2018

Yearly Archives

  • Posted in:

    430,689 not 85,799

    We need to face up to what mature countries call housing need by Rory Hearne   There is general acceptance that the housing crisis has reached unacceptable levels. However, the government’s current policies are inadequate to address the crisis because, firstly, they underestimate the scale of the crisis. Secondly, they deny the overall housing policy […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    McWilliams regurgitates

    But it’s only his own old articles by Emma Gilleece David McWilliams has been a household name since 1999 when he invented the term Celtic Tiger. Except he didn’t. Later that year he conceded it was an ex-pat City of London-based analyst called Kevin Gardiner who used the term in a Morgan Stanley report published […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    It was about McCabe not O’Sullivan and Fitzgerald

    Fine Gael learns the wrong lessons from the Charleton Tribunal report by Frank Connolly   The almost hysterical reaction of her former colleagues to the finding by Justice Peter Charleton that Frances Fitzgerald had done nothing to warrant her resignation from the cabinet in November 2017 is little short of mind-boggling. Instead of focusing on […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    EU’re in the Line of Fire

    EU Digital Copyright Directive aims to reward content providers but overreaches on ordinary web users By Laurence O’Bryan   Our world is experiencing a cathartic period of change, thanks to the internet and social media. The President of the United States uses Twitter to rally popular support among his base, including people who believe, as he […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    The Secret Barrister, reviewed by David Langwallner

      The rage of London at the moment is a self-consciously anonymous blog called “The secret barrister” which is an exposé of the profession of a criminal barrister and indeed of the criminal justice system written by a junior counsel specialising in criminal law. This blog aims to provide a fly-on-the-wall view of the criminal […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    THE DUP SKELETONS IN THERESA MAY’S CLOSET

    SIR ANTHONY BLUNT, BRITAIN AND MI5’S ARCH TRAITOR, WORMED HIS WAY BACK INTO THE GOOD BOOKS OF BRITISH INTELLIGENCE BY PROVIDING THEM WITH DETAILS OF A PAEDOPHILE NETWORK IN IRELAND OF WHICH HE WAS A MEMBER AND WHICH THEY LATER EXPLOITED FOR BLACKMAIL AND DESTABILISATION PURPOSES.  THERESA MAY YET CLINGS TO POWER WITH THE AID […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    Nada from Nama

    The revelation that the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) has failed to disclose “relevant material” to the Commission of Investigation into its controversial sale of its 11.5 billion (£1.24 million) Project Eagle loan portfolio in the North in 2014 will not come as any surprise. Many NAMA watchers have been wondering how the Commission, headed by […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    Mr Eddie Sheehy and Village

      Mr Eddie Sheehy and Village   The Press Council of Ireland has decided to uphold an appeal by Mr Eddie Sheehy that two statements complained about in an article published by Village in March 2018 were inaccurate and therefore a breach of Principle 1 of the Code of Practice of the Press Council of […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    Law is boring

    by David Langwallner   I-am-a-lawyer. I’ve said it. You may feel that positions me on the level of an amoeba or vermin but I believe I am ethical, professionally competent, creative and that I and many of my colleagues often do good things fighting on behalf of the voiceless and the victimised. But I must […]

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    Boris Johnson

    Born “Alex” in Manhattan in 1964; son of largely absentee father, Stanley Johnson who later became a Tory MEP and leading champion of EU environmentalism

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    Trump, making China Great again

    China has used Kim Jong-un to distract and bamboozle Donald Trump while in the background it has outmanoeuvred US economic and strategic interests in Asia. Beijing is now in pole position to dominate the South China Seas and the $5 trillion worth of trade which passes through it annually. Japan, the US and the UK will be the big losers

    Loading

    Read more

  • Posted in:

    Equivocal Evelyn

    Met Eireann’s Evelyn Cusack has been slower than the World Meteorological Organisation to attribute current severe weather to climate change

    Loading

    Read more