A reader submitted this in response to this week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column
Thursday, September 30, 2021
Real stand-ins for Del Boy and Rodney fix a chandelier
Wednesday, September 29, 2021
The bones and blood of David Trimble lie deep in Kilkeel
The bones of my ancestors are in this land, the blood of my family has been spilt on this land. We’ve fought for the right to be in this land.
Our roots are here, this is our home, and I love this place. I love the beauty of this place. I love the people of this place. I’ve no intention of going anywhere.
Leader of the DUP, David Trimble in an interview with The Irish Times.
David Trimble’s family has lived in the same part of Northern Ireland for 400 years. They have been living in the fishing village of Kilkeel, Co Down.
Tuesday, September 28, 2021
They were no ordinary fools and horses
This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column
Monday, September 27, 2021
Russian woman offers hope to those who fight wrongdoing
Marina Litvinovich commenting on why she continues to oppose Vladimir Putin writes:
“I believe we need to fight to the end. And if I don’t do it then who will.”
A brave woman expressing a powerful resolve.
Words that give hope to anyone who fights wrongdoing.
And certainly words that support them in their resolve to remain steadfast.
Merkel’s party has its worst ever general election result
All the Irish media have been singing the praises of the chancellorship of Germany’s Angela Merkel. And she certainly has been a leading light in her country, Europe and the world.
Angela Merkel’s CDU had its worst ever result in yesterday's general election.
It is still possible for the CDU to form the next government but most likely the SPD, which had a five per cent vote increase yesterday, will be the main party in the next government, with Olaf Scholz as German chancellor.
The next days will see much horse trading. Had Die Linke received a larger vote it most likely would have been an SPD, Green, Die Linke government. but it now seems it will most likely be an SPD, Green and FDP coalition.
Sunday, September 26, 2021
German finance minister versus Canisius scholarship boy
The Germans go to the polls today. Approximately 60 million people have the right and privilege to vote.
The opinion polls are calling it a very close race.
Up to last week SPD candidate Olaf Scholz was ahead of CDU leader Armin Laschet, but in the last days it seems Laschet has made up ground, something he did in the election that won him the premiership of North Rhine Westphalia.
Scholz is a former mayor of Hamburg and current German finance minister in the Berlin coalition government.
The Catholic Church in Germany awards university scholarships, Canisius Scholarships, to gifted students. Laschet was the recipient of such a scholarship.
If the CDU win it most likely will be a CDU/CSU, Green, FDP coalition.
If the SPD win, they will most likely form a grouping with the Greens and the FDP or Die Linke. Die Linke has its origins in the SED, the ruling party in the former German Democratic Republic.
There is one unusual or strange aspect to the current opinion polls. This time last year both CDU and SPD were performing badly in polls, but the SPD even more so. Why are the polls giving them such a strong showing now? Can one man, in this case, Olaf Scholz, make such a difference?
The German election system is, to say the least, complicated. People vote for the party and also vote directly for individual candidates. It means the number of MPs differ from one election to the next.
There is also referendum tomorrow dealing with the right of the State to acquire property for personal accommodation, something on those lines.
It would be good for Germany, Europe and indeed democracy to see the far right AfD do badly in today’s elections. Then again, they might well cause a surprise.
For any party to sit in parliament it must obtain at least five per cent of the vote. This is to safeguard Germany from another Adolf Hitler.
38 per cent of today's voters are over 60 years go age.
Olaf Scholz to be next Gemran chancellor?
Saturday, September 25, 2021
Apprising people to stick with the simple word
RTE reporter Barry Lenihan interviewing Bishop Michael Router on the Claire Byrne Show yesterday on the scourge of drugs, said that the bishop was appraising the minister about the situation. Of course he should have said that the bishop was apprising the minister.
The moral of the story is always to use the simple word instead of the ‘fancy’ one.
But it’s not only journalists who make this error. Some people get confused with these two words. And it seems to happen when they are trying to sound important, patronising their listener, playing tricks with people.
Why not simply say inform or tell?
Friday, September 24, 2021
Wise, incisive words from T S Eliot
This except from T S Eliot’s The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock fits the mood.
No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to be;
Thursday, September 23, 2021
An anthem full of nostalgia with ruinous implications
The anthem on the former German Democratic Republic.
An ironic title ‘Risen from the Ruins’
Next Sunday Germans will go to the polls to elect a new Bundestag or parliament.
The current German borders exist since 1990.
Was that an issue of unification or reunification?
Wednesday, September 22, 2021
German anti-masker shoots a man dead at a filling station.
At an Aral filling station in Idar-Oberstein in the western State of North Rhine Westfalia in Germany a 20-year-old assistant was shot dead when he asked a customer to put on a mask.
The 46-year-old alleged shooter gave himself up to the police and explained how he is opposed to the wearing of masks.
He was buying beer at the filling station.
Tuesday, September 21, 2021
A little kindness goes a long way......
This week’s Mediahuis Irish regionals newspaper’ column.
Monday, September 20, 2021
Boycie of Only Fools And Horses Fam dies
On the death of John Challis, who played Boycie in Only Fools And Horses, it’s worth watching this clip of the iconic show.
And Trigger too is gone.
Sad times.
When it comes to cancer there is no safe alcohol limit
Just one glass of wine or beer every day is enough to increase a person’s chances of developing mouth cancer.
Eilish O’Regan writing in the Irish Independent reports:
Eleanor O’ Sullivan, of Cork University Hospital, said the more people drink the higher the risk of these cancers and that there is no safe limit.
“People need to become aware. It is not a case of telling people what they can and cannot do but informing them of the risk.”
She was speaking ahead of Mouth, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Day on Wednesday which this year is focusing on the links with alcohol.
It can be a silent killer because people can be unaware they have the disease for so long. She said while many people can identify smoking as a cause of mouth cancer, few know the risks posed by alcohol.
Sunday, September 19, 2021
Controversy surrounding three-day Russian elections
Russian citizens living in Ireland can vote today in their country’s three-day elections.
All they have to do is turn up at the Embassy of the Russian Federation on Dublin’s Orwell Road between 8am and 8pm and cast their vote.
Prior registration is not required.
According to an embassy spokesperson there are over 5,000 Russians living in Ireland.
At the request of the Russian government Google and Apple have removed the Navalny app, designed by Alexei Navalny’s team to identify opposition candidates with the best chances of defeating rivals from the ruling United Russia party.
Navalny supporters accuse Google and Apple of a shameful act of censorship. The Russian government threatened to sue the two companies and accused them of interference in Russia’s election.
Saturday, September 18, 2021
From golf to the bicycle and back to golf again
It is said that golf is no longer the favoured sport of young upwardly mobile people. Instead, kitted out in expensive lycra, they have taken to bicycles.
But it now seems that golf is on the upswing, at least in the United States of America.
The number of people who teed up for the first time hit a record three million in 2020. In all, close to 37 million golfers played 502 million rounds. This is a 14 per cent increase on the previous year.
Friday, September 17, 2021
Preaching and proclaiming the good news.
A line from today’s Gospel goes: Now it happened that after this he made his way through towns and villages preaching and proclaiming the good news of the kingdom of God. With him went the Twelve.
It’s from St Luke.
Goodness and kindness. Doesn’t the Dalai Lama say that kindness is his religion.
If we are not good and kind then it really is all empty, a fraud, a scam.
The joy, the privilege it is to meet good and kind people.
Something to do with being real.
Thursday, September 16, 2021
Boris Johnson and his new cabinet of nitwits
If it weren’t so serious it would be hilarious.
And it applies not just to the Tories and the current UK government.
Giving people a chance to control their lives
Interesting and indeed even wise words from The Irish Times columnist Fintan O’Toole.
Giving cash to people living in poverty does not make them lazy. It gives them a chance to take control of their lives.
Wednesday, September 15, 2021
A bird’s eye view of third level fees across the EU
It’s the norm that third-level full-time students pay only administrative fees in the first cycle, which max at €100 in Slovakia, Slovenia, Poland, Croatia, Czech Republic and Germany.
In Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, Netherlands, Hungary and Spain fees range from between €1,000 and €3,000.
In England the comparable fee is over €10,000.
No fees in Sweden, Austria, Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Malta, Scotland.
In Northern Ireland it is just short of €5,000.
Tuesday, September 14, 2021
A joy in reading the printed version of a newspaper
This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspaper’s column
Monday, September 13, 2021
Spending over €30m to examine wasting €8 million
The State set up a Commission of Investigation to examine the sale of building services group Sitserve to billionaire Denis O’Brien. The sale took place during the financial crisis.
Siteserve was heavily indebted to the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation at the time it was sold to the Denis O’Brien-owned Millington.
IBRC was made up of the two collapsed banks, Anglo Irish Bank and Irish Nationwide Building Society.
It was sold for €45 million in 2012. IBRC wrote off €119 of the €150 it was owed.
The report concludes that the State could have made an extra €8 million from the sale.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin has said the inquiry will cost in excess of €30 million. The Dáil has heard claims that the inquiry could cost €70 million.
Spending either €30 million or €70 million to investigate wasting €8 million sounds absurd.
Sunday, September 12, 2021
The West might well have been kinder to Mother Russia
On this day, September 12, 1990 the two German States and the Four Powers, the Soviet Union, United Kingdom, France and the United States signed in Moscow the Treaty of the Final Settlement with Respect to German Unification.
Significant that it was signed in Moscow.
Had the West been more magnanimous to the then government in Moscow might the world be a far safer and more secure place today? Most likely yes.
Was it not agreed in those days that Nato troops would not go east of the new Federal German frontier?
The West has not got clean hands when it comes to how it has teated Mother Russia.
Saturday, September 11, 2021
The strength to carry our cross
The Thinking Anew column in The Irish Times today.
Michael Commane
We don’t hear it too often these days but if someone says to me that I should offer up pain or suffering I immediately react with a sense of anger and annoyance. I keep asking myself – what is it all about?
Why must some people suffer so much?
Just last week a woman told me about her mother’s dementia. The woman was visiting her father in hospital, so naturally he too was concerned and perplexed about the condition of his wife.
At one stage in our conversation the woman mentioned that she felt guilty because she should have spotted the early signs of the disease and maybe she could have taken action earlier and that might have been of help to her mother. Most of all it was that sentiment that struck a chord with me.
There’s an old adage I so often heard as a child: ‘If all the ifs and buts made pots and pans there’d be no need for tinkers’. Traditionally travellers/tinsmiths were experts in repairing broken pots and pans.
Some years ago had I left the house two minutes later or earlier I would not have been knocked off my bicycle. All those ifs and buts in our lives ... simply put, there are no answers that make sense to us. Are there any answers to pain and suffering? The wife of a close friend of mine died of a brain tumour. She was far too young to die. We all have similar stories.
Are our lives made up of a succession of accidental happenings, the people we meet, the people we love, those who come together and bring new life into the world? From beginning to end it seems to be one continuous matter of accidental events.
In my five years working as a hospital chaplain I have seen first-hand the fragility of our lives. I am constantly amazed by how people cope with their illnesses. We humans are amazingly adaptable.
In tomorrow’s Gospel (Mark 8: 27 - 35) when Jesus asks his disciples who do people say he is, he tells them that God’s ways are not the ways of human thinking.
If they want to be his followers, they need to renounce themselves, take up their cross and follow him. “For anyone who wants to save his life will lose it.”
In recent days Eileen O’Riordan, mother of the late Dolores O’Riordan of Cranberries fame, has spoken on a number of media outlets about her talented and wonderful daughter, who died in 2018.
Last Monday would have been the singer’s 50th birthday. Eileen has spoken publicly of how her faith has kept her going in such difficult times. Listening to her I was back thinking of the fragility of our lives, the fact that we have no idea what might face us tomorrow.
Maybe because of the very fragility and the randomness of our lives I’m inclined to say that there must be more to it than what meets the eye.
Yes, I fall back on the faith of my parents and their parents before them and say, in belief, that we are destined in some way or other to be united with God.
I don’t understand suffering, I cannot account for the vagaries of human behaviour. But these days I keep saying to myself that there has to be more to our existence, that it does not end with simple full stop, like a sentence written on paper.
I also realise that it is folly – and a terrible form of arrogance to think that we are fully in control of the circumstances of our lives. Just look around and see the job that we can do. Yes, we humans can do extraordinary good but we can also inflict indescribable pain and suffering.
Of course it’s wrong to preach resignation to the poor and suffering, but in moments of great hardship and pain a cry out to God, invoking God’s name, might well give us a perspective on what our lives are about.
There is a line in the reading from Isaiah in tomorrow’s liturgy which goes: “The Lord is coming to my help”(Is 50:7). Christians believe that all our unanswered questions and dilemmas will be resolved in God’s providence.
In that context I accept that there is an all-seeing God, whose nature is to love the world, to love its creatures, to love me. In that context, I hope and pray that I will be able to carry my cross.
Friday, September 10, 2021
Darwin and Kant looked down their noses on smell
Charles Darwin believed that smell to be “of extremely slight service” to humans and Immanuel Kant regarded it as “most dispensable" of the senses.
It’s doubtful if people who have suffered from long Covid would be impressed with Darwin’s and Kant’s views on smell.
Thursday, September 9, 2021
Republic of Ireland population goes north
For the first time since 1851 the population of the 26 counties has exceeded five million.
According to CSO figures the population of the State stands at present at 5,011,500.
Wednesday, September 8, 2021
The twin evils of arrogance and entitlement
Fintan O’Toole writing about the politicians involved in the Merriongate scandal in his column in The Irish Times yesterday wrote:
The privileges of office have become entitlements. And entitled people, however smart, do stupid things. In the thin air of high political altitudes, they become light-headed with hauteur.
If cocaine is God’s way of telling you that you have too much money, the drug of arrogance is her way of telling everyone else that you've been in office too long.
Interesting words and they don’t exclusively apply to politicians.
Wides words too and apposite.
Tuesday, September 7, 2021
The Irish Independent worked the trick on the day
This week’s Mediahuis Irish regional newspapers’ column.
Monday, September 6, 2021
‘Players know when there are cliques'
These two pieces are from
Joe Brolly’s piece in the Sunday Independent Sport yesterday.If you happen to have a copy of the newspaper in your possession and have not read the full article, then make sure to read it. It comes highly recommended and of course the sentiments expressed do
not exclusively apply to football or sport.It is a clever piece of writing, maybe more subjectively said, this blogpost writer agrees with it and finds it pertinent and applicable to so many walks of life, secular and religious.
So often, isn’t the cliques that destroy so much good.
We all know when there are cliques. And they always do terrible damage to the body politic.
Sunday, September 5, 2021
A letter in reply to David McConnell
This letter was published in The
Irish Times yesterday.
Is it a convincing reply to David McConnell's piece?
Is it "ludicrous for the most ardent atheist to argue these values originated anywhere except Christianity”?
Saturday, September 4, 2021
It doesn’t make sense to blame secularism for world’s ills
The Right&Reason column in The Irish Times last Tuesday was written by David McConnell, honorary president of the Humanist Association of Ireland.
He concludes the piece with this thought:
"The way to dialogue is through mutual respect and understanding.
"A religion will not retain or regain respect in society by blaming all the ills of the world on secularism and humanism (or on other religions) or by claiming that religions have a special right to be heard."
Friday, September 3, 2021
Jimmy, The Provo and the Eye and Ear
I first met Jimmy Fitzsim0ns in the early 1990s when we were both living in Dublin’s north inner city. We became friends
Back then Jimmy was a strong supporter of the Provisional IRA. More accurately said, he was forever talking about them.
On one occasion I asked his mother, who had a stall on Moore Street, if Jimmy was in the IRA.
She replied: “Jasus, the Eye and Ear wouldn’t take him.” We laughed.
Mrs Fitzsimons has since died. She was a lady.
On Wednesday I bumped into Jimmy on Dominick Street. We were chatting, our usual banter. He began to tell me what he was doing for the rest of the day and then said: “I have to get gear for the Provo.” I was confused and did not understand what he was saying so I asked him to explain.
Right behind him was a pug style dog. It was Jimmy’s
The dog's name, The Provo.
Thursday, September 2, 2021
Tess, had been on many a mountain but loved her comfort
It may have been 2007, at least
sometime in that period, that I acquired Tess my Labrador.
She had been with a family where the couple split up and Tess was not quite abandoned but left somewhere in no-man’s land.
My previous dog had died and the woman of the house suggested Tess would be a good fit for me.
She turned out not just a perfect fit but an adorable friend.
She moved to Dublin with me. We climbed every mountain in Wicklow and Dublin and some in Kerry. We regularly swam in the Atlantic.
As she grew older, friends pointed out to me that it was not fair to leave her at home all day on her own while I was out at work.
Their wisdom prevailed and in 2016 Tess moved less than two kilometres to her new home, where she was spoiled beyond words.
Anytime I called to see her, even in her old age, she came to greet me. She well knew who I was.
On Monday I received this message from Bernadette:
"St Francis took Tess at 7.10 a.m this mirning. First time ever she barked and woke me at 3am. I came down & sat with her until she died. What a wonderful creature she was. Peter and myself are heartbroken. But glad she didn't suffer much.
Thank you for giving her to us."
Wednesday, September 1, 2021
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