|
So anyone think this citizens forum on abortion is going to produce anything of value or is it just an exercise in face saving after getting a scolding from the UNHRC?
|
# ? Jun 20, 2016 20:18 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 07:22 |
|
The citizens forum lets them kick the can down the road a bit. Fine Gael relies on a hard-line catholic votership in a much more tangible sense than most political parties in the country. The idea that they might be the political party to introduce godless baby murdering into legislation will hurt that vote in years to come. They are probably afraid of driving said voting bloc into the arms of the great enemy.
|
# ? Jun 21, 2016 14:37 |
|
There's no way FG are going to attempt a referendum on the 8th. All they are doing is buying time and hoping something comes along that can distract the media/electorate.
|
# ? Jun 21, 2016 14:52 |
|
Senator Ronan Mullen believes the IDA threatened NUIG with withdrawal of funding if they didn't install gender-neutral bathrooms. We truly are blessed with the expertise that comes from the Seanad.
|
# ? Jun 29, 2016 15:03 |
|
Swan Curry posted:We truly are blessed with the expertise that comes from the Seanad. I hate that the electorate allowed it to remain on the basis that it would be reformed by some undefined manner. And now we're stuck with ex-ministers on the government payroll who were parachuted in when they couldn't retain their seat, e.g. James Reilly.
|
# ? Jun 29, 2016 17:17 |
|
Lots of outrage at the census showing that 10% of the housing pool is apparently unoccupied. Interesting number but how many of those houses are in locations that people will accept to live, homeless or not? If I'm jobless/housing list in Cork will a ghost estate down near Bantry improve my life?
|
# ? Jul 15, 2016 17:02 |
|
So i was bored and read this thread. does ireland really have a political party named after the people running for office!? haeley-ray.
|
# ? Jul 31, 2016 19:52 |
|
snergle posted:So i was bored and read this thread. does ireland really have a political party named after the people running for office!? haeley-ray. It's more of a joke on the fact that healy-rae brothers managed to win more seats than Renua, an honest to goodness political party with ex-ministers and everything. Officially they're independents. In actual news it's looking increasingly likely they'll be another election next spring as some cracks have started to show in the Government. At the start of the month independent Mick Wallace tabled a (repeat) bill that would have legalised abortion in cases of Fatal Foetal Abnormality - something which the previous government had voted against after receiving legal advice that such a law would be unconstitutional without a repeal of the Eight Amendment. However three Independent Alliance Ministers who are part of the current government defied the agreed government line on the vote and voted in favor of the bill - an embarrassing failure to impose the collective cabinet responsibility that was baked into the current coalition deal to try to stop this from happening. There where some very unhappy chaps in FG after that happened. Enda did some bizarre manovuering that lead to some rumbling in FG that maybe it's time to start looking at replacing him. In June he sacked the deputy leader of FG, James Reilly (who had lost his seat in the election but subsequently got a place in the Senate), in what was widely seen as a punitive move for his vocal support for a referendum on the eight amendment which went against the softly softly approach officially endorsed by the party. Then bizarrely at the start of July, Reilly was reappointed deputy leader which left everyone very confused at what Kenny was exactly playing at. Then polls started coming out showing FF have overtaken FG... Since there has been increased speculation about Kenny stepping aside as leader this year (centering on either before or after Budget Day in October) and a slow build up of campaigning from the three presumptive candidates who are all being very cute about how they support Kenny unconditionally. Leo Varadkar remains odds on favourite to replace Kenny, number two is Simon Coveney (who speaks to more rural conservative voters who might be slightly put off by having a gay member of the liberal wing as leader) and Frances Fitzgerald as an outside middle ground candidate who's media profile has certainly shot up in the last few weeks (can't open the Irish Times in the last few days without reading about her). Oh and here's another poll for ye
|
# ? Jul 31, 2016 20:49 |
|
I'd say that Fitzgerald would be best posed to take leadership of FG. Leo seems very... Untested. Along with the fact that people only seem to like him until he opens his mouth. Can't see him doing well in a GE. Of course the Eighth would be the death of the government. Neither FF nor FG wants to touch that while in government. Forever sighing that FF are pushing up in polls. I expect them to be propped up by SF in another election, sadly.
|
# ? Jul 31, 2016 21:25 |
|
The most shocking figure in those polls is that 7% of adults think Simon Harris should be Taoiseach. A 29 year old who has never had a job other than politician. Wherefore art thou technocrat government?
|
# ? Aug 1, 2016 13:46 |
|
How hard is it for a European citizen to move to Ireland?
|
# ? Aug 14, 2016 18:43 |
|
Kurtofan posted:How hard is it for a European citizen to move to Ireland? As easy as anywhere else in the EU, usual 3 month window for seeking employment with the ability to claim unemployment benefit from your country of origin etc etc. Your biggest barrier will be usual cost of living/finding somewhere to rent if your looking at Dublin and if you're aiming at a skilled job in say the technology sector competition can be pretty fierce at times
|
# ? Aug 14, 2016 18:57 |
|
kustomkarkommando posted:As easy as anywhere else in the EU, usual 3 month window for seeking employment with the ability to claim unemployment benefit from your country of origin etc etc. I see, and is studying really expensive? I've looked up the costs for a postgraduate cursus for a EU citizen and it was very high.
|
# ? Aug 14, 2016 21:52 |
|
Kurtofan posted:I see, and is studying really expensive? I've looked up the costs for a postgraduate cursus for a EU citizen and it was very high. Yeah, postgraduate education can run you between €4,000-€10,000 a year shooting up to crazy levels if you're looking at Business or Medicine. You can apply for a Student Universal Support Ireland (SUSI) post-graduate fees grant but I think that caps out at €2,000 annually conditional on you earning under €30,000 a year.
|
# ? Aug 14, 2016 23:22 |
|
Rent levels are completely hosed in Dublin at the moment, minimum you'll pay for a three bed in and around the city centre that isn't a complete kip is around 600 pp, prolly 500/550 a bit further out. Viewings are a clusterfuck as well - been to a few and there's been like 25 people there, babies etc ... Campus accommodation would probably be worth it all things considered if you're studying.
|
# ? Aug 15, 2016 11:47 |
|
Entropy238 posted:Rent levels are completely hosed in Dublin at the moment, minimum you'll pay for a three bed in and around the city centre that isn't a complete kip is around 600 pp, prolly 500/550 a bit further out. Its more convenient, but on-campus is very pricey even by Dublin standards. €10,400 for 11 months Sept->August in UCD appears to be going the rate last year. Almost 950eur a month, not including utilities, is fairly hefty.
|
# ? Aug 15, 2016 15:10 |
|
Blut posted:Its more convenient, but on-campus is very pricey even by Dublin standards. €10,400 for 11 months Sept->August in UCD appears to be going the rate last year. Jesus Christ. God forbid that a university in Ireland should run its accommodation services for the benefit of its students rather than to make a few bob.
|
# ? Aug 15, 2016 16:36 |
|
Just don't study in Dublin, it's a shithole anyway. What are you thinking of doing?
|
# ? Aug 15, 2016 17:25 |
|
Surely most of Ireland's postgrad opportunities are in Dublin? There's Cork and Galway but I can't imagine Sligo IT has a particularly large choice of masters' programmes
|
# ? Aug 15, 2016 18:12 |
|
I was looking at postgrad offers in humanities, for instance in Limerick: a cursus in History, a cursus in languages. Edit; but really I'd love to study in an English speaking country and Ireland seems like a good choice. Kurtofan fucked around with this message at 21:06 on Aug 15, 2016 |
# ? Aug 15, 2016 20:39 |
|
You would be surprised at what you can do in the ITs these days.
|
# ? Aug 15, 2016 21:02 |
|
Entropy238 posted:Jesus Christ. God forbid that a university in Ireland should run its accommodation services for the benefit of its students rather than to make a few bob. Between rent, utilities, living costs and the ever-increasing fees I can only imagine how much debt a rural student living in Dublin these days comes out the end of a now fairly standard 4 year undergrad +1 year postgrad college experience with. 5 years of all of that must have people almost approaching American levels of student debt. Then they get to face the joy of the destroyed under 25s welfare rates if they can't get a job. It makes me rather glad to have gone to uni before the crisis.
|
# ? Aug 15, 2016 21:50 |
|
Kurtofan posted:I was looking at postgrad offers in humanities, for instance in Limerick: a cursus in History, a cursus in languages. I know some foreign folks who love studying in Limerick
|
# ? Aug 17, 2016 20:14 |
|
julian assflange posted:I know some foreign folks who love studying in Limerick My university has a partnership with the Institute of Technology Tallaght, in Tallaght,Dublin. Do you know a little about it?
|
# ? Aug 17, 2016 21:38 |
|
Apparently they had to change it from Tallaght Institute of Technology, it was also the location of hit tv show Tallafornia
|
# ? Aug 17, 2016 21:43 |
|
I thought Tallaght was merging with DIT and Blanch to form Ireland's first University of Technology at Grangegorman. Did that go ahead or did the government never pass the required legislation?
|
# ? Aug 17, 2016 22:34 |
|
Nope, DIT are in Grangegorman. They've been talking about making a Uni out of all the outlying ITs for years. Hasn't happened yet. Probably won't. Tallaght IT changed to IT Tallaght when it became clear that the acronym was TIT. Most of the ITs have done something similar.
|
# ? Aug 23, 2016 15:07 |
|
People are freaking the gently caress out over this Apple ruling but am I correct in saying that they had a setup that was paying even less than Google etc which is what prompted the investigation?
|
# ? Aug 30, 2016 11:30 |
|
I don't know off hand what Google were paying. But reports say Apple was paying 1% since 1991 which was reduced to 0.005% in 2007, that's 5000 paid in tax for every million of profit. Good thing there wasn't anything that happened after 07 where we would have needed that tax base. Marenghi fucked around with this message at 13:01 on Aug 30, 2016 |
# ? Aug 30, 2016 12:59 |
|
julian assflange posted:People are freaking the gently caress out over this Apple ruling but am I correct in saying that they had a setup that was paying even less than Google etc which is what prompted the investigation? Google uses the same income shifting structure apple uses (that's technically be banned by law now with a couple of twilight years to allow the big companies to reach new tax arrangements). The argument with the Apple case seems to rest on profit booking between internal branches of the same Irish registered company with state knowledge which the EC found to be a sweetheart deal outside the norm of the double Irish
|
# ? Aug 30, 2016 14:08 |
|
The government is protesting very loudly about the evils of this to keep our American MNCs happy but they must be rubbing their hands gleefully in private. €13bn is what, a little under 10% of the national debt (or almost 25% of the bank bailout) wiped out in one-go?
|
# ? Aug 30, 2016 16:03 |
|
Blut posted:The government is protesting very loudly about the evils of this to keep our American MNCs happy but they must be rubbing their hands gleefully in private. €13bn is what, a little under 10% of the national debt (or almost 25% of the bank bailout) wiped out in one-go? Or one year of running the HSE
|
# ? Aug 30, 2016 16:15 |
|
Some interesting cabinet level divisions about appealing the Apple ruling, Shane Ross and co not rolling over on this so easily and seem to be pressing for a recall of the Dail. What with the previous cabinet shenanigans I wonder if this could cause a bit of a falling out... The EC have clarified that there is no legal compulsion for recovered funds to be used to pay down debt, just that doing so is a long-running EC policy recommendation for Ireland and they think we should do that. Might make things a bit more interesting.
|
# ? Aug 31, 2016 20:07 |
|
Tim Cook on Morning Ireland earlier describing the relationship between Apple and Ireland as a long marriage... yup I'm pretty sure there are marriages like this but I don't know if those are conventionally functional marriages.
|
# ? Sep 1, 2016 10:29 |
|
jacksbrat posted:Tim Cook on Morning Ireland earlier describing the relationship between Apple and Ireland as a long marriage... yup I'm pretty sure there are marriages like this but I don't know if those are conventionally functional marriages. It's a pity they don't care about the actual Irish workers. I live in Cork, and have heard a poo poo ton of horror stories from working at Apple here. Edit: VVV Yeah. But south west Ireland is call centre country, but even Apple is regarded as bad among them. happyhippy fucked around with this message at 18:48 on Sep 1, 2016 |
# ? Sep 1, 2016 17:48 |
|
Are those call centre stories because all call centres are poo poo
|
# ? Sep 1, 2016 18:43 |
|
happyhippy posted:It's a pity they don't care about the actual Irish workers. Any chance of hearing one of these horror stories.
|
# ? Sep 1, 2016 21:18 |
|
happyhippy posted:Edit: VVV Yeah. But south west Ireland is call centre country, but even Apple is regarded as bad among them. Only now that Dundalk Ebay has closed
|
# ? Sep 2, 2016 01:37 |
|
Marenghi posted:But reports say Apple was paying 1% since 1991 which was reduced to 0.005% in 2007, that's 5000 paid in tax for every million of profit. It's actually €50 for every one million euros. That TD that came out and said something like "if you're a us-multinational, the government has your back", I can't imagine the most conservative politicians in other countries being able to say that without getting slaughtered. We've steadily allowed ourselves to become that country that flagellates ourselves for big business. We're perfectly happy to cycle between right/free-market econ policies and the same except with more social conservatism every election cycle, with a healthy dollop of the most useless, vote chasing independents. Nobody seems to care about anything in our lower house, our upper house has no power, we happily elect proven tax evaders and crooks. Starting to become seriously disillusioned with the political process in this country. We came out of this recession like nothing even happened and went straight back to the status quo. Emigration is becoming more attractive every day.
|
# ? Sep 2, 2016 13:24 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 07:22 |
|
You are only starting to get disillusioned now?
|
# ? Sep 2, 2016 13:55 |