Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005
RTEs Sarah McInerney ? Fianna Fail?supporter? Anthony
Joe Duffy is dishonest and untrustworthy Anthony
Robert Watt complaint: Time for decision by SIPO Anthony
RTE in breach of its own editorial principles Anthony
Waiting for SIPO Anthony
Public Inquiry >>
Promoting Human Rights in IrelandHuman Rights in Ireland >>
Net Zero ?Harms Human Lives?, Trump?s Envoy Warns Starmer Thu Apr 24, 2025 19:00 | Will Jones
Net Zero policies "harm human lives" and undermine "health, wealth and opportunity", Donald Trump's trade envoy Tommy Joyce has told Keir Starmer in an attack on?Labour?s radical energy policy.
The post Net Zero “Harms Human Lives”, Trump’s Envoy Warns Starmer appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
Is it Autism or Just Bad Parenting? Thu Apr 24, 2025 17:00 | Will Jones
Amid a surge in autism diagnoses, Arthur Mann found a friend's children detached and glued to their screens. Is it not more likely, he wonders, that we are suffering from an epidemic of disastrous middle-class parenting?
The post Is it Autism or Just Bad Parenting? appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
Banning Alternative f?r Deutschland Thu Apr 24, 2025 15:00 | Eugyppius
In Germany the Left doesn't need to beat Right-wing parties, it can just ban them for supposedly being a bit too much like Hitler. Eugyppius is increasingly convinced the AfD will face a potential ban in the coming months.
The post Banning Alternative f?r Deutschland appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
It?s Time to Kick the Extremists Out of the Classroom Thu Apr 24, 2025 13:00 | Brian Monteith
PETA's schools programme tells children that animals are "just like us" and it's wrong to have pets and zoos. An organisation that has likened farming to the Holocaust has no place in the classroom, says Brian Monteith.
The post It’s Time to Kick the Extremists Out of the Classroom appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
Reeves?s Incompetence Means the UK is Heading for a Full-Blown Financial Crash, and Nothing Can Stop... Thu Apr 24, 2025 11:00 | Will Jones
Rachel Reeves's disastrous mishandling of the thriving economy she inherited from the Tories means the UK is heading for a full-blown financial crash ? and nothing can stop it now, says Matthew Lynn.
The post Reeves’s Incompetence Means the UK is Heading for a Full-Blown Financial Crash, and Nothing Can Stop it Now appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
Lockdown Skeptics >>
Voltaire, international edition
Will intergovernmental institutions withstand the end of the "American Empire"?,... Sat Apr 05, 2025 07:15 | en
Voltaire, International Newsletter N?127 Sat Apr 05, 2025 06:38 | en
Disintegration of Western democracy begins in France Sat Apr 05, 2025 06:00 | en
Voltaire, International Newsletter N?126 Fri Mar 28, 2025 11:39 | en
The International Conference on Combating Anti-Semitism by Amichai Chikli and Na... Fri Mar 28, 2025 11:31 | en
Voltaire Network >>
View Comments Titles Only
save preference
Comments (12 of 12)
Jump To Comment: 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1Those who are telling us not to vate will be the very ones at the polling sttion @ 8 0 clock am voting labour & F/G F/F
We are not simpletons. Evyone vote , an then when COUNCELLORS come once again to your door asking you to vote them, then YOU will have the upper hand? VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE i BUT VOTENDEP PREF.BUT VOTE
Figure that one out.
Here's a reply to the asinine WSM video that really says it all: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDUyZatcUfk
On re reading your comment yes I misunderstood it first time around. Apologies
I was just pointing out (badly?) that parties of the left think anarchism is not relevant - in which case what anarchists say about elections shouldnt matter. Blaming anarchists for their own bad turn-outs in the polls is pretty funny.
Frankly - if another government gets elected that isn't entirely socialist I'm blaming the WSM.
Leftcommie you have a fundamental misunderstanding of WSM politics.
The reason we reject elections is because we have no wish to lead the working class either electorally or by any other route. The road to revolution does not lie through workers selecting better leaders, it lies through self organisation of ourselves as a class and a rejection of all who would lead us. The WSM objection to electoral politics is that by design it can only be about trying to convince the class that your man (or women) has the answers and things can be changed by ticking the box next to their name. The best of the electoral parties (SP, ISN) understand this problem and seek ways to overcome it but we are unconvinced that this is possible - leadership cults are created by those outside the party as well as those in it.
If lefties think they are not getting elected because the WSM believes class struggle can't be built through parliament then they are either fooling themselves or aknowledging that the WSM are more in touch with the working class than they are. Are they not voting for you because they have taken up the flag of anarchist communism? Or is it just that you're not relevant.
"Do you believe the people of Cabra were better off having Dermot Fitzpatrick as a TD than if 74 more people had voted for Nicky Kehoe in the last election?"
No, I reckon there wouldn't have been any concrete difference for the people of Cabra. Every single vote in the dail and in every single committee would have had exactly the same result, all government policy would have been exactly the same and I doubt that a single word that he uttered in the Dail would have been reported in a single media outlet.
Perhaps you can give me a single concrete difference that might have been experienced had Nicky been in the Dail for the last 5 years and explain how exactly him being in the Dail would have made it happen.
Just because you don't understand something doesn't make it incoherent.
But I'll simplify it for you:
Do you believe the people of Cabra were better off having Dermot Fitzpatrick as a TD than if 74 more people had voted for Nicky Kehoe in the last election?
If the Dail is an irrelevant talking shop, then what does it matter who gets elected?
And are you saying that SF or SP have a chance of threatening the Government?
Your argument is incoherent: if we elect a few people who will end up in oppositon it will stop the current government remaining in power. What?!
If your focus is on a change of government then surely you should be voting for the blueshirts or Labour, and Chekov dealt with this point of view in his comment. If you think it's more important to vote SP and SF, and get a strong opposition then Chekov has also dealt with you.
Strange that you try to pick apart the contribution above but you leave out the following paragraph: "Sinn Féin and the Socialist Party have a good chance of getting TD's elected, but in all cases by tight margins, so every vote will count. Absenting yourself from the voting process will help Fianna Fail retain power. It's as simple as that."
What's the matter-did you not see it?
In Dublin Central in 2002, Nicky Kehoe missed out on a seat in the irrelevant talking shop that is the Dáil by 74 votes. Instead of a Sinn Féin rep, the people of Cabra and the North Inner City got a second Fianna Fáil TD to help fill the government backbenches. It'll be as close-if not closer- this time. What is the WSM advice for young voters in Cabra- ignore the whole sorry mess and let Sinn Féin lose by 74 votes again?
Make sure Clare Daly loses for the Socialists in Swords as well? And Dessie Ellis and Larry O'Toole should forget their hopes of representing their constituenties in the Dáil. Let more Labour, FF and FG drones in - all people who voted for the gas giveaway...
Bertie must love the WSM.
The WSM may have a way of changing the states oil and gas licensing and royalty regime by local action, but we've yet to hear it.
First of all, where are you getting this 'local action' stuff from? It's not something that the WSM counterposes with voting. What we actually counterpose to voting is activity in areas where there is some space for genuine democratic input - trade unions, campaign groups, community groups and so on. Personally I think it's obvious that well-organised and militant popular extra-parliamentary movements are always more effective at putting pressure on governments than the election of oppositional politicians who will waste away in the irrelevant talking shop that is the dail.
For example, do you think the nurses would have been better off going on strike for their demands or should they have just concentrated on canvassing for a labour government? If you want something, you have to fight for it - no matter who the government is, they respond to pressure from the population.
In the case of the oil and gas regime, if the government was to find itself confronted with a large popular movement which adopted direct action against the giveaway of resources - strikes, blockades and so on, they would feel much, much more pressure than they would from oppositional voices being safely ignored in Leinster house.
Of course we don't have a sizeable popular movement capable of doing this on a national level at the moment. But neither do we have a parliamentary movement that is within an ass's roar of threatening the dominance of right wing politics in parliament - which one should people put their energy into building? The complete absence of anything approaching a sizeable radical parliamentary movement in Irish history, which is littered with mass, popular, militant movements also suggests that it's actually easier to build such movements compared to the difficulties of building parliamentary groups, which have had a hugely consistent history of selling out, or disintegrating long before they get anywhere near power.
A change of government next month would certainly send a signal that people are unhappy with the current arrangement
That's fantasy land. A blue-shirt led administration would probably be even more driven in privatising and giving away our wealth. That's the only realistic prospect for a new administration. It is also obviously true that it would be invalid to equate any election result with a particular point of view about natural resources - we vote for politicians, not policies and politicians are free to interpret their mandate any way that they want.
I will bet you any money that you like that, regardless of the outcome of this election, the next government won't even consider trying to recover the given away resources - it won't even be on the table.
and the election of parties which have argued against the present system would ensure that there is a voice for change being heard.
A voice for change is being heard - it's being heard on the ground in Rossport. We know it's being heard, because the state sent in hundreds of police to suppress that voice. If you think that a few opposition politicians waffling on in the Dail, would make this voice louder - dream on. Is the media suddenly going to start focusing on the thrilling speeches of irrelevant back-benchers when they have decided long ago that the near-daily physical confrontations on the ground are not newsworthy?
Fianna Fáil said quite clearly that they were going to change the rules on royalties for oil and gas prior to 1992. Anyone who voted for them later than 1989 was complicit in this change. Anyone who supported them (for example -Labour were in power with them after the 1992 election) was part of the problem.
In my opinion, anyone who did not vote against them, and thus gave them a free ride on this and other issues, was and is part of the problem.
The WSM may have a way of changing the states oil and gas licensing and royalty regime by local action, but we've yet to hear it. A change of government next month would certainly send a signal that people are unhappy with the current arrangement, and the election of parties which have argued against the present system would ensure that there is a voice for change being heard.
Sinn Féin and the Socialist Party have a good chance of getting TD's elected, but in all cases by tight margins, so every vote will count. Absenting yourself from the voting process will help Fianna Fail retain power. It's as simple as that.
Local action may be a part of the solution, but only a part.