comparisons between the current era and 1930s fascism are overbaked, but the erosion of Ukrainian sovereignty and the disintegration of Czechoslovakia 85 years ago have strikingly similar contours.

Hácha still hangs in the nation’s history somewhere between traitor and patriot.

Summoned to Berlin in 1939, the old and infirm Hácha was made to wait for hours in the Reich chancellery while Hitler and his air force chief Hermann Göring reputedly drank and watched US westerns on a projector upstairs.

By the time he was seen – some time in the early hours of March 15th – Hácha was dehydrated and exhausted. Presumably that was the point. Hitler played bad cop, issuing increasingly violent threats, including that he would have Prague bombed to the ground in two hours unless Hácha surrendered his fledgling state, while Göring played good cop.

Accounts vary but at one point Göring is said to have taken Hácha by the hand, saying: “Mr Hácha, we both know Prague, isn’t it a lovely city, wouldn’t it be a shame if something happened to it?”

At which point Hácha collapsed with a suspected heart attack, an inconvenience for Hitler, whose focus was on securing Czechoslovakia diplomatically. The elderly leader was revived by Hitler’s physicians using Pervitin, an early form of crystal meth, which Germany had been trialling on soldiers to reduce fatigue and boost alertness.

Hácha was politically humiliated and put back on a slow train to Prague, only to be met by Hitler at the other end. The German dictator had separately sped to the Czech capital to proclaim the country’s new protectorate status as a fait accompli.

The country’s weak resistance (initially) combined with the vital role it played in Germany’s war economy damaged the Czechs’ standing among the allies.

That was until the extraordinary assassination of Reinhard Heydrich (acting Reich protector of Bohemia and Moravia and one of the most sinister figures in the Third Reich) in 1942, an event documented by French author Laurent Binet in his brilliant book, HHhH.

The assassination, a joint British and Czech operation was botched after the assassin’s gun jammed and a subsequent grenade missed the target. Through a fortuitous sequence of events, however, the objective was achieved. Heydrich got blood poisoning after a bit of shrapnel blew horse fibres from his car’s upholstery into his body. He might have survived from such a minor wound if he hadn’t refused treatment until a German doctor could be found.

The subsequent hunt for the assassins Jozef Gabcík and Jan Kubis and their heroic last stand in the Church of St Cyril and St Methodius, now a shrine to Czech and Slovak resistance, was the centrepiece of our tour.

“We are Czechs! We will never surrender, you hear? Never!” Gabcík and Kubis are reported to have shouted at the Germans surrounding them.

The parachutists’ bodies were later laid out in front of the church to be identified by the man who had betrayed them, fellow paratrooper Karel Curda.

The good and the bad of wartime Prague.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

A Luas checker’s early morning inspiring behaviour

This week’s column in The

Kerryman newspaper.

Michael Commane

It was 07.10 when the checker boarded the Luas on its way to Dublin’s Broombridge. He is a friendly man, who is often on my early morning tram to check tickets, indeed, we’ve chatted and shared the odd joke. 


He’s a gentle person and friendly too, always polite to passengers when asking to see their tickets.


He approached a passenger asking to see his ticket, the man told him he’d no time to buy one. The checker explained the trams come every few minutes. 


He then asked him for identity, the passenger said he had none. Next question is to ask for his address and Eircode but they don’t match and the checker explains that to the passenger. 


At that the passenger raises his voice and calls the checker an ‘f….cu..’ and then goes on to shout at him that if he were black he would not be treated in such a manner.


That’s exactly what happened. I know. I was sitting beside the passenger. And all the time the checker kept his cool, was always polite but definite with the passenger. He called for assistance and asked the passenger to leave the tram with him at the next stop.


It was an horrific early morning experience; the violence of the passenger was palpable. I was greatly impressed by the conduct of the checker.


The following morning the checker was back on my tram. He told me that the passenger turned more violent on the platform, it was only when he realised that the CCTV was recording his behaviour that he quietened down. 


He was issued a Standard Fare Notice, which means he is obliged to pay €45 within 14 days, failing that he has to pay €100, and if he does not pay that after 28 days it can be a court appearance and a fine of up to €1,000. And all that for not paying a €2 fare.


That’s how the passenger behaved in a public space; how must he behave behind closed doors when he gets annoyed and angry? At all times the checker was clear and polite with him. How must that passenger react when someone challenges him raising their voice or behaving in a like manner? How could a woman or child deal with such behaviour, anyone? 


For someone to argue that foul words are just words and ok to use I can assure them nothing is further from the truth.


The F-word has now gained common parlance, it’s used as a verb, noun, adjective, as an exclamation.


Have we all become too loose with our use of words? 


Always with these type of words there is a veiled anger, annoyance, unpleasantness simmering or lurking behind them. And that passenger is the perfect example of the damage those words can cause.


Over the years I’ve worked in different jobs in different places and what annoys me most of all is how people throw around these words, managers too. 


And those same people can go off and appear in the media and you’d think butter would not melt in their mouths.


I never once heard my mother or father attempt using the F or C-words. 


The Luas checker was a shining light in a moment of darkness.

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Shooting in Minneapolis and the graciousness of Trump

The shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis surely must bring to mind Stalin’s comment: "A single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic.”

On Sunday on BBC 1 television Laura Kuenssberg interviewed the UK’s former ambassador to the US, Peter Mandelson, who was sacked as ambassador because of his close friendship with Jeffry Epstein.

It was an interesting interview. Mandelson painted an alternative picture of President Trump. He said he was a man who takes risk, a clever man, he even said he was a gracious man. He gave the impression he is the right man for the job in the current geopolitical chaos.

Mandelson is suave, comes across as clever and wise. One must remember when he was secretary of state for Northern Ireland he was dubbed as the Prince of Darkness.

If you can manage to find the clip it’s well wort a listen.

Featured Post

Mark Carney's speech at World Economic Forum in Davos

In the midst of pending great darkness a man appears on stage, the prime minister of Canada, Mark Carney. https://youtu.be/btqHDhO4h10?si=_0...