seamus wrote: » But will she find any solicitor willing to assist her file a dead duck appeal when they're unlikely to get paid?
alaimacerc wrote: » There's plenty of people rattling around -- and rattling rosaries -- with a law degree. Obviously you might see a fairly steep drop-off in quality if they're only doing it to further their personal dogmatic agenda, and not to get paid. But judging by the poor arguments made in this case, we may be there already.
aloyisious wrote: » He said her application had raised genuine issues about the system of voter registration and had contributed to restoring social cohesion after the “most divisive” referendum in the State’s history.
A significant number of people with deep religious convictions were “genuinely shocked, distressed and crestfallen” at the outcome of the referendum following a “polarising” and sometimes “bitter” campaign which set younger people against older people, he said.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Also, the young against old narrative is a crock. There was substantial support for repeal across every age group. The only age group to oppose repeal was 65+, but even there there was substantial support for repeal.
lazygal wrote: » We can't be the only couple who this happened to this year all because of the referendum.
lazygal wrote: » A lot of hidden things came out, myths were challenged, stories were told for the first time and they all voted yes without hesitation. .
Igotadose wrote: » It's not just about abortion.
....... wrote: » It was never just about abortion but the pro-lifers always just made it ONLY about abortion so they could push a false narrative that continued to endanger the lives and health of Irish women. Id didnt suit them AT ALL to talk about wanted pregnancies, hence the unbelievable push back about Savita's death and its cause, literally arguing it down to a point where all humanity was lost and a different meaning was being imposed on commonplace words just so they could insist that it wasnt related to the 8th.
lazygal wrote: » I was told by a prolife person handing out leaflets that abortion was available for rape and fatal abnormalities, and that the eighth actually provided for all the hard cases so we didn't need to change it. Blatant outright lies. I heard no such lies from anyone on the prorepeal side I spoke to or saw in the media. It was infuriating that these sorts of lies weren't challenged. The eighth amendment affects every single pregnancy in Ireland, no matter what your circumstances, women have been taken to court for refusing interventions at the very end of pregnancy or have been told their miscarriages won't be medically managed because of it.
Igotadose wrote: » It's the anecdotes, things like 'in her shoes,' and other sites that caused the repeal to be such a landslide.
aloyisious wrote: » I thought the national debate on the issue of abortion was done and dusted until I [just now] saw the Renua Ireland Ad on F/Book. I though maybe the August 23 date was from another year so I googled Renua Ireland - pillar 4 Pro Life and found it is from this month and year. Well, I was wrong. The party is alive as well. I deleted the link I posted because cos it opened onto my F/Book page. Just google Renua Ireland - pillar 4 Pro Life yourself.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Their twitter feed is pretty mental.
aloyisious wrote: » Just google Renua Ireland - pillar 4 Pro Life yourself.
Turtwig wrote: » Anyone who intends on doing this use incognito mode. Last thing you want is is pro life adds popping up everywhere
alaimacerc wrote: » Then again, anyone who hangs around the boards discussion boards is probably into a little bit of recreation shouting. In policy terms, it's bizarre. Renua were a dead duck, having tried to tack from being one-issue splitters to breathtakingly right-wing on everything else, and plausibly deniable on abortion. And been wiped out for their trouble. Abortion's now been settled, so why go back to it? To hoover up the disgruntled rosary-rattling vote, that's why. Don't have to have any prospect of changing anything; just need to try to haul in the predominant chunk of a quota.
end of the road wrote: » as we know, it isn't just catholics or religious in general, who have an issue with abortion, either full stop or AOD. even then, many people who have an issue with abortion in whichever form, would likely not vote for renua as their other policies may not represent them.
Cabaal wrote: » To be fair, their website is pretty thin on policy and even thiner on policy details about how they'd pull of anything they state is a piller. The party is effectively meaningless, they are down to renting a office in a community centre. they are registered to: Saint Joseph’s Community Centre, Frankford, Kilcormac, Co. Offalyhttp://www.kilcormac.com/services/kda/st-josephs-community-centre/
Cabaal wrote: » [...] how they'd pull of anything
Cabaal wrote: » To be fair, their website is pretty thin on policy and even thiner on policy details about how they'd pull of anything they state is a piller. The party is effectively meaningless, they are down to renting a office in a community centre.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Anyone remember the Sky News interview a couple of days before the 8th vote with Colm O'Gorman and a, to be quite frank, embarrassingly and utterly nuts No campaigner? Well... turned out she thinks she's presidential material!!! And Sarah Louise Mulligan even has it on her own Youtube channel... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tja3CkGqoYg Talk about cringeworthy!
Cabaal wrote: » That's a train wreck of an interview, she's well out of her depth when debating