Almost Anonymous ‘No To Lisbon’ Posters

You’ve probably seen the almost anonymous ‘No to Lisbon’ posters festooning the lamp posts of Dublin and probably elsewhere. If not, here are a couple of them:

Well, If they were anonymous, they would be illegal.

Section 140 of the Electoral Act 1992 makes it illegal to publish any notice, bill or poster promoting an election candidate without including the name and address of the printer and of the publisher. Section 6 of the Referendum Act 1994 applies this provision to referendums.

But these posters scrape into the legal category, because they have a tiny line of text, which is unreadable when the poster is high on a lamppost, that describes the publishers as Coir.

Coir is based at the same address as Youth Defence, and its spokesperson is Richard Greene.

Campaign against Lisbon if you want, but have the courage to let voters know who you are.

2 comments May 14, 2008

What If - Pee Flynn and the Tribunal

RTE do a radio show every Sunday that examines what might have been if certain political events had not happened. Today it was about what would have happened if Padraig Flynn had not appeared on the Late Late Show and prompted Tom Gilmartin to give evidence to the Flood Tribunal. I was a guest on the show, along with journalist Michael Clifford.

You can listen to it here.

What If?, RTE Radio One, Sunday 4 May 2008

4 comments May 4, 2008

Monday Quiz 44 - Large Towns and Litter Louts

During this week last year (Apr 21 to Apr 27, 2007):

  • What six Irish towns passed the 10,000 population mark for the first time?
  • Which TD commended the Gardai after he was arrested on suspicion of drink driving?
  • What other crime had he previously been convicted of, after which he did not commend the Gardai?
  • How did Ivor Callely of Fianna Fail fall foul of Council litter wardens?
  • What did he do then?

Click here for answers: >>> (more…)

Add comment April 21, 2008

Monday Quiz 43 - Madams, Mayo and Manchester

During this week last year (Apr 14 to Apr 20, 2007):

  • How did madam Deena Edridge from Kildare make legal history?
  • How much did Bank of Ireland have to pay back to customers it had wrongly charged, and why?
  • How did a seven-year-old boy from Singapore, whose grandparents are from Mayo, show himself to be a child genius?
  • Which senior negotiator of the Good Friday Agreement switched allegiance to a different political party?
  • Who denied a claim by his former Garda driver that he had travelled to Manchester with a briefcase of cash in the 1990s?

Click here for answers: >>> (more…)

Add comment April 14, 2008

Monday Quiz 42 - Superstition Dying Out?

During this week last year (Apr 7 to Apr 13, 2007), the Iona Institute published a survey of Irish awareness of Christian teaching. For each of the following questions, do you know (a) the answer and (b) how many people got it right?

  • Name the Holy Trinity.
  • How many Gospels are there in the New Testament?
  • What is the First Commandment?
  • What name is given to the changing of the body and blood of Christ in the Mass?
  • What is meant by the immaculate conception?

Click here for answers: >>> (more…)

4 comments April 7, 2008

Eoghan Harris Hosts Masterclass in Eejitry

Senator Eoghan Harris has taken an early lead in the race for Eejit of the Year 2008. His article in today’s Sunday Independent both borrows a tactic perfected by last year’s winning Eejit John Waters (the famous ‘I am crying, writing this’ theme) and also ventures into unparalleled realms of eejitry of his own.

Just read this, and I defy you not to laugh: >>> (more…)

7 comments April 6, 2008

Leave Her At It, Go On - No Bother, Johnny!

Some hilarious on-board commentary from driver Niall O’Connell and and co-driver John Liston as they try to overtake a slow car on a narrow straight road in the Irish National Rally Championship. It’s on YouTube via MotorSportMad.com.

Add comment April 4, 2008

Thomas the Tribunal v Bertie the Bluffer

As Bertie Ahern’s fate unfolded yesterday, I had this nagging feeling that I had seen it somewhere before. Then I remembered this old episode of Thomas the Tank Engine, in which Ringo Starr’s commentary is a surreally perfect allegory for the morality tale of Thomas the Tribunal versus Bertie the Bluffer.

Add comment April 3, 2008

Top Ten Things We’ll Miss About Bertie Ahern

Ahern Laughing

Number 10: His visionary insights

  • “With hindsight, we all have 50-50 vision.”
  • “We haven’t been able to do all that we can.”
  • “The cynics may point to the past but we live in the future.”
  • “The grass roots, or the rank and file, are now made from fibre optics.”

Number 9: The Drumcondra Mafia

  • Digout Des Richardson, who gives false invoices to stockbrokers for political donations then gives the money to Bertie Ahern as a personal gift.
  • Tim Nice-but-Dim Collins, the serial bank-account-opener who uses initials like B/T and D/T for his accounts, and who told the Tribunal that “figures aren’t my forte.”
  • Joe Burke, who, along with Tim Collins,  supposedly lent Ahern’s girlfriend £30,000 of Fianna Fail money, for a house, without Bertie knowing.
  • Paddy the Plasterer, who Joe Higgins suggested should avoid Ivor Callaly’s house, as Callaly was in enough trouble already with the painters.

Number 8: His ethical philosophies

  • “We’re not gonna hang anyone on the guillotine.”
  • “I never condemn wrongdoing in any area.”
  • “There is a code of ethics whereby those who have been elected to the House try to remain elected. That is the code of ethics in this House.”

Number 7: His most secretly truthful answer ever

  • When Ahern was first asked about the allegations of receiving between €50,000 and €100,000, he told journalists that a lot of the report was correct but “the figures are off the wall.” This, of course, was true, because he got some of the money “off Michael Wall”.

Number 6: His peacemaking abilities

  • “There have been disputes between fractions.”
  • “We shouldn’t upset the apple tart.”
  • “I don’t think it helps people to start throwing white elephants and red herrings at each other.”
  • “At present, I have my hand in a whole lot of dykes, trying to keep them in and keep people together.”

Number 5: His tribunal evidence generally

  • He has a magic briefcase that turns random uncounted bundles of Irish and English money into large exact round-sum dollar and sterling amounts.
  • He once lodged £50,000, then took it out again, then converted it to Sterling, then kept in his safe for a few months, then converted it back to Irish money, then re-lodged it, in two separate amounts.
  • He believes that, in 1995, he gave somebody £30,000 to buy sterling with, but he can’t remember who he gave it to.
  • He bought his house from a philanthropic bus driver who attends dinners but doesn’t eat the dinners, and who had already given Ahern the house in his will anyway.

Number 4: His opinion of Charles Haughey

  • “I think Charlie Haughey is basically a very good man and unfortunately he got into things like the lifestyle, and the bills caused him to do some things that I feel very strongly about.”

Number 3: His social life

  • “I’ve never met a socialist in my life, and if I do, I’ll tell you.”
  • “I can’t say that I have met any homosexuals.”
  • “I could certainly drink a fair few pints of Bass and be capable of driving.”

Number 2: The quadruple negative

  • “It is not correct, and if I said so, I was not correct, I cannot recall if I said it, but I did not say, or if I did, I did not mean to say it, that these issues could not be dealt with until the end of the Mahon tribunal. That is not what Revenue said.”

Number 1: The Bertie Ahern Problem-solving flowchart

  • Am I in the Dail? Say that I can only tell the Tribunal.
  • Am I at the Tribunal? Say that I can only tell the Dail.
  • Am I somewhere else? Say that it’s all smoke and daggers.
  • Have they stopped asking questions? Go and watch Man United.
  • Are they still asking questions? Tell the High Court to make them stop. Then go and watch Man United.

5 comments April 2, 2008

Monday Quiz 41 - Petrol, Pensions and Prisons

On this week last year (Mar 31 to Apr 6, 2007):

  • How much petrol could you buy for the same price as a litre of bottled water?
  • In a survey of teenagers in the midlands and north-east, what was the average age that they first got drunk? And how many said they had been drinking on at least six of the previous 30 days?
  • What was unusual about the decision that a former Circuit Court judge was to receive a lump sum payment from the State of €57,000, and an annual pension of €19,000?
  • Who arrived in Dublin and said: “I have to shake this man’s hand. I’ll give him a grip,” and who was he talking about?
  • What happened to former Fianna Fail Councillor, Michael Fahy, the day before he was due to begin a 12 month jail sentence for misappropriating funds from Galway County Council?

Click here for answers: >>> (more…)

Add comment March 31, 2008

Tim Nice-But-Dim Contradicts Ahern Evidence

Ahern Laughing

I’ve just noticed a very clever question from Tribunal barrister Des O’Neill, which exposes yet another plot hole in Bertie Ahern’s fairytale of Drumcondra. This one involves Tim ‘Nice-but-Dim’ Collins, the serial account opener who claims that figures are not his forte, contradicting a key element of Ahern’s sworn evidence. I’m sure this exchange will feature in the Tribunal’s final report. >>> (more…)

1 comment March 24, 2008

Monday Quiz 40 - Cronyism and Smoking Bans

On this week last year (Mar 24 to Mar 30, 2007):

  • Which Green Party TD called for an end to ‘crass cronyism’ in the way appointments are made to public bodies, and added that if there is to be a change in Government, ‘there has to be a change of culture too’?
  • Which Green Party TD, a few months later, lost his seat in the General Election and was then appointed to the Senate by Bertie Ahern?
  • What proportion of Irish businesses did Office of Tobacco Control report were in breach of the smoking ban?
  • What proportion of public houses did Office of Tobacco Control report were in breach of the smoking ban?
  • Which former Fianna Fail Minister said on RTE that, after twenty years in office, he now had to ‘actually find where the Aer Lingus desk is and join the queue like everybody else’ at airports, and also ‘look at things that I didn’t know existed, which are monitors which show your arrivals and departures and the times and the boarding gates - that is all totally new, a totally new world.’

Click here for answers: >>> (more…)

Add comment March 24, 2008

Muppets Celebrate Saint Patrick’s Day

Add comment March 17, 2008

Irish Golfer Wins Lowest Ever Prize Money

From the Ireland.com homepage of the Irish Times today:
IT Golf
Actually, McDowell won $333,000 of a $2.9m prize fund.

Add comment March 17, 2008

Bertie Ahern Gets Another Huge Digout

Here’s an interesting sight from yesterday on Drumcondra Road - a large-scale digout operation going on in front of Saint Luke’s, Bertie Ahern’s famous constituency office cum sleepover pad cum informal financing office.

Saint Lukes Digout

So what is going on? Perhaps, as Ahern feared at the Tribunal, Saint Lukes is actually sliding into the Tolka (presumably underneath the several buildings in between it and the river)? Or perhaps the digout is an audacious tunnelling attempt to reach Ahern’s infamous ’safe safe’? You know, the one that turns random uncounted bundles of Irish and English money into large exact round-sum dollar and sterling amounts? Or a briefcase of £30,000 in cash left by Michael Wall for Ahern? Or an envelope with £20,000 in cash left by Tim Collins for Joe Burke?

2 comments March 17, 2008

Monday Quiz 39 - Junkets and Jail Terms

Sadly, another week has passed during which real life has interrupted my blog posting. However, nothing can stop the Monday Quiz. On this week last year (Mar 17 to Mar 23, 2007):

  • Which Government Minister cost most to travel on their Saint Patrick’s Day junket - Martin Cullen going to San Francisco, Noel Dempsey going to Dallas and Houston, or Mary harney going to Scandinavia?
  • Which Junior Minister cost most to travel on their Saint Patrick’s Day Junket - Pat ‘the Cope’ Gallagher going to Atlanta and Philadelphia, Michael Ahern going to Kuala Lumpar and Singapore, or Tom Parlon going to South Africa?
  • Why was former Fianna Fail Councillor Michael ‘the Stroke’ Fahey of Galway jailed for twelve months and fined €75,000?
  • Whey were 400 prisoners or former prisoners suing the State?
  • What shock did passengers on two Aer Lingus flights to Rome get?

Click here for answers: >>> (more…)

Add comment March 17, 2008

Cribbing and Moaning About the Economy

A quick thought arose when I read today that Bertie Ahern sees a hard economic year ahead. He said that we won’t escape the effects of an American recession, and that:

Every 10,000 houses less that are built knocks 1 per cent off growth and that takes a fair bit out [of the employment figures]. That’s the rule of thumb. It also takes a considerable amount of revenue out as well. We are not going to see bounce-back in that in the short term.

And I wondered, can this be the same man who said last July that he doesn’t know how people who crib and moan about the economy don’t commit suicide?

2 comments March 11, 2008

Monday Quiz 38 - Beggars, Bebo and Free Books

On this week last year (Mar 10 to Mar 16, 2007):

  • How did a young Dublin beggar change a law introduced during the famine?
  • Who was Falmouth Kearney, and why was he in the news?
  • What territorial occupation did the Minister for the Environment oppose?
  • Why did Bebo remove pages by Limerick teenagers?
  • Who distributed 50,000 free books at public events and through letterboxes in Dublin South East?

Click here for answers: >>> (more…)

Add comment March 10, 2008

Battle of the St Patrick’s Day T-Shirts

Some options available for online purchase by the discerning Irish parader:

PD FightPD Irish UpPD Car

PD BlahPD DefendPD Gold

PD DrunkPD ShitfacedPD Bitches

You can buy the top row from Speak Up Designs, the middle row from FlippinSweetGear, and the bottom row from CafePress.

Add comment March 9, 2008

Oasis Tribute - Wonderwall from Donegal

This is what might have been if Oasis were from Donegal (a video tribute from YouTube user Cornyack):

Add comment March 8, 2008

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A blog by Michael Nugent

Welcome to my blog about living in the maddest country on earth. Please feel free to leave a comment.

I also write Bionic Bohs, a blog about following Bohemians football club in the 1970s.

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As mentioned above, if you like Irish football and/or cultural nostalgia, I also write Bionic Bohs, a blog about following Bohs in the 1970s.