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Will the Irish State collapse?

2

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,619 ✭✭✭Bob_Harris


    darkman2 wrote: »
    Are you worried about the immediate future that Ireland could be a failed state? Bare in mind we are talking Zimbabwe or Somalia here - a collapse into lawlessness and anarchy.

    African countries have a long history of descending into anarchy and lawlessness, so you can't compare a country like Ireland to Zimbabwe or Somalia.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 435 ✭✭onq


    Sorry, forgot to ask. Where did you get your degree in economics from? I'll post the following article, from Peter Sutherland. He's a man with a wealth of experience and knowledge. He was an EU Commissioner, Director General of the WTO and is now the Chairman of BP and Goldman Sachs International. If there's a person who knows what he's talking about, I'd put my money on him.

    <snip excellent article>

    Of course though you'll probably brush all of what he said off and continue to believe the Irish State will collapse. I mean obviously you know more about economics than the Chairman of 2 of the biggest companies in the world

    Good ol' Suds.

    I think I'll frame that masterpiece of feelgood financialism [to coin a phrase].
    No doubt we'll see more from that source in due course [umm, bit too poetic here for my liking...]

    ONQ.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,803 ✭✭✭El Siglo


    I don't think we'll be anything like Zimbabwe, but I wouldn't surprise if we go the way of this crowd. If we're not sorted out by 2012 then I can see IMF Intervention, after that we're in big trouble not just economically but socially and politically etc... the last thing we need is the IMF, so no matter how 'painful' as our politicians put it the 'market correction' will be, IMF taking over the books will cripple us for an untold number of years. To be fair though what is happening now, happened in almost the exact same way as in the 1980s, we'll get over it but it will be at least a decade. The only thing to do now is:
    (1) Emigrate to anywhere not in as a bad a situation,
    (2) Education, if you've a degree do a postgrad etc...
    To be fair, number 1 is the best option at present, not unless everyone wants to face the prospect of paying 60% of their wage on tax.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 8,632 ✭✭✭darkman2


    Sorry, forgot to ask. Where did you get your degree in economics from? I'll post the following article, from Peter Sutherland. He's a man with a wealth of experience and knowledge. He was an EU Commissioner, Director General of the WTO and is now the Chairman of BP and Goldman Sachs International. If there's a person who knows what he's talking about, I'd put my money on him.


    Of course though you'll probably brush all of what he said off and continue to believe the Irish State will collapse. I mean obviously you know more about economics than the Chairman of 2 of the biggest companies in the world

    wow! that's a pretty impressive bubble your living in there. The most worrying thing about the responses on this thread is the level of delusion that still exists about our situation. I don't think most Irish people get it yet. They have not grasped the full reality of the situation. The country is nearing financial collapse. But it is more then just the economics. Ireland has other self perpetuated problems. There is not one single important institution left in Ireland that the people can trust. The banks, politicians and the church were all found to be corrupted. The anger among the population is going to grow (most likely it will be taken out on immigrants). The correction required is so large that your going to see civil unrest within the next 6 months as sure as night follows day.

    The situation is completely impossible. Our country is destroyed. I don't think this country will maintain it's independent status for much longer. The tragedy is the Irish people have done this to themselves. Fianna Fáil on 4 other occasions brought this country to the brink of collapse - they were found always to be corrupt gombeen men. What do the Irish people do - they keep voting them back in. 25% of people in the last local elections voted for this mob. Their people who, if FF killed children, they would still vote for them. Look at B Flynn in Mayo. The Irish people have been found incapable of self governance. It is patently obvious. FF nearly destroyed the country before. This time they have succeeded.

    I fear for the people, such as yourself, who are still deluded about the situation.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 865 ✭✭✭Purple Gorilla


    As has been pointed out, there's a difference between a government collapsing and a state collapsing. The government will more than likely collapse yes, but the economy will not.

    Do you think international investors fear the collapse of the state? NTMA Bond Auctions would seem to tell a different tale with our Government bonds being constantly oversubscribed.

    If you were to make this thread back in Jan/Feb/Mar then people would have more than likely agreed but the situation is no longer as bad as it was then.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,619 ✭✭✭Bob_Harris


    darkman2 wrote: »
    The country is nearing financial collapse. But it is more then just the economics. Ireland has other self perpetuated problems. There is not one single important institution left in Ireland that the people can trust. The banks, politicians and the church were all found to be corrupted. The anger among the population is going to grow (most likely it will be taken out on immigrants). The correction required is so large that your going to see civil unrest within the next 6 months as sure as night follows day.

    Yeah because without the bank manager, the politician and the priest we're are just lost souls wondering around our green island with no guidance and no future.

    Through the "boom" things were never as good as people made out, and during the "recession" things were never as bad as people make out. Exaggeration makes for good headlines and allows people have something else to talk about other than the weather, which again in Ireland is not as bad as people try to make out it is.

    As for civil unrest, well the Irish are just too apathetic to for that to happen.

    Your vision of apocalypse will not happen.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,151 ✭✭✭✭ejmaztec


    As has been pointed out, there's a difference between a government collapsing and a state collapsing. The government will more than likely collapse yes, but the economy will not.

    Do you think international investors fear the collapse of the state? NTMA Bond Auctions would seem to tell a different tale with our Government bonds being constantly oversubscribed.

    If you were to make this thread back in Jan/Feb/Mar then people would have more than likely agreed but the situation is no longer as bad as it was then.

    Didn't AIB and BOI get "pushed" into buying some of these?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,711 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    Bob_Harris wrote: »
    Yeah because without the bank manager, the politician and the priest we're are just lost souls wondering around our green island with no guidance and no future.

    Not entierly untrue, although I know you mean it sarcastically. People in Ireland (people in most of the English speaking world) are way too lazy to do research and make decisions for themselves. How else do you explain the popularity of taboid newspapers?

    "Someone turn on something - I'm starting to think here!" - Homer Simpson.

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 8,632 ✭✭✭darkman2



    If you were to make this thread back in Jan/Feb/Mar then people would have more than likely agreed but the situation is no longer as bad as it was then.

    I disagree. It's even worse. The deficit is still widening. The ECB are already propping the state up by buying Irish bonds so the demand is not painting an accurate picture. And even if there was not complete financial collapse we are looking at a lost decade and more similar to Japan.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 27,944 ✭✭✭✭4zn76tysfajdxp


    Rebelheart wrote: »
    So, does anybody here actually like poor Caoimhín? :)

    I do. Check out my profile, he's even one of my friends.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 8,632 ✭✭✭darkman2


    Bob_Harris wrote: »

    Your vision of apocalypse will not happen.

    An awful lot of people will be getting very desperate in the coming months. Just wait till after the December budget! We have much tougher times ahead as a country. Hopefully the worst won't happen - but it can happen.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    darkman2 wrote: »
    The situation is completely impossible. Our country is destroyed. I don't think this country will maintain it's independent status for much longer. The tragedy is the Irish people have done this to themselves. Fianna Fáil on 4 other occasions brought this country to the brink of collapse - they were found always to be corrupt gombeen men. What do the Irish people do - they keep voting them back in. 25% of people in the last local elections voted for this mob. Their people who, if FF killed children, they would still vote for them. Look at B Flynn in Mayo. The Irish people have been found incapable of self governance. It is patently obvious. FF nearly destroyed the country before. This time they have succeeded.

    Four occasions you say? Must have missed the memo on this one. Do tell.
    Even if this is AH there are some seriously specious ramblings here without an awful lot of evidence to offer it any support.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 8,632 ✭✭✭darkman2


    is_that_so wrote: »
    Four occasions you say? Must have missed the memo on this one. Do tell.
    Even if this is AH there are some seriously specious ramblings here without an awful lot of evidence to offer it any support.


    1930's (stupid Dev "economic war" with Britain)

    1961 (Whitaker tells FF the country cannot maintain independence for much longer the way the economy is being managed)

    1970's ....pointless, needless recession

    1980's ....lost decade


    What do they all have in common - those recessions I hear you ask that all brought the country to it's knees? Two words - Fianna Fáil......


    BTW not saying the opposition would be much good either.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    darkman2 wrote: »
    1930's (stupid Dev "economic war" with Britain)

    1961 (Whitaker tells FF the country cannot maintain independence for much longer the way the economy is being managed)

    1970's ....pointless, needless recession

    1980's ....lost decade


    What do they all have in common - those recessions I hear you ask that all brought the country to it's knees? Two words - Fianna Fáil......


    BTW not saying the opposition would be much good either.

    This has all the look of a cunningly disguised "I hatez FF" rant. You seem to be pinning every economic problems we've ever had on one party.

    Whitaker was right. We had an agrarian, backward economy. Whitaker, Lemass et al ushered in the golden age of modern Irish politics and the foundation for our modern economy during the sixties.

    The 1970s was mostly the result of the oil crisis and not peculiar to Ireland. Britain had an even worse time of it. Incidentally we had a FG/Labour coalition from 1973-77.

    The only one I'd agree with is the 1980s mostly because it is true, but not exclusively the fault of FF. Common sense only once reared its head in the 80s , with the Tallaght Strategy and Mac The Knife. But the country wasn't destroyed as you describe it any more than we have been destroyed now. It's a recession, which in our case has been exacerbated by local activities.

    Our current mess is a mixture of government decision-making, greedy people and a collectively apolitical public who now want to blame the same people who gave them the money to spend.

    The budget in December will be the worst one in many years but not the end of the world. It certainly will have nothing on the hairshirt budgets of the 70s and 80s. Most of what is likely to happen has been in the public domain for a while anyway.

    I can't help feeling that there are some people who just have an obsessive hankering for a meltdown and have no real idea what it means.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,803 ✭✭✭El Siglo


    The big problem, and major deviation between this recession and the last, is not the public sector debts, over spending, greed, incompitent politicians etc... these are constants in our system. The big difference is personal borrowing, whatever about our government borrowing, the borrowing by Joe Bloggs and Jane Doe is a serious problem, with thousands of jobs going every week, it's very easy to blame politicians (and rightly so) for the mess, but the problem is that everyone is in serious debt, and you can ask every one above the age of 40, and they will tell you the same thing; 'you never borrowed big back in the day'. I wouldn't go out and say to people 'it's your fault you're broke now', you can't look at it that way, borrowing from the general public was necessary for everything because of the rate of inflation over the last decade and cost of living increases etc... The big problem is:
    Unemployed + massive debt + low social welfare benefits = desperate people and this is something we can't neglect. I don't think we'll have a financial meltdown and subsequent 'glorious workers revolution' but I do think a more insidious and horrible result of this economic crisis will be more crime, more drugs and more broken families as opposed anything else. If anything that will collapse it will be the intangible aspects of Irish society as opposed to political economy, we'll lose our spirit before our TDs and bank managers.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,077 ✭✭✭Rebelheart


    I do. Check out my profile, he's even one of my friends.

    hehe Joy Tall Showcase. I was wondering "What sort of an odd auld bastard is this?" when I saw that but then I read your profile and found the Caoimhín in question.

    So, does anybody actually like the Kevin Myers who was born in Leicester, England, Great Britain, in 1947, a subject of Her Majesty the Queen of England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Jamaica, Barbados, The Bahamas, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, The Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize and St Kitts and Nevis, Head of the Commonwealth, Supreme Governor of the Church of England, Duke of Normandy, Duke of Lancaster (yes, Duke, not Duchess) Lord of Mann and Paramount Chief of Fiji? (Ah the modesty, humility and moderation of that entire culture will be the death of me.)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,634 ✭✭✭jenno86


    Pardon my french, but what a load of bólocks.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,213 ✭✭✭Mrmoe


    I hope it does, nothing like starting anew again.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,803 ✭✭✭El Siglo


    Rebelheart wrote: »
    hehe Frada. I was wondering "What sort of an odd auld bastard is this?" when I saw that but then I read your profile and found the Caoimhín in question.

    So, does anybody actually like the Kevin Myers who was born in Leicester, England, Great Britain, in 1947, a subject of Her Majesty the Queen of England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Jamaica, Barbados, The Bahamas, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, The Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize and St Kitts and Nevis, Head of the Commonwealth, Supreme Governor of the Church of England, Duke of Normandy, Duke of Lancaster (yes, Duke, not Duchess) Lord of Mann and Paramount Chief of Fiji? (Ah the modesty, humility and moderation of that entire culture will be the death of me.)

    Ah no, Idi Amin's title was class so it was, now this is a title:
    "His Excellency President for Life, Field Marshal Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin, VC, DSO, MC, Lord of All the Beasts of the Earth and Fishes of the Sea, and Conqueror of the British Empire in Africa in General and Uganda in Particular.":D


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    How exactly is the huge level of personal debt that has built up ( + interest :eek:) going to be paid back?...If people are losing their jobs, social welfare to be cut, more taxes this December

    This is the elephant in the room - its not going to just go away.

    The **** is yet to hit the fan here


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,992 ✭✭✭✭partyatmygaff


    Rebelheart wrote: »
    hehe Frada. I was wondering "What sort of an odd auld bastard is this?" when I saw that but then I read your profile and found the Caoimhín in question.

    So, does anybody actually like the Kevin Myers who was born in Leicester, England, Great Britain, in 1947, a subject of Her Majesty the Queen of England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Jamaica, Barbados, The Bahamas, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, The Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize and St Kitts and Nevis, Head of the Commonwealth, Supreme Governor of the Church of England, Duke of Normandy, Duke of Lancaster (yes, Duke, not Duchess) Lord of Mann and Paramount Chief of Fiji? (Ah the modesty, humility and moderation of that entire culture will be the death of me.)
    And supposedly Kevin Myers is responsible for the actions of the British monarchy from hundreds of years ago and the size of the British Empire. These countries are no longer under command of the Queen, the majority atleast but nevertheless, In this day and age anyone who still views the entire British nation and all those from Britain as evil and unlikeable is unfathomable.

    Careful now Rebelheart, your speaking english, the language of the demon state known as the UK.
    :rolleyes:

    Cop on all that Anti-British republicanism and stuff has no place in 2009


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 865 ✭✭✭Purple Gorilla


    salonfire wrote: »
    How exactly is the huge level of personal debt that has built up ( + interest :eek:) going to be paid back?...If people are losing their jobs, social welfare to be cut, more taxes this December

    This is the elephant in the room - its not going to just go away.

    The **** is yet to hit the fan here
    Well last month (Or June? Not sure) was the first month in a while where the Irish actually repaid more debt than they borrowed I believe :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,624 ✭✭✭Blackjack


    And supposedly Kevin Myers is responsible for the actions of the British monarchy from hundreds of years ago and the size of the British Empire. These countries are no longer under command of the Queen, the majority atleast but nevertheless, In this day and age anyone who still views the entire British nation and all those from Britain as evil and unlikeable is unfathomable.

    Careful now Rebelheart, your speaking english, the language of the demon state known as the UK.
    :rolleyes:

    Cop on all that Anti-British republicanism and stuff has no place in 2009

    ??


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,323 ✭✭✭Hitchhiker's Guide to...


    JupiterKid wrote: »
    Anyone who loves this country should never vote FF ever again.

    lol. The other parties wanted even more public spending according to their manifestos in the last two elections and proposed nothing to reduce house prices. Did the other parties propose any law bills on bank lending over the last ten years? How would they have helped us avoid a recession?

    Each political party would have been equally likely to have led us into this recession imo.

    I won't be voting for FF at the next election, but that doesn't mean i have even the slightest bit more respect for any of the other political parties.

    I definitely don't think we should single out FF, without pointing out the multitude of flaws of the opposition parties.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,400 ✭✭✭Dartz


    strongr wrote:

    No, if the country isnt sorted out in the next few years the eu will goosestep in.

    Fixed if for ya.

    .

    i've got my browncoat ready.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,692 ✭✭✭✭OPENROAD


    lol. The other parties wanted even more public spending according to their manifestos in the last two elections and proposed nothing to reduce house prices. Did the other parties propose any law bills on bank lending over the last ten years? How would they have helped us avoid a recession?

    Each political party would have been equally likely to have led us into this recession imo.

    I won't be voting for FF at the next election, but that doesn't mean i have even the slightest bit more respect for any of the other political parties.

    I definitely don't think we should single out FF, without pointing out the multitude of flaws of the opposition parties.

    You make some very valid points, however all this has happened on FF watch so the opposition are not responsible for the situation we are in.

    As I said you do make some valid points re the opposition, one only has to look back at the last election to see that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,151 ✭✭✭✭ejmaztec


    And supposedly Kevin Myers is responsible for the actions of the British monarchy from hundreds of years ago and the size of the British Empire. These countries are no longer under command of the Queen, the majority atleast but nevertheless, In this day and age anyone who still views the entire British nation and all those from Britain as evil and unlikeable is unfathomable.

    Careful now Rebelheart, your speaking english, the language of the demon state known as the UK.
    :rolleyes:

    Cop on all that Anti-British republicanism and stuff has no place in 2009

    Even in these days of Ipods, and other such fanciful things, there are people still using those old-fangled record machine contraptions where the needles get stuck.:eek:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 600 ✭✭✭Rev. BlueJeans


    The one thing many people are overlooking here is how deep in the mire we are.

    Look at it this way-the rest of Europe is or will begin to emerge from a recessionary state before the year is out. As will the US and the rest of the world.

    The price of fossil juice is what, about 70 bucks now? Let it hit 140, and couple that with a few points of a rise in the ECB rate.

    Many people that are borderline now mortgage wise will be goosed, and we'll still have the debt on our backs from the vote buying double effers (and the people who were quite happy to lap it up without a thought for the future, or any care for inefficiency and capitulation to the grabbing masses.

    Stephen is it you call this thing? He'll be here for a while yet I'm afraid.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 865 ✭✭✭Purple Gorilla


    The ECB will not be raising interest rates anytime soon. They do not want to do anything that will upset France and Germany's recent minimal growth and especially while most of the rest of the EU is still in recession, they will not be raising rates. I also doubt we'll see oil hitting $140 a barrel anytime soon.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,077 ✭✭✭Rebelheart


    Careful now Rebelheart, your speaking english, the language of the demon state known as the UK.
    :rolleyes:

    Ahem. You're. And to think I went to the tech! Jaysas.

    And supposedly Kevin Myers is responsible for the actions of the British monarchy from hundreds of years ago and the size of the British Empire.

    You're not understanding English if you came to that conclusion. Re-read my post, slowly and carefully. Ah, see?
    These countries are no longer under command of the Queen, the majority atleast but nevertheless,

    There's no 'nevertheless' about it. The official title of Her Majesty (the one and only, sorry Beatrice of the Netherlands!) is as above. It should be assumed that I know what I'm talking about considering I omitted former titles such as 'Queen of France' and 'Queen of Ireland', held by some of the current monarch's predecessors.

    In this day and age anyone who still views the entire British nation and all those from Britain as evil and unlikeable is unfathomable.


    strawman2.jpg


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 595 ✭✭✭the_dark_side


    Brian Lenihan was recently heard saying (off the record) that the single biggest mistake that the government did in the last year was to pump 7 billion into Anglo Irish Bank in a bid to refloat them; they just hadnt realised how huge Anglo's problems were, and that is 7 billion down the drain... now the government have try and grab it off the dole budget to make up the loss.

    Ireland has gone down the swany about 2 years ago. IMF will be in after another 7 or 8 months, watch and see


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,558 ✭✭✭netwhizkid


    I personally believe Ireland is finished and is a failed state, I cannot comprehend how we are allowed to remain in the Euro and the ECB should kick us out of the EURO and let us revert to An Punt Nua and see it devalue to rock bottom, Ireland has actually escaped the worst of things yet by being locked into the EURO, when Europes (Germanys) economy starts going right again and they will rise the interest rates high to suit then it will be anarchy here.

    I can see a Civil War on Irish soil before 2015 resulting from various issues, I think sometime between 2011 to 2012 the new FG government will resign office after the savage cuts of the IMF which will decimate our Police and Army forces. FF will then go back into Government to fill the power vacuum as FG says this is not our mess we are not sorting it out. The people of Ireland now facing a 40% unemployment rate with 70% PAYE taxes and €50 a week dole will then revolt. Dail Eireann will burn and Fianna Failers, builders and developers around Ireland will be targeted and killed mercilessly. Ireland is doomed and I for one welcome they day that Bertie Ahern is made to pay for his crimes of economic treason.

    The old Irish Republic and constitution will rise and the counties of Tyrone and Fermanagh will be seceeded from the UK to form part of a new 28 County Irish Republic. Fianna Fail has killed the Republic of Ireland but the new Irish Republic will rise from the ashes.

    The country is ruined :-/


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 865 ✭✭✭Purple Gorilla


    netwhizkid wrote: »
    I personally believe Ireland is finished and is a failed state, I cannot comprehend how we are allowed to remain in the Euro and the ECB should kick us out of the EURO and let us revert to An Punt Nua and see it devalue to rock bottom, Ireland has actually escaped the worst of things yet by being locked into the EURO, when Europes (Germanys) economy starts going right again and they will rise the interest rates high to suit then it will be anarchy here.

    I can see a Civil War on Irish soil before 2015 resulting from various issues, I think sometime between 2011 to 2012 the new FG government will resign office after the savage cuts of the IMF which will decimate our Police and Army forces. FF will then go back into Government to fill the power vacuum as FG says this is not our mess we are not sorting it out. The people of Ireland now facing a 40% unemployment rate with 70% PAYE taxes and €50 a week dole will then revolt. Dail Eireann will burn and Fianna Failers, builders and developers around Ireland will be targeted and killed mercilessly. Ireland is doomed and I for one welcome they day that Bertie Ahern is made to pay for his crimes of economic treason.

    The old Irish Republic and constitution will rise and the counties of Tyrone and Fermanagh will be seceeded from the UK to form part of a new 28 County Irish Republic. Fianna Fail has killed the Republic of Ireland but the new Irish Republic will rise from the ashes.

    The country is ruined :-/
    Is this an excerpt from some fiction novel or something? :confused:

    If we're a failed state, I'd hate to see Spain


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,789 ✭✭✭✭ScumLord


    The whole world is doomed to failure as far as I can see. We have economy's that need constant growth or else they're failing, machines taking over allot of jobs to keep up with consumer demand. The only way out of that is to introduce more bureaucracy so that everything is top heavy with management, I really don't see the point in trying to keep the current way of life afloat when it's so flawed. We're just going around in circles getting nowhere and the only people it protects are the people abusing the system for their own gain.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,077 ✭✭✭Rebelheart


    netwhizkid wrote: »
    I personally believe Ireland is finished and is a failed state, I cannot comprehend how we are allowed to remain in the Euro and the ECB should kick us out of the EURO and let us revert to An Punt Nua and see it devalue to rock bottom, Ireland has actually escaped the worst of things yet by being locked into the EURO, when Europes (Germanys) economy starts going right again and they will rise the interest rates high to suit then it will be anarchy here.

    I can see a Civil War on Irish soil before 2015 resulting from various issues, I think sometime between 2011 to 2012 the new FG government will resign office after the savage cuts of the IMF which will decimate our Police and Army forces. FF will then go back into Government to fill the power vacuum as FG says this is not our mess we are not sorting it out. The people of Ireland now facing a 40% unemployment rate with 70% PAYE taxes and €50 a week dole will then revolt. Dail Eireann will burn and Fianna Failers, builders and developers around Ireland will be targeted and killed mercilessly. Ireland is doomed and I for one welcome they day that Bertie Ahern is made to pay for his crimes of economic treason.

    The old Irish Republic and constitution will rise and the counties of Tyrone and Fermanagh will be seceeded from the UK to form part of a new 28 County Irish Republic. Fianna Fail has killed the Republic of Ireland but the new Irish Republic will rise from the ashes.

    The country is ruined :-/


    One of the more interesting posts I've read on Boards.ie, that's for sure. Conor Cruise O'Brien, if he were around, would probably have a lot to say about it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,185 ✭✭✭asdasd


    ireland is not going to fall into anarchy. Far from it. The Irish State is remarkably resiliant, far more than most European countries. America is in a low grade cold civil war most of the time with the Far right and Left ranting past each other on "mainstream" news.

    Ireland on the other hand has:

    1) Taken a 10% cut in private pay on average.
    2) Increased it's exports during a huge drop in world trade ( this year).
    3) Reduced the pay of it's public employees across the board. More to come.
    4) Has not dumbed down it's education system.

    There has as yet not been a riot. The French would be buring down the Bastille at this stage.

    Yes we went too Free market. yes, the politicians are crap. In general though, there is enough talent in Ireland to come back fairly quickly. neither Finland, nor iceland, nor Japan have seen the "State collapse", now have they? All are remarkably stable. And nor will we have a lost decade, the big fall in the first year of a recession can be benefical in the long run, as there is spare capacity when things get going. Japan lost it's decades ( really two) because it did not actually take that much of a hit - unemployment was kept artifically low.

    BTW AIB and BOI are trading at about 2 euro now, up from a few pence in March. The market believes in the future.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,711 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    netwhizkid wrote: »
    I personally believe Ireland is finished and is a failed state, I cannot comprehend how we are allowed to remain in the Euro and the ECB should kick us out of the EURO and let us revert to An Punt Nua and see it devalue to rock bottom, Ireland has actually escaped the worst of things yet by being locked into the EURO, when Europes (Germanys) economy starts going right again and they will rise the interest rates high to suit then it will be anarchy here.

    I can see a Civil War on Irish soil before 2015 resulting from various issues, I think sometime between 2011 to 2012 the new FG government will resign office after the savage cuts of the IMF which will decimate our Police and Army forces. FF will then go back into Government to fill the power vacuum as FG says this is not our mess we are not sorting it out. The people of Ireland now facing a 40% unemployment rate with 70% PAYE taxes and €50 a week dole will then revolt. Dail Eireann will burn and Fianna Failers, builders and developers around Ireland will be targeted and killed mercilessly. Ireland is doomed and I for one welcome they day that Bertie Ahern is made to pay for his crimes of economic treason.

    The old Irish Republic and constitution will rise and the counties of Tyrone and Fermanagh will be seceeded from the UK to form part of a new 28 County Irish Republic. Fianna Fail has killed the Republic of Ireland but the new Irish Republic will rise from the ashes.

    The country is ruined :-/

    Is this why you are encouraging people to vote no to Lisobon on your sig?

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 865 ✭✭✭Purple Gorilla


    asdasd wrote: »
    ireland is not going to fall into anarchy. Far from it. The Irish State is remarkably resiliant, far more than most European countries. America is in a low grade cold civil war most of the time with the Far right and Left ranting past each other on "mainstream" news.

    Ireland on the other hand has:

    1) Taken a 10% cut in private pay on average.
    2) Increased it's exports during a huge drop in world trade ( this year).
    3) Reduced the pay of it's public employees across the board. More to come.
    4) Has not dumbed down it's education system.

    There has as yet not been a riot. The French would be buring down the Bastille at this stage.

    Yes we went too Free market. yes, the politicians are crap. In general though, there is enough talent in Ireland to come back fairly quickly. neither Finland, nor iceland, nor Japan have seen the "State collapse", now have they? All are remarkably stable. And nor will we have a lost decade, the big fall in the first year of a recession can be benefical in the long run, as there is spare capacity when things get going. Japan lost it's decades ( really two) because it did not actually take that much of a hit - unemployment was kept artifically low.

    BTW AIB and BOI are trading at about 2 euro now, up from a few pence in March. The market believes in the future.
    ^^
    Sense


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,624 ✭✭✭Blackjack


    netwhizkid wrote: »
    I personally believe Ireland is finished and is a failed state, I cannot comprehend how we are allowed to remain in the Euro and the ECB should kick us out of the EURO and let us revert to An Punt Nua and see it devalue to rock bottom, Ireland has actually escaped the worst of things yet by being locked into the EURO, when Europes (Germanys) economy starts going right again and they will rise the interest rates high to suit then it will be anarchy here.

    I can see a Civil War on Irish soil before 2015 resulting from various issues, I think sometime between 2011 to 2012 the new FG government will resign office after the savage cuts of the IMF which will decimate our Police and Army forces. FF will then go back into Government to fill the power vacuum as FG says this is not our mess we are not sorting it out. The people of Ireland now facing a 40% unemployment rate with 70% PAYE taxes and €50 a week dole will then revolt. Dail Eireann will burn and Fianna Failers, builders and developers around Ireland will be targeted and killed mercilessly. Ireland is doomed and I for one welcome they day that Bertie Ahern is made to pay for his crimes of economic treason.

    The old Irish Republic and constitution will rise and the counties of Tyrone and Fermanagh will be seceeded from the UK to form part of a new 28 County Irish Republic. Fianna Fail has killed the Republic of Ireland but the new Irish Republic will rise from the ashes.

    The country is ruined :-/

    Time to run for the hills, eh?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,013 ✭✭✭leitrim lad


    yip the story about the irish state is abit like the titanic , we got half way there and hit an ice berg called anglo ,and it brought us down in the middle of the atlantic,

    if only poor old dev could see our country now and what he faught for being sold to the germans for half nothing ,by a barrister and a solicitor,

    i wou7ldnt think he would approve at all


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,692 ✭✭✭✭OPENROAD


    ^^
    Sense

    The fact that the public finances are getting worse is not a major worry.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 27,252 ✭✭✭✭stovelid


    is_that_so wrote: »
    Kevin Myers as credible social commentator are not words that go together. Mr Myers has always had his own drum to bang and even at his best was nothing more than just clever and faintly amusing. I suspect that writing An Irishman's Diary gave him an ego as big as that other "intellectual giant" Fintan O'Toole and the belief that what he says matters. Since his move to eh greener pastures his output has got steadily worse as he succumbs to that disease of being a grumpy old git who used to be famous and once was even good.
    This is also the silly season when real news is thin on the ground. RTE's second story yesterday was about the great granny and her progeny.

    I suspect some posting here have no idea what a state collapse means. Even with the state of our economy at present we are nowhere near anything like that. Financially we are in a very bad way if look at the numbers but expressed as a percentage the situation is far less serious than some other countries. Italy for example has debt of over 100% of GDP, far worse than ours. Spain has nearly 18% unemployment and they're in as bad a situation as we are but they'll survive as we will.

    /Sadly puts rocket launchers, face-paint and reference copy of Beyond Thunderdome back in the attic.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 361 ✭✭teddy_303


    FF have been the defining political party since the birth of the free state. Whatever any other party has or has not done, is an irrelevance in my opinion. The fact that these 2nd income politicians , who seek an exploitable workforce for their cheap sh*t shops, factory's, and associated workplaces, want the general public to have to burn themselves out earning an inadequate living makes me sick. Charlie Haughey telling the public they were living beyond their means, while he fleeced the state of millions, while wearing a new 2,000 pound shirt each day, to throw it in the bin rather than wash it, epitimoses everything those hipocrites stand for. Why would anybody say they like FF, let alone vote for these corrupt money grabbers, I do not understand, unless they are one of them. :mad::mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:.

    If those crooks lived in any decent progressive country, they would face imprisonment, and rightly so. Not the people who have to work for a living, and cxannot payback loans who lost their jobs because of these bums.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,185 ✭✭✭asdasd


    Do FF own all the factories? Who knew. Certainly the generation of FF since haughey - mostly a Dublin based mafia is corrupt. However they did produce some good ones in the past, introduced most of the welfare State, free education, land redistribution.

    People vote for FF in kind of the same way that the English working class vote for Labour, both practice a form of clientalism - but people are greatful when they get goodies, or have historically got goodies - even though most parties are not really working class anymore. My grandma, for instance, vote FG all her life until haughey brought in Free travel.

    But yes they presided over the two worst governments in the State.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 28,789 ✭✭✭✭ScumLord


    teddy_303 wrote: »
    FF have been the defining political party since the birth of the free state. Whatever any other party has or has not done, is an irrelevance in my opinion. The fact that these 2nd income politicians , who seek an exploitable workforce for their cheap sh*t shops, factory's, and associated workplaces, want the general public to have to burn themselves out earning an inadequate living makes me sick.
    Ireland is not cheap and I don't mean that in the overpriced way. Our factories are run to fairly high international standards, we do have highly skilled workers it's just high quality isn't appreciated on the world stage anymore all that matters now is cheap.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,730 ✭✭✭✭entropi


    darkman2 wrote: »
    Why? How did I offend this boardsie - seems I have offended most at this stage - come on - why? I could be Kevin Myers you know;)
    Hey amacachi, the OP wants to know why they are on ignore...:pac:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 361 ✭✭teddy_303


    OK then. what % of FF candidates are business owners? maybe thats a better place to start. how many of them lick their lips at the idea of a cheap exploitable work force? How many get paid twice the national industrial average wage as a 2nd income, while claiming equal if not better holidays than primary school teachers? Bums.

    Bums. Bums. Bums.Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums.Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums. Bums.

    Ignore their electorate, please them selves, line their pockets,
    fcck the people. Prosecute CJ while Bertie fleeces, blame Biffo while Bertie disappears, prosecute Bertie while biffo lies, same old story, same old, same old. Enjoy the AGM FF member. You are not fooling everyone and never will. :mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:.

    Revolution time people. The media say things to gauge apathy, Revolt for god sake, there is no other answer! Revolt!
    Until you won't stand for it anymore, they will keep pissing down our backs and keep telling us it raining. Enough!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 421 ✭✭procure11


    darkman2 wrote: »
    Very interesting discussion on Newstalk today with Kevin Myers. He said our State faces complete societal and political collapse. Hard to argue with tbh. Have you an exit strategy for the upcoming collapse? Ireland could end up literally third world with starvation and poverty for the majority. Are we facing this collapse into anarchy do you think? Are you worried about the immediate future that Ireland could be a failed state? Bare in mind we are talking Zimbabwe or Somalia here - a collapse into lawlessness and anarchy. Spending 60 billion - taking in 30 - seems inevitable tbh and I don't know whether Irish people realise the potential armegeddon that is going to occur yet...

    Well I think you could be accused of over-dramatizing about the state of the nation...dont get me wrong the current state of affairs is not very encouraging but what the Country does not need are the kind of analysis above but we should facing the problems proactively and consisely.

    What made me laugh the most was the illiterate comparison to Zimbabwe/Somalia...have you or Kevin ever been there or do you honestly know anything about those countries??...I doubt it.Ireland has great challenges ahead of her but comparing her to those is simply atrousious.

    My honest 2 cents..there is certainly light at the end of the tunnel!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 45,433 ✭✭✭✭thomond2006


    The Irish State collapses a little anytime when IRA ****bags Sinn Fein receive a vote.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,185 ✭✭✭asdasd


    Revolution time people. The media say things to gauge apathy, Revolt for god sake, there is no other answer! Revolt!

    Revolt! Resist!! Revolt!! Its like that horrible time I dated an anarchist. Who wasnt even kinky. Wench.

    I dont know but I dont think that most FF politicans are Factory owners. We dont really have a ruling class of capitalists, since we import capital ( and anyway share owning is diffuse these days). The statistics are out there but I would guess they are teachers, barristers, professional politicans, farmers with a few other upper professionals thrown in. Very few private sector workers, or capitalists in fact. All parties are the same.

    I'd like to see a party with normal people - office workers etc.


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