Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Little Rory set me thinking about my interest in trains

This week’s column in The Kerryman newspaper.

Michael Commane

Rory was eight on Saturday. His grandfather Donal and I are lifelong friends. Donal sent me a video of the Lego train Rory received for his birthday. The little fellow assembled it himself. I called him to wish him a happy birthday.


He told me he got up at 6am and built the train between then and 2pm at which time he had it running on its tracks, which he also assembled.


I was reminded of the disappointment I had when the train set I was expecting never arrived. But for whatever reason, to this day I have a great interest in trains.


Since mid-November I have been a daily rail commuter. I have been greatly impressed with the service, there have been only two occasions when I was late for work and they were weather related.


I regularly chat with the locomotive driver. There is always a minute or two to chat before the train moves off and since November I have talked with many drivers. It’s a matter of going up to the cab, knocking at the window and chatting. I don’t think there has been driver, who has told me to get lost. Once or twice I realised the driver did not want to engage; no problem; I walked away.


In the past locomotive drivers came from other jobs on the railway, men working on the platform, train guards, gate keepers or permanent way staff, et al. The permanent way is the track, rails and ballast.  And drivers call the track or line ‘the road’.


Railway jobs went down from father to son. 

But all that is now changing. Today many of the younger drivers come from ‘outside’. They apply online, do a number of preliminary online tests before they are called for interview. Once successful they begin a period of rigorous training before they are appointed as drivers to a station.


Just last week the driver, with whom I was talking, told me he came to the job from outside and had no problem telling me he would never again give out about his job. He was loving it. They are coming from all walks of life and the money is attractive with a decent pension.


Another of the changes is that women are now driving our trains. Up to recent years it was an all-male profession; it was unthinkable that a woman would drive a train. Like everything else they are adding a new dimension to the job.


There are always quirky things to every job and Irish Rail is no exception. While Irish roads changed from miles to kilometres per hour in 2005, the railway is still on mph and has no intentions of changing. The next time you are on a train look out the window and spot the mile posts along the track; every quarter of a mile there is a post.  


Check the web, Irish Rail is regularly looking for drivers.


But how long will it be before we have driverless trains? This AI business is driving us all crazy.


If I had my life all over again, I think I’d have been a locomotive driver. The question is would they have employed me and then kept me? I’ll never know.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

'Something about Conor McGregor intrigues me'

Mark O’Connell’s weekly opinion. piece in The Irish Times last Saturday is a most interesting read; it’s not just about Conor McGregor, it's about what’s happening in front of our eyes, all over the world right now. Make sure to read it, a pity to miss it.

I feel a little queasy admitting this, given his total abjection as a public figure – his incessant attempts to whip up anti-immigrant sentiment; his conviction for assault; above all a High Court civil trial jury’s decision that he raped Nikita Hand – but I cannot tell a lie: I am fascinated by Conor McGregor’s unique style of speaking.

There are, no doubt, readers of this column who will feel that it is harmful, or just plain wrong, to even draw attention to the man; a large part of me can’t help but agree.

And yet I find myself helplessly intrigued by his bizarre style of self-presentation and rhetoric.

Take, for instance, a clip he posted to social media last week, in the aftermath of the fuel protests, and in advance of the failed no-confidence vote against the Government. In the video, McGregor, wearing a tracksuit top partly open over a lavishly tattooed neck and chest, stands in front of a bare brick wall, behind him a framed poster of the Proclamation of the Irish Republic and what looks like the sort of polyester Tricolour you’d buy in Carroll’s Irish Gifts.

He begins with praise of the fuel protesters and their blockade, delivered in a manner presumably intended to position him as, if not a leader (which, even for a man as deluded as McGregor, would be pushing it) then a sort of figurehead-avatar of the rising mood of anti-Government sentiment.

“Seeing the courage of our people standing together in unity against the failed rule of this Government has been incredible,” he barks, enunciating each word in his peculiarly staccato style. He refers to all manner of Government iniquities, real and perceived, from a failure to handle the cost of living and housing crises, to its “disastrous handling of immigration, that has overwhelmed our communities and services”.

The Government have treated ordinary people in a “shocking way” in recent days, he says; “their hand has been exposed, and it is a busted flush. And we, as the mighty Republic, hold all the aces.”

He goes on in this way for some time, seeming to become increasingly puffed up – his nostrils flared, his chest heaving – on his own pure and uncut verbiage, until he reaches his grand conclusion: “Ireland, for the future of our country, for our children, we must stand together in unity and complete this tackle. I love you with all my heart, every single one of you. God bless Ireland! Up the Republic!”

As always with McGregor, and with his fellow travellers in the online anti-immigrant right more generally, the question of audience immediately raises its head. Who, in other words, is this performance for?

It is, of course, explicitly addressed at Ireland – or rather “Ireland”, that beleaguered nation of patriots suffering stoically under the tyranny of a globalist Government, gathering its vital energies to rise up against oppression.

Transatlantic vernacular

But although McGregor presumably still has some kind of residual Irish fan base, this country – the actual Ireland as opposed to the “Ireland” he invokes in his speech – has very little time for him. (Memories of his sporting achievement have been almost entirely eclipsed by those serious legal issues mentioned above.) And this “God bless Ireland!” stuff is, I think, a pretty obvious tell, in that it is not something a normal Irish person would ever think to say, in either casual or political speech. It is a direct and clumsy translation, that is, of the transatlantic vernacular “God bless America”.

Watching that speech, I was reminded of another recent public appearance by McGregor, on Sean Hannity’s Fox News programme, in the run-up to Ireland’s presidential election last autumn.

In the interview, he repeatedly described himself as a “God-fearing patriot” in a “fight against evil”.

The interview also contained what seemed to me a pristine example of McGregor’s richly bizarre manner of expressing himself: “There is so much travesty taking place in Ireland that screams me to sleep at night.”

Talking to a friend the other day, I quoted this sentence as an example of McGregor’s unique rhetorical combination of orotundity, sententiousness and sheer boneheadedness.

She agreed with the description, but said that there didn’t seem to be anything unique about it; that, she said, was exactly how she would characterise the house rhetorical style of the far right. The more I think about it, the more accurate this feels to me. A true people terribly wronged, stabbed in the back by a cowardly political class, and surrounded on all sides by enemies and traitors: such is universal language of extreme nationalist movements everywhere and at all times.

The “God-fearing patriot” has never really been a presence in Irish culture to speak of. It is, as far as I can tell, a distinctly American trope. And this seems to me to suggest a larger truth about McGregor and the Irish online far right in general: that they are engaged in a performance of Irishness for the benefit of an American, and to an extent British, audience.

International reactionary energies

Their shtick is, in a sense, oddly reminiscent of the stage Irishry common on the stages of London and New York in the 19th century.

The irony, as always, with extreme nationalist movements is that they are every bit as internationalist as the globalists they identify as their enemies.

Steve Bannon’s recent claims about working to foment an Irish version of the Maga movement are a strong case in point. “I’m spending a tonne of time behind the scenes on the Irish situation to help form an Irish national party,” as he put it last year.

“They’re going to have an Irish Maga, and we’re going to have an Irish Trump. That’s all going to come together, no doubt. That country is right on the edge thanks to mass migration.”

McGregor himself, as a political force, is a nonentity. But it seems only a matter of time until a political figure comes to the fore with a capacity to draw on international reactionary energies while speaking directly to Irish people, in a language to which Irish people respond.

We often flatter ourselves that we are immune to the political maladies that have afflicted other European countries in recent years (and of course less recent years too), but it may be that we are just a decade behind the Italians, the Germans, the French.

Certainly the speed with which the anti-immigrant right took possession of certain aspects of the fuel protests last week was eerily reminiscent of the gilets jaunes movement, around which the French far right coalesced and mobilised almost a decade ago.

As Fintan O’Toole pointed out in these pages earlier this week, the fuel protests seem very likely to give rise to a more organised and energised far right in this country. And when that does happen, it will be because a leader has emerged who speaks the international far-right language of grievance, self-pity and defiance in a uniquely Irish register.

Monday, April 20, 2026

The Irish Times and its double negative is confusing

The weekend edition of The Irish Times carried a story on Trump and the Pope, written by Patsy McGarry.

The following paragraph reads: Safe to say Pope Leo is not popular in Maga circles then?  No. On his election last May, leading Maga activist Laura Boomer posted on X that Leo was “anti-Trump, ant-Maga pro-open borders, and a total Marxist like Pope Francis.”

McGarry asks the question is it safe to say Pope Leo is not popular in Maga circles. He answers, No, (it’s not safe). Surely the double negative means he is popular in Maga circles.

At the least it’s confusing, at the worst, it’s simply wrong.

And should it not be pro open-borders and not pro-open borders?

The Irish Times, the paper of record?

Maybe it does make sense and can be explained to this blogger.

Sunday, April 19, 2026

The Irish Times has the Rhine flowing through Berlin

The paragraph below is from Miriam Lord’s column in The Irish Times yesterday; crass ignorance. And this from the paper of record, laugable.

The ceremonials took place in the very modern and wonderful outdoor space of the Bundeskanzleramt (chancellery) on the banks of the Rhine.

The river Rhine does not flow through Berlin, never did nor never will, though it did for a number of years flow through the provisional capital of Germany.

The first editorial in the newspaper on Friday made another error. This is an excerpt: Yesterday Leo concluded his tour of four African countries, a signal of where he believes the future of Catholicism lies.

Not correct, Pope Leo’s visit to the African continent runs from April 13 to 23.

And why does the newspaper write that Pope Leo believes the future of Catholicism lies in Africa. Such a sentiment sounds most un-Leo like.

The paper of record?

Saturday, April 18, 2026

A contest Donal Trump can never win

Below is the first editorial in The Irish Times yesterday. It makes for interesting reading. While the editorial notes how Pope Leo has been supported by there US cardinals, what about the Maga bishops, and what about Bishop Robert Barron?


It was surely inevitable that Donald Trump would fall out with Pope Leo XIV. But when the US president launched a fusillade of abuse at the first American-born pontiff, he lifted the lid on a conflict that has been simmering almost since the day Robert Prevost appeared on the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica.

The immediate trigger was the Iran war. US defence secretary Pete Hegseth framed the American assault in explicitly Christian terms, invoking divine providence to justify the bombing. Leo pushed back, saying God “does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war but rejects them”. He was supported by three American cardinals.

It appears that tensions had been accumulating for some time behind the scenes. When vice-president JD Vance extended an invitation for Leo to visit the country of his birth during its 250th anniversary celebrations this summer, the Vatican declined, reluctant to become a prop in the 2026 midterm campaign. At an antagonistic meeting in January at the Pentagon, the Vatican’s ambassador to Washington was told the US had the power to do whatever it wanted and that the church “had better fall in line”. One official reportedly invoked the example of the forcible removal of the papacy from Rome to Avignon in the 14th century as a warning of what could lie ahead.

Religion plays a more prominent role in the second Trump administration than it did in the first. Hegseth represents an aggressive Christian nationalism, speaking of the armed forces as warriors for the faith. Vance is a Catholic convert, heavily influenced by postliberal thinkers who were intensely hostile to Leo’s predecessor, Pope Francis, and who view the papacy with deep suspicion when it fails to align with their beliefs.

Leo is a more measured figure than Francis, cautious in style and centrist in his overall positioning. But his continuity with Francis on issues such as immigration, climate and economic inequality means he will never satisfy the American right.

Trump’s decision to post an AI-generated image of himself as a Christ-like healer, subsequently deleted and implausibly explained away, was received with horror by many conservative Christians and creates difficulties for Vance and his fellow Catholic and rival for the succession, Marco Rubio. Polling shows Leo with a net favourability of plus 34 among registered voters against Trump’s net negative of 12, while the president is underwater with Catholics, a crucial voting bloc in both his election victories.

Yesterday Leo concluded his tour of four African countries, a signal of where he believes the future of Catholicism lies. He is 70 years old, a decade younger than the president. With Trump drifting towards lame duck status, the pope may have reason to believe that time as well as theology are on his side.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Read from Brazil to Bangladesh and Ireland to India

Below is a limited list of where this blog has been read in the last 24 hours.

Is there any other Dominican publication that has such a worldwide and large readership?

And this is no exception. On a daily basis it now has approximately 40,000 hits. And all on a budget of €00.00. It is also read in China. In the last 24-hour period it had 167 hits in the Peoples Republic of China.

What countries/entities are included under ‘other' is not known.

           Singapore
7.12K
Brazil
3.11K
United States
2.68K
Iraq
859
India
808
United Kingdom
778
Vietnam
702
Germany
645
Ireland
585
France
580
Argentina
560
Bangladesh
545
Chile
481
Spain
475
Canada
453
Türkiye
416
Mexico
412
Saudi Arabia
373
Pakistan
372

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Public transport gives one a glimpse into what’s happening

Apologies for the late appearance of this post. It is due to a technical problem, that has now been resolved.

Any one who uses public transport on a daily basis in Ireland will see first hand how Ireland is changing, indeed, a mirror of what is happening across the world.

Renowned theologian Karl Barth said that a Christian should carry a Bible in one hand and a newspaper in the other.

No one is ever seen reading a newspaper, tram or bus, occasionally it can be seen on a train.

Maybe if Barth were alive today he would suggest it’s a good idea to use public transport.

Certainly anyone who tries to talk about the Christian message in a language that makes sense today, using trains, buses and trams might be a good starting point.

[Karl Barth was born in Basel Switzerland in 1886 and died there in 1968.

While teaching in Bonn he refused to sign allegiance to Hitler and returned to Switzerland.

He was a signatory to the Barmen Declaration and wrote a personal to Hitler objecting to his policy.]

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

It is easy to get fed up listening to priests and journalists

This week’s column in The Kerryman newspaper.

Michael Commane

While working with Concern Worldwide I attended a conference in Dublin where former President of Ireland Mary Robinson, the then President Michael D Higgins and former US president Bill Clinton spoke. All three are fine speakers but the one who stole the show for me was Bill Clinton.


It was September 2018. He spoke during that dead hour immediately after lunch. I remember listening attentively to him and indeed, felt he was specifically speaking to me. He has that skill.


If you asked me now, eight years later, what he said, I have not a clue, nor do I remember a word any of the three speakers said. But I remember that it was a Concern Worldwide conference, whose job it is to support developing countries. 


Similarly, listening once to the late Dr AJF (Tony)  O’Reilly; the moment he opened his lips I was enthralled by him. And again I have no idea what he said that evening. I do remember it was at a book launch.


Dominicans put the letters OP after their name; it stands for Order of Preachers. It sounds grand and fancy.


Pope Francis often had a sideswipe at priests for their poor sermons, he also criticised them for talking too long.


It’s an extraordinary privilege a priest has to be able to stand up in front of people and talk to them.

But maybe priests are akin to journalists, no matter how good they are, you eventually simply get fed up with them.


Maybe I’m intolerant but I can honestly say it is not too often I walk out of a church impressed or inspired by the words I hear. I have no idea how many times I have found myself screaming to myself, pleading with the priest to shut up.


I don’t like the word preaching. There’s a patronising tone to it.


There’s a funny side to everything. I celebrated Mass on Easter Sunday with a small group of elderly religious sisters. I’d never been there before and was somewhat nervous. I prepared what I was going to say after the Gospel.


During the Mass there was little or no reaction from the sisters; I thought they were deep in prayer and probably too polite to show any outward experience of how they were feeling.


Over a cup of coffee after Mass I learned most of the women were hard of hearing.


The moral of that story is anytime anyone is talking they should make it their business to know something about the people to whom they are speaking. 


And in many ways that touches Pope Francis’ ideas on synodality. It’s the concept that the church has to develop better relationships within its communities. It’s a great idea but I keep thinking the hierarchical church in Ireland deep down is afraid of any such ‘crazy ideas’.


There is an entrenched pomposity, a type of arrogance that is evident in the clerical state. Pope Francis had serious issues with clericalism. It appears Pope Leo has too. As it is the Easter Season it’s fitting to cry, Alleluia.


And by the way, Mass can be celebrated as sacredly and devoutly in English or in any language. What’s special about Latin? Elitism, religious snobbery? Maybe

Alleluia.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Donald Trump hurls his usual invective at Pope Leo

It’s been on every television screen, in every newspaper, the story of President Donald Trump criticising Pope Leo. using unseemly language, as is his style.

Late last evening JD Vance advised Pope Leo to stick with matters of morality; the old chestnut. It really is the last straw in the cupboard of the White House.

Pope Leo who is on a visit to Algeria says he does not fear Trump. Pope Leo says he is not a politician and it’s his job to preach a message of peace.

Below is the story as told by the Guardian.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/13/donald-trump-pope-leo?CMP=share_btn_url

Monday, April 13, 2026

A clarification on Tom Brodie’s leaving the Irish Dominicans

The text below also appears under the post  'More thoughts on the late Tom Brodie, former Dominican’, published on Wednesday, April 8. 

The piece below is written by Vivian Boland, who served for a number of years as an assistant to the Master of the Order. He is a theologian, author and teacher.

This blog cherishes dialogue and open discussion. 

Vivian Boland’s clarification:

"In fairness to all involved: it is not correct that Tom Brodie was 'summarily dismissed' from the Order by a 'committee of experts’. 

"On the publication of his book there were conversations between Tom and at least two commissions of the brothers. 

"One was appointed by the Irish province and when it found against his book he appealed to the Master of the Order, as was his right. 

"The Master established another, international, commission to review the situation and the decision of the Irish province. That commission also found against Tom's book, judging the views it put forward to be unfounded. 

"The same judgement came from the theologians and biblical scholars who contributed to a special issue of Doctrine & Life which considered his arguments. 

"Neither commission had the authority, nor did either attempt, to dismiss Tom from the Order. It is true that he could no longer preach or teach in the name of the Order or of the Church and he decided then to request laicisation. 

"But he was not dismissed from the Order, nothing was done 'summarily', and 'committees of experts' were not involved at any stage with the question of his membership of the Order."

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Little Rory set me thinking about my interest in trains

This week’s column in The Kerryman newspaper. Michael Commane Rory was eight on Saturday. His grandfather Donal and I are lifelong friends. ...