Reputable Rog wrote: » Make Good Friday great again. Don't think I'll bother going to the pub now that I have a choice. Time for a campaign for Christmas Day opening.
The_Valeyard wrote: » Militant atheists are going to be fairly upset by this news. Yet another thing to complain about taken away from them.
drake70 wrote: » December 8th is a holy day when the schools are off and because of that it was a popular day to bring the kids Christmas shopping. I've been in the public service for 27 years and have never had it off except when it fell on a Saturday or Sunday. Bank time, which has now been abolished, was only a half hour per pay day.
A Little Pony wrote: » Irish people need to stop drinking, not being encouraged to drink more. One of the worst problems with the country is the drinking culture.
splinter65 wrote: » If you could get the weekend off it’d mean you’d actually have 4 days.But that’s all over now.
splinter65 wrote: » Good Friday is absolutely not a public holiday. It is a bank holiday, a big difference.
Agricola wrote: » I'm all for a secular society where religious beliefs don't impinge on what the non religious want to do with their free time, but is there anything inherently wrong with one other day in the year, along with Christmas, when people in an industry with shítty wages and work hours got time off, another family orientated day/night when people either abstain or drink their heads off at home if they so wished.
Agricola wrote: » The Good Friday drink ban is a great way of demonstrating the absolute adolescent attitude so many people have to a) drink and b) authority in general. People who are practically pioneers the other 364 days of the year, apart from Good Friday when they often ended up in alcohol induced comas so they could "stick it to the man" and "his religious oppression that keeps me from drinkin" I'm all for a secular society where religious beliefs don't impinge on what the non religious want to do with their free time, but is there anything inherently wrong with one other day in the year, along with Christmas, when people in an industry with shítty wages and work hours got time off, another family orientated day/night when people either abstain or drink their heads off at home if they so wished.
Agricola wrote: » but is there anything inherently wrong with one other day in the year, along with Christmas, when people in an industry with shítty wages and work hours got time off, another family orientated day/night when people either abstain or drink their heads off at home if they so wished.
Mebuntu wrote: » Might help out the tourists but can't see this law change making any difference to the native drinking fraternity who can't last a day without drink being available (i.e., 90% of the population) who will have already worked out solutions over all the years.
_Dara_ wrote: » Once again, with feeling: people get annual leave and do not work 364 days a years in these jobs. People can still abstain from drinking on Good Friday. From a church/state separation viewpoint, this is an important development. You say you're all for a secular society. This is a step towards achieving that. Such a small thing but so big at the same time.
Agricola wrote: » Church/state separation is all great but this is just a win for the Vintners/revenue by stealth.
Agricola wrote: » I'd rather declare Good Friday, National Dry Shíte Day and keep the status quo with none of the Catholic connotations that so excite all the a la carte atheists who probably still happened to have big church weddings!
_Dara_ wrote: » I don’t know anyone outside of public sector workers who got Good Friday off.
hynesie08 wrote: » Only day off in the year is it?