realitykeeper wrote: It is well known that the nuns were a frugal and thrifty group of women who knew how to stretch a pound, fair play to them, they were great when it came to running hospitals and so on. No super bugs in the hospitals back then, the hand scrubber and carbolic soap saw to that.
NIMAN wrote: Bit of a strange connection there. But you have form.
Peregrinus wrote: » I'm gonna go out on a limb here and say that debt levels are not causally connected with religiosity, either positively or negatively.
kneemos wrote: » The national dept was practically nothing before the bust,thirty billion or something. The current dept would be that bit less if the nuns and others paid their bills.
realitykeeper wrote: » It was enormous before 2007, it is just much more enormous now. Even at the peak of the celtic tiger, the government only had budget surpluses of about a billion because it squandered so much on quangos. The nuns would not have wasted money on quangos, they would have done away with the dole and given work to the idle. Factories would have hum to the sound of industry and happy workers would have recited the rosary in the fields, the factories and in the board rooms. Ireland would have competed successfully with China to stave off imports. * Crucially, wealth manifests where you combine hard work with frugality. The Ireland of today has neither of these attributes, it has debt and it is about to pay dearly for that debt.
realitykeeper wrote: » ............. The consequences of the enormous national debt will be far more dire than almost anyone can comprehend .......
realitykeeper wrote: » .................. The next recession will be the worst in human history and I believe it will start before the end of this decade..............
Hitman3000 wrote: » Easy stretch a pound when the women they held in the laundries were essentially slave labour, not forgetting the profit from the sale of babies to the US .
Billy86 wrote: » Debt to GDP in 2007 was about 20% of what it was in 1987 (and at 20-25% may have been the lowest in the states' history, though finding pretty 1980 figures online seems borderline impossible). I'd be inclined to say correlation does not equal causation, but you're lacking any correlation to begin with.
realitykeeper wrote: » At least the women in the laundries got free bed and board until they were ready to move on.
realitykeeper wrote: » Yet in 2008, Ireland had to call in the IMF. This obsession with GDP is totally erroneous because GDP is not recession proof. GDP in Ireland is heavily dependent on foreign multinationals based here. Ireland`s public debt per capita is third highest in the world, so is Ireland`s private debt.
Cabaal wrote: » Can we look forward to another thread next week about how the rise of mobile phone usage and the decline of landlines is linked to the decline of Catholic Church? And another about how the increase of access to Internet is linked to decline of Church? :pac:
smacl wrote: » So do prisoners in Mountjoy. While many women in these laundries were there against their own free will, unlike prisoners in Mountjoy they hadn't committed any crime to get there yet were treated as little more than slaves. If you're seriously advocating there was any good being done by incarcerating innocent women in this fashion I would suggest you have a long hard look at your moral compass because from where I'm sitting it seems totally banjaxed. Most survivor accounts also show that the nuns behaved disgracefully during this period.
realitykeeper wrote: » I read in the Irish Times recently that the increase in Ireland`s national debt really began in earnest in the 1980s and it occurred to me that this trend coincided with the decline in Church attendance, the authority of the church, the numbers of catholics etc. It is well known that the nuns were a frugal and thrifty group of women who knew how to stretch a pound, fair play to them, they were great when it came to running hospitals and so on. No super bugs in the hospitals back then, the hand scrubber and carbolic soap saw to that. The consequences of the enormous national debt will be far more dire than almost anyone can comprehend and that being the case, would Ireland have been better off it it turned the running of the country over to the nuns these past 4 decades? I know a lot of people think the nuns did a bad job running the laundries, but if Ireland faces serious financial difficulty in future, it seems to me that the reopening of the laundrys and workhouses generally will be a necessity as will the debtors prisons. Furthermore, if these institutions are run by non nuns, I believe they will not be as good as when they were run by nuns. All this reality could have been avoided if the country spent more time listening to the nuns and less to the liberal media. The next recession will be the worst in human history and I believe it will start before the end of this decade. Ireland needs to be run by the nuns as a matter of absolute urgency. Am I wrong?
Billy86 wrote: » Second, GDP to debt makes infinitely more sense than looking at inflation in isolation. There is a reason why it is easier for the US or China to take on €1mn debt than it is for Vanuatu or Nauru. I'm not sure I should even be explaining this to be honest, but it's the same reason why Apple or Google can take on and manage €1mn debt more easily than FX Buckley Butchers across the road from me would manage with the same €1mn debt.
EdgeCase wrote: » It's down to the availability of credit and that's global. Irish banks were able to tap the derivatives markets and effectively sell broken up packets debts as investment vehicles on the financial market. Then if you add in Ireland's membership of the Eurozone, Irish banks were given far too much credit based on confidence in the Euro, rather than the underlying Irish economy at the time.
realitykeeper wrote: » Not sure how any of this is relevant to the point I made. As for inflation, did I even mention that?
Augeo wrote: » The nuns knew how to boil a spud, scrub a floor ... I'm not sure if running banks would have been their cup of tea.
realitykeeper wrote: » We will will have to agree to disagree on much of the above but the point I am making is that the women who worked in the Magdalene laundries were not charged for their bed and board. Employees of the state are paid with borrowed money so ultimately they and everyone else will have to repay that money with interest. Why work for money you have to repay? The nuns would have balanced the books, not imposed a debt that will bury us.