Politics


The most senior judge in Saudi Arabia has said it is permissible to kill the owners of satellite TV channels which broadcast immoral programmes.

I hate religion…


(Note: Nothing in this post is to be construed as criticizing John McCain’s service in Vietnam.)

With Friends like these….

Hillary; before the fall.

It is universally acknowledged by those of us who would have people reject the inherent irrationality of religion, that mere dogmatic atheism would provide an entirely unacceptable alternative. It is a simple point to note that people can and do hold beliefs without having sufficient evidence for those beliefs, and that these beliefs are by no means confined to those which would be rejected upon careful examination and the application of critical thinking. The child who believes, for example, that slavery is wrong for the sole reason that his father tells him so is as justified in his belief as the child who believes the opposite for the same reason. It is only when critical thinking is applied, that we can hope to distinguish between these two judgments.

There are a myriad of circumstances we can imagine under which someone might come to hold an unjustified belief of any sort. It would seem to be a question of luck whether such people happen to acquire beliefs which are (upon examination of the evidence) actually justified.

While those who fall on the other side of the fence are more easily identifiable for obvious reasons, we cannot afford to neglect to encourage critical thinking amongst those we might consider safely ensconced within our own ideological camps. While such people will at the very least be more likely to vote for the better candidate, or endorse the better policies, they will be ill-equipped to engage in persuasive argument with those who oppose them, and, as will be seen from what follows, can go so far as to warrant embarrassment if not outright hostility from their more enlightened peers. If this language strikes you as elitist, consider that the fundamental point of this post is to call for nothing more than honest and open engagement of all issues, without resorting to blind dogmatism and downright wilful ignorance.

I present for your consideration, the denizens of http://www.hillaryclintonforum.net/ . A quick glance through the depressingly large volume of topics on the forum will reveal a coterie of sycophantic disciples whose bitterness is exceeded only by their astounding capacity for denial.

“I have made it very clear that I am supporting Senator Obama and we’re working cooperatively on a lot of different matters, but I think that delegates can decide to do this on their own. They don’t need permission. They can decide under the rules of the DNC, and so I think it would be better if we had a plan that actually we put in place and everybody knew what it was and then we executed it because I just think that would go more smoothly,”

Let’s begin with a relatively objective account of the situation. Both Senators Obama and Clinton were campaigning to win the nomination of the same political party. During the primary season under extensive media scrutiny and after more than twenty debates, the consensus was that both candidates shared extremely similar policy positions, with few exceptions. Obama, having wrapped up the Democratic nomination long before his achievement was acknowledged by Clinton (an achievement which still is not acknowledged by a majority on www.hillaryclintonforum.net but more on this later) now faces the Republican Party’s John McCain, a man who unsurprisingly advocates many policies which are anathema to the majority of Democratic voters. These are the facts.

If we gaze through the distorted lens of a small but statistically significant proportion of Hillary Clinton supporters as exemplified by those on the above forum, we arrive at a very different account of reality. A reality where it is acceptable for a woman to vote for Hillary for her sex, but not for a black person to vote for Obama because of his race. A reality where a commentator’s use of the phrase “tit for tat” equates to sexist language (seriously) and where racist anti-Obama graffiti is attributed to Obama supporters attempting to tarnish Clinton’s image, to cite but a few examples. A reality where Hillary’s “suspending her campaign” (language used by all of the contenders for nomination, including John Edwards) is taken as code for some sort of uprising at the Democratic Convention at the end of this month. Clinton herself has recently stoked these absurd notions by refusing to rule out having her name included on a ballot at the convention. Somehow, such a publicly divisive gesture is to help “party unity”, the current mantra of DNC bigwigs. The problem, however, is that the targets of such attempts at unity now proudly proclaim the acronym PUMA, or “Party Unity My Ass”, a fitting epitaph for their self-destructive mentality…

This is the logical conclusion of illogical practises. This faction of Clinton loyalists (which we must bear in mind are not by all accounts a fringe minority) intend either not to vote, or in many cases to support McCain in the general election. We might call this the ultimate act of taking one’s ball and going home, as it were. Despite the fact that, for example, McCain is a strong opponent of abortion rights (in contrast to the vast majority of Clinton supporters), these men and women are willing to endure a minimum of four years of policies they by and large oppose, for the simple fact that they feel (“feel” being the operative word here) that their candidate has been unfairly treated by the media and by her Democratic opponent.

If such people should provide the so-called “Nader-factor” of the 2008 election, in drawing enough votes away from Obama to cost him the election, a successful Clinton campaign for the oval Office in 2012 is by no means guaranteed, but there is at least one thing we can say for certain: Come the fifth of November 2008 those at www.hillaryclintonforum.net will have elected exactly the president they deserve.

Clinton prepares for a Pagan sex romp by donning ritualistic clothes she will wear while aborting foetuses in their second trimester.

I voted “yes”, so I’m a bit disappointed with the outcome, but at the same time I’ll be very annoyed if the bigger member states try to steamroll over us and ram this treaty through in some shape or form regardless of this referendum. While some may say it’s undemocratic for three million voters to scupper the plans of almost half a billion other people, this negates the obvious fact fact that we were the only country of 27 to get a damn vote on the matter. Indeed, it seems that plenty of other Europeans were in favour of the “no” vote, and I seriously doubt that, had each state held a referendum, Ireland would have been alone in its opposition to the treaty. This Anonymous comment on the matter seems to sum up pretty well a lot of the anti-Lisbon sentiment floating around on the internet, and it captures my own feelings too to a certain degree:

Thank fuck for the Irish. The Treaty of Lisbon was a butthurt “BAWWWWWWWWWW we want our Constitution” from people who didn’t get the fucking message the first time.

Lisbon is a half-assed fuckwitted way to fix Europe. Give me a proper, directly elected, two house system with a directly elected President and independent judiciary and admit it’s a federal nation in it’s own right…OR FUCK OFF.

Tom Raferty has a poll up. Go go vote!


Vote No

EU

I have been watching with mild amusement for the past few days as the “yes” campaign wasted thousands of euro tacking up posters with their slogan ( usually, vote yes ) on every stationary object with 2 miles of my house. I didn’t take much notice , other than to comment repeatedly to my girlfriend that there is a noticeable lack of “no ” posters to counter this.

Sadly, driving to work this morning, i saw the opposition had finally turned up, and had spray-painted “No” on all the signs a large penis next to fine gaels logo( kinda funny i must admit ) . Worrying however, were the 2 leaflets that taunted me when i got home. Mussolini would be proud so full of bias and propaganda these little devil leaflets were.

Coir (formerly the No to Nice campaign), operating from 60a Capel Street in Dublin ( the home of some unpleasent business regarding pro-life campaign being sly ) were the first. Coir were at logger heads with the government this month regarding the barely legal signs for the no campaign. Almost anonymous , they had the affiliation with Coir in miniscule print at the bottom, just to creep inside the boundaries of legality as opposed to random europe bashing.

This group distributed the cleverly titled, EU treaty Vs Eire.
Here are the highlights

” The Irish Nation will be abolished . Ireland will be under an EU Dictatorship”
- Republic abolished to foreign control
- Eu has absolute control over our lives
- 100% of Irelands laws decided in a foreign parliament
- Suppression of free speech
- 20% euro tax
- introduction of chinas one child policy ( im serious. Its in here)

The second group have slightly more taste. No, wait! There is not second group! Its Coir again! They just designed it so that it would appear there were at least 2 groups opposed to this. Thats clever!

This time,
-”the EU will be a new empire” – Jose M Barroso ( with manic cackle im sure )
-Chalie McCreevy admitting the EU’s long term hidden agenda is to take control of taxation.

This is great. I would just laugh at all this, except my sister then turned to me and said, God , i don’t believe most of this, but this Lisbon thing looks terrible.

It worries me. So just to present an over view of the main points ( sourced from the referendum commission )

-All the policy meetings and debates that were private become public

-A new form of decision making using a slightly different majority voting system will apply to energy, asylum, immigration, judicial co-opperation in cilil matter and sport. Only.
Realistically, the new system makes it easier to the majority rule to work, but big countries will get more voting power, however, its also harder to the big countries to block things, so its balanced out. Plus its more fair this way, and seeing as its about immigration and asylum and energy, which affects them way more, i cant see it as a problem.

- The dail gets a say in proposals, but not necessarily that much

- The EU does not gain any power to decide things without our approval, but does gain equal power in decisions involving public health, energy and environment, all of which we’re making a total balls of on our own anyway.

- Ireland still gets to opt out of decisions and involvement in asylum and stuff.

- Neutrality isnt affected.

- EU convention of human rights becomes more important.

I see nothing negative to be perfectly honest, in the whole thing, and in my personal opinion the treaty seems to streamline some things, gives us a high commissioner for foreign policy ( which gives us a figure head – which will be good for the global impression of Europe. A strong image = a strong economy ) and protects all the issues Ireland is sensitive to. No abortion. No Loss of power on major issues such as our own laws, constitution, neutrality, taxs or any of that scare-mongering.

I’ll be voting yes. I would advise anyone who is interesting in voting ( you all should be ) to read the commission handbook and decide for yourself, and then have a good giggle over those xenophobic ex- IRA nationalists at COIR regardless.

“Yes Mr. President, your idea is genius. It’ll solve everything.”
Why tackle the cause when making new notes is cool? Putting something cool and manly on a note is always awesome it’s gotta be something that represents the country’s pride, it’s history, it’s future.
Any suggestions for images that best represent Zimbabwe? I’m thinking something Zeppelin-esque

via Damien Mulley and scamp.ie

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