Pherekydes wrote: » I also wonder why they use the British flag, rather than the English?
recedite wrote: » What.. naked woman or 9 week old foetus, which is it you don't like looking at?
volchitsa wrote: » You're not suggesting a half naked woman breast feeding is a common sight at which nobody would bat an eye, are you?
recedite wrote: » I've seen the word EIRE marked out with stones a couple of times on sea cliffs around the coast. Done in the 1939-1945 era to ward off RAF and Luftwaffe planes apparently.
recedite wrote: » I've seen the word EIRE marked out with stones a couple of times on sea cliffs around the coast. Done in the 1939-1945 era to ward off RAF and Luftwaffe planes apparently. The word has good international recognition for distinguishing NI from RoI, even if we don't use it that way ourselves.
seamus wrote: » An Leithris
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » An bhfuil cead agam.... Bloody hell. 14 years of daily Irish instruction and 30 more living here and I've never heard that word in my life.
seamus wrote: » ..if you see "Eire" used in anti-choice material that's otherwise written in English, then it's been produced or paid for by American shills and isn't coming from Irish groups.
recedite wrote: » Quite possibly, although according to what you were saying earlier, it would be quite correct to use the word if the placard was produced in Ireland. Being the first language of the country and all.
aloyisious wrote: » I'm left wondering if it might be worth pushing for the inclusion in the apparent wording in the referendum about the Oireachtas having freedom to legislate the words "that the Oireachras members are legally obliged to have a law permitting abortion in the law books, outside those contained in POLDPA, within six (6) months in line with said constitutional amendment" seeing as how some of the politicians need a push or two towards doing so. Call this standing on moral grounds what it is, a big lie to avoid legislating.
aloyisious wrote: » The Chief Justice, before closing this morning's session, stated that the hearing on the 21st will be heard on the basis of immigration rights and nothing else.
recedite wrote: » Could be tricky to make that work. I seem to remember them saying the x case judgement would apply to that one case, and no other. Didn't happen though.
One of the Supreme Court judges who decided the landmark X case on abortion has said the judgment is “moot” and may not be binding on Government. Hugh O’Flaherty said he stood over the decision of the five-judge court in 1992 and stressed that the Government was obliged to legislate to give effect to the 1983 amendment to the constitution, which expressly equated the right to life of the mother and the unborn. But he said the X case itself was moot because the 14-year-old girl at the centre of the drama miscarried and did not have an abortion. The case was “peculiar to its own particular facts”, he said.... They’re all talking about the X case, but in effect the X case is moot because the girl didn’t have an abortion. She had a miscarriage,” he told The Irish Times. “To say the X case is some giant talisman hanging over us is wrong...
aloyisious wrote: » If the High Court decision had been made totally moot and of no standing in law by the miscarriage, the SC would have had no need to overturn it so his quotes on that SC decision could be, IMO, unfortunately misleading.
aloyisious wrote: » This seems to indicate that the SC will take a narrower approach in deciding what the law is concerning immigrants childrens rights - if the child is born here - than the Pro-Life camapign may think wise.
recedite wrote: » That's just it though, if an unborn immigrant is "a child", then an unborn native must be a child also. The court will do more than try to confine it to immigrant's rights; they will try to confine the judgement to just this one case. But as I was saying, that may not actually work out in practice.
Peregrinus wrote: » How can you have an unborn native? It's a contradiction in terms.
aloyisious wrote: » Nice try with the "reverse angle" argument of: if an unborn immigrant is "a child", then an unborn native must be a child also. Judge Humphrey would probably applaud it, if he is "Pro-Life".
mrkiscool2 wrote: » If they got the SC to concede that the fetus of the immigrant had rights as a citizen due to the weird way law defines the unborn in Ireland, they could apply said rights to a fetus of a citizen in Ireland and therefore strike down any referendum as it would be unconstitutional. Super sneaky but tactically brilliant. Glad the SC wanted nothing to do with that.