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Is it just me or have SF vanished?

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 267 ✭✭overkill602


    I agree there are some who abuse the system, all systems are abused.
    Solving those abuses will go some way to solving the overall issues but won't come near doing that on their own.
    It's far too easy to start targeting sections and coming the dictator.


    Quoting the ridiculous here


    System abuse is ok then
    so solving doesn't have a priority
    and body pointing it out the obvious is a dictator



    I think i can guess your occupation your its in a circus


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,786 ✭✭✭✭maccored


    Redgirl82 wrote: »
    I wasn't debating? I asked a question. Not sure what the confusion is here. I did state a number of times on my post I asked a question. If you ask a question normally you get an answer. I didn't get one so I have come to the conclusion that Sinn Fein record in the North is poor. We can have another two pages from Francie again today and end up exactly in the same place

    you are on a thread talking about the north and then admit that since you couldnt find what you needed on google that you thought francie was talking bollocks.

    go away with that rubbish. if you have any notion you'll see the two parties hands are tied when it comes to financing the north. they can only try to divvy up what westminister gives them.


  • Posts: 6,246 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    markodaly wrote: »
    In a word yes.

    Land is more expensive
    Way more regulations and environmental considerations to go through
    Planning permissions is a minefield
    We dont tax existing homeowners the rates we used to back then.
    EU Competition law also has something to say about all this
    All new houses, by law now need to be A2 minium. That does not come cheap.

    Nevermind that we have much more immigration today and the need for higher density, which pisses off existing home owners.

    It's like saying a car build in 2020 is the same as the car built-in 1960. Sure its a chassis, an enginee and 4 four wheels, but we all know that cars today are a hell of a lot smarter and safer than those cars built 60 years ago. Chalk and cheese.

    All this seems circular,they said xy and z couldnt be done with healthcare

    Coronavirus come about and show to me,where theres the political will to do a thing and it'll get done


    Idk what journalist said it,but they pointed out fg were landlord party and ff developer party....they are too compromised to sort this issue imo


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,929 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    blanch152 wrote: »
    The poster is correct, they didn't happen, or other people were responsible.

    Westminister improved women's rights.
    Eveentually after years of pressure and blocs being put in place by fundamentalist Unionism.
    Westminister brought in SSM.
    Again, you are ignoring for your own petty fear of the boogeymen reasons, the data presented by another poster which shows how many times this legislation was blocked by our old friends the fundamentalist Unionists.
    There is no standalone Irish language act.
    This from the same guy who taunts that the IRA didn't get the British out. Juvenile and bitter to the last.
    Everything that was achieved for nationalists in NI took time and brave and persistent people.
    They brought down Stormont for three years for nothing, while nurses didn't get their pay increase.
    Yes...sometimes people have to take extreme measures to advance. And what the electorate have now after the hiatus is more rather than less with regard to SSM and Women's rights and the Irish language.
    The FG government negotiated for Ireland on Brexit.
    Yes, FG changed from Enda's 'no special status' for NI and drew plaudits for standing for all the people of the island..exactly the solution that SF proposed from the beginning...an all island solution if Britain left the EU.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,929 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    markodaly wrote: »
    You didn't mention them because the stats are horrible.

    The North does worse in all facets when it comes to the big-ticket items.

    Education is worse than the south, the economy is in a hole, health is arguably in a worse crisis than the south and unemployment were always higher than in the south..... and to top it all off, the entire region is addicted to money from London as if they are a heroin dealer.

    The region cannot sustain itself, London won't keep bailing it out forever and we in the South are not going to be too happy footing the bill anytime soon.
    But yea, SF sorted out the flag issue.



    The ultimate get-out clause, its always someone elses fault.

    Well, blanch got schooled on who is responsible for some stuff as did Leo.

    I presented fact checks on it and blanch went silent.

    I fully agree, that the 'region' cannot sustain itself either economically or socially because it has been created artificially and the issues caused by that have never sorted themselves out and show signs of never sorting themselves out.
    If you are correct on health and education then that will make unifying the island all the more attractive to those who want better. Somethings aren't fixable because the root problems of why they are how they are, aren't fixable.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,252 ✭✭✭Redgirl82


    Im well past 16,kid....looking at building myself in 2-3 years,(well past hearing about heat recoveries etc )

    Im not at fault for you not being aware of what A2 spec amounts to and demanding council houses be built to it


    They arent building any of these higher spec housing though??,

    the world likely has never been better in last 200 years for CO2 with this lockdown......lads thinking putting underfloor heating into council housrs is gonna save the planet are pure and utter deluded

    Of course you are

    I am fully aware of the requirements for high rated houses. Just said I never mentioned under floor heating.

    The other statement is another baffling one to be honest, you do understand how Co2 works?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,929 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Quoting the ridiculous here


    System abuse is ok then
    so solving doesn't have a priority
    and body pointing it out the obvious is a dictator



    I think i can guess your occupation your its in a circus

    Where did I say 'system abuse is ok'?

    Correct...I didn't say it.
    I said solving 'system abuse' will not fix the problem or go any were near doing that.


  • Posts: 6,246 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Redgirl82 wrote: »
    Of course you are

    I am fully aware of the requirements for high rated houses. Just said I never mentioned under floor heating.

    The other statement is another baffling one to be honest, you do understand how Co2 works?

    Ive never yet,set foot in an A2 rated house,that deosnt have underfloor heating,have you??


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,338 ✭✭✭✭jm08


    Societaly as well, long gone are the days the state or councils could hire on workers for f'all, build a shanty with a shed at the bottom of the garden for a toilet.
    Our own expectations what is acceptable housing is a major factor.
    Housing hasn't just increased in line with inflation, standards and expectations have gone through the roof (pun intended).
    Slums were everywhere, in every town the length an breadth of Ireland, this was housing, a roof over your head, you weren't homeless but you lived in a hovel.


    Some of those houses that you claim were hovels are going for 300/400K now in places like Ballyfermot, Donnycarney, Crumlin and elsewhere. Dublin Corporation in the early 80s did some really good housing schemes such as those red brick houses on City Quay. In my own country area, the co. council houses that were built may have had an outside toilet then, and no running water, but it got people with a roof over their heads and those people were able to buy extend and improve them which they did over the years. Some of the houses who had large enough gardens (usually about half an acre) now have second houses on them, built by the children of the original owners at no cost to the state.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,338 ✭✭✭✭jm08


    markodaly wrote: »
    It was cheaper and easier to build two up two down houses on cheap land very much closer to the city centre. Good luck getting that type of housing built now a days.

    Building houses is not the same as it was 60 years ago, and my point was people like yourself harking back to some "golden age' where problems were fixed by easy slogans.


    All those red bricked houses around Dublin were built in the 80s by Dublin Corporation, just before the policy changed to hand all responsibility to FF's friends in the Galway Races Tent.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,338 ✭✭✭✭jm08


    Tnx.
    But they won't except simple modest houses.
    There's a three bed council house up the road from me, detached on its own site, rural, idle for two years. They've been unable to find a Tennant who will accept it since the previous owners have now passed away. It was built in the eighties. Grand little modest cottage.


    There isn't a housing crisis in rural Ireland. There is in Dublin though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,330 ✭✭✭Bishop of hope


    jm08 wrote: »
    Some of those houses that you claim were hovels are going for 300/400K now in places like Ballyfermot, Donnycarney, Crumlin and elsewhere. Dublin Corporation in the early 80s did some really good housing schemes such as those red brick houses on City Quay. In my own country area, the co. council houses that were built may have had an outside toilet then, and no running water, but it got people with a roof over their heads and those people were able to buy extend and improve them which they did over the years. Some of the houses who had large enough gardens (usually about half an acre) now have second houses on them, built by the children of the original owners at no cost to the state.

    That's a fair point, I know of loads of these too.
    But that's not the way today's expecting tenants look at them, which was my point really.
    Firstly even specifications for acceptable housing has gone mad.
    And if any Govt or council decided to build just livable housing, with a bathroom and running water and a reasonable way of heating, because of up to date specs it is still very costly to provide this housing.
    If a Govt decided to build housing to the same standards as the 80's for instance, they would be criticised right left and center.
    And a lot of tenants won't accept housing unless it's in a certain area.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,338 ✭✭✭✭jm08


    markodaly wrote: »
    In a word yes.

    Land is more expensive The State has large banks of land. Use that.
    Way more regulations and environmental considerations to go through: If the State/Councils are building the houses, all those issues will be easier to deal with.
    Planning permissions is a minefield: Should not be an issue for the State since they make the rules.
    We dont tax existing homeowners the rates we used to back then: We didn't pay wastage rates back then either (or water rates).
    EU Competition law also has something to say about all this: Nope. Social housing won't be an issue with EU Competition law.
    All new houses, by law now need to be A2 minium. That does not come cheap: What are the additional costs?


    It's like saying a car build in 2020 is the same as the car built-in 1960. Sure its a chassis, an enginee and 4 four wheels, but we all know that cars today are a hell of a lot smarter and safer than those cars built 60 years ago. Chalk and cheese.


    That isn't true. Some great housebuilding done up to about the 80s. Have a look at some of the houses built by the Iveagh Trust in the early part of the century (around Glasnevin for example).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,323 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    All this seems circular,they said xy and z couldnt be done with healthcare


    Now, that is the ultimate circular argument. Pointing to Coronovirus as way to build houses... :p


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,338 ✭✭✭✭jm08


    blanch152 wrote: »
    The poster is correct, they didn't happen, or other people were responsible.

    Westminister improved women's rights.
    Westminister brought in SSM.
    There is no standalone Irish language act.
    They brought down Stormont for three years for nothing, while nurses didn't get their pay increase.
    The FG government negotiated for Ireland on Brexit.

    Nothing on that list was an achievement of Sinn Fein.


    Are you aware that the DUP, using the Petition of Concern, blocked SSM in Stormont on 5 occasions in as many years, despite (bar the TUV), everyone else supported it?


    How would FG get around something like that in the Dail, say for example if Aontu/Mattie Fox/Ronan Mullan conservatives had a veto on legislation?



    Are you aware that the Labour MP who introduced the legislation in Westminister is from Armagh and his father was a Sinn Fein Councillor (and former mayor of Newry) up to recently (now retired)?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,323 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    jm08 wrote: »
    [/B]

    That isn't true. Some great housebuilding done up to about the 80s. Have a look at some of the houses built by the Iveagh Trust in the early part of the century (around Glasnevin for example).

    The 80's? When we had way more people leaving the country then arriving, which resulted in no pressure on housing at all?
    The 80's? Which was 40 years ago at this stage?
    The 80's? Right after the 77 elections when FF abolished rates?

    Again, lets not hark back to golden era nostalgia.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,431 ✭✭✭Mortelaro


    jm08 wrote: »



    Are you aware that the Labour MP who introduced the legislation in Westminister is from Armagh and his father was a Sinn Fein Councillor (and former mayor of Newry) up to recently (now retired)?
    I wish other Sinn fein people would do what he did then and cross his fingers behind his back whilst pledging an oath to the Queen taking his seat in Westminster
    If the SF mps had done the same,there would be no Brexit


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,929 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    jm08 wrote: »
    Are you aware that the DUP, using the Petition of Concern, blocked SSM in Stormont on 5 occasions in as many years, despite (bar the TUV), everyone else supported it?


    How would FG get around something like that in the Dail, say for example if Aontu/Mattie Fox/Ronan Mullan conservatives had a veto on legislation?



    Are you aware that the Labour MP who introduced the legislation in Westminister is from Armagh and his father was a Sinn Fein Councillor (and former mayor of Newry) up to recently (now retired)?

    This.

    Unionists used the Petition Of Concern as a continuation of their veto.

    Complete head in the sand stuff from guess who...Mark and blanch.

    The Unionist veto has been removed and now their Petition Of Concern abuses are to be reformed so that they cannot block rights on religious or cultural grounds..


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,269 ✭✭✭Runaways


    Mortelaro wrote: »
    I wish other Sinn fein people would do what he did then and cross his fingers behind his back whilst pledging an oath to the Queen taking his seat in Westminster
    If the SF mps had done the same,there would be no Brexit

    That’s pure bollocks
    There isn’t one MP in parliament who would vote the same way as Sinn Fein on anything even Brexit

    And why would SF go into Parliament to stop Brexit when Brexit is bringing about their ultimate aim which is a united Ireland

    None of you FG sycophants seem to have an actual clue about anything it’s gas


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,935 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    Well, blanch got schooled on who is responsible for some stuff as did Leo.

    I presented fact checks on it and blanch went silent.

    I fully agree, that the 'region' cannot sustain itself either economically or socially because it has been created artificially and the issues caused by that have never sorted themselves out and show signs of never sorting themselves out.
    If you are correct on health and education then that will make unifying the island all the more attractive to those who want better. Somethings aren't fixable because the root problems of why they are how they are, aren't fixable.


    Sorry that I can't be on these boards 24/7 to counter all the nonsense that is posted, but I have a real life.

    I will have a look and see if there is anything substantive worth answering.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,935 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    40% of those in arrears are paying...if you start evicting them you get nothing only the costs of evicting them and then you create more homeless people.

    So, the 33m figure starts diminishing very quickly...lets say you manage to get 20m....so to meet the SF proposed spend, you only have to get another 5.475 billion approx.

    A child would know this is not a solution.

    This is an example of the cognitive dissonance at the heart of Sinn Fein policy.

    On the one hand we are told that the expenditure will be repaid in the form of rent, on the other we are told that the colossal amount of unpaid rent won't make a dint in the cost of the expenditure.

    It does not add up.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,431 ✭✭✭Mortelaro


    Runaways wrote: »
    That’s pure bollocks
    There isn’t one MP in parliament who would vote the same way as Sinn Fein on anything even Brexit

    And why would SF go into Parliament to stop Brexit when Brexit is bringing about their ultimate aim which is a united Ireland

    None of you FG sycophants seem to have an actual clue about anything it’s gas
    Ah,so the previous parliament would vote for Brexit if SF turned up
    I See
    I fear it's you hasn't a clue

    So SF are also in favour of Brexit, I see...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,338 ✭✭✭✭jm08


    markodaly wrote: »
    The 80's? When we had way more people leaving the country then arriving, which resulted in no pressure on housing at all?[


    I stayed. It was more because social housing was still being built by the State/Councils.


    The 80's? Which was 40 years ago at this stage?
    And?


    The 80's? Right after the 77 elections when FF abolished rates?


    My first general election to vote in. Even I knew then that abolishing road tax was just stupid.


    Again, lets not hark back to golden era nostalgia.
    I'm not a bit nostalgic for the amount of tax I had to pay to cover these extravagances of Fianna Fail. I had a reasonably good PAYE job and several times having done a bit of overtime, 50% of my salary went on tax. I also remember on my first mortgage that the interest rate was 18% and could fluctuate by +/- 100 euro a month over the term of mortgage.


    No, I'm not nostalgic at all for that period in time. Four companies that I worked for during that period went bust.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,338 ✭✭✭✭jm08


    Mortelaro wrote: »
    I wish other Sinn fein people would do what he did then and cross his fingers behind his back whilst pledging an oath to the Queen taking his seat in Westminster
    If the SF mps had done the same,there would be no Brexit


    Conor McGinn lives in England (by choice presumably) and is a Labour MP whose Head of State is the Queen.



    If Sinn Fein introduced that Bill in WM, no one would have supported it. Do you not know anything?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,929 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    blanch152 wrote: »
    This is an example of the cognitive dissonance at the heart of Sinn Fein policy.

    On the one hand we are told that the expenditure will be repaid in the form of rent, on the other we are told that the colossal amount of unpaid rent won't make a dint in the cost of the expenditure.

    It does not add up.



    Getting money slower than you expect is better than not getting it at all. Simple business that does add up.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,929 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Mortelaro wrote: »
    Ah,so the previous parliament would vote for Brexit if SF turned up
    I See
    I fear it's you hasn't a clue

    So SF are also in favour of Brexit, I see...

    This approach to principles and core values - we can drop them to take advantage of a given situation - is what has the power swap were they are, down to it's lowest ever share of the vote.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,269 ✭✭✭Runaways


    blanch152 wrote: »
    Sorry that I can't be on these boards 24/7 to counter all the nonsense that is posted, but I have a real life.

    I will have a look and see if there is anything substantive worth answering.

    Lol

    Thats funny

    What do you just have a boards wide notification set up on your phone or something every time Sinn Feins mentioned you’re there


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,692 ✭✭✭Fionn1952


    blanch152 wrote: »
    This is an example of the cognitive dissonance at the heart of Sinn Fein policy.

    On the one hand we are told that the expenditure will be repaid in the form of rent, on the other we are told that the colossal amount of unpaid rent won't make a dint in the cost of the expenditure.

    It does not add up.

    Not to defend SF economic policy, as I see some massive holes in it myself, but the above isn't necessarily a contradiction if the amount of rental non-compliance is a small percentage of rental revenue. Your use of the word, 'colossal' doesn't make it so.

    The big headline number is that there is €33m of council rent outstanding to Dublin City council as of the start of 2020. The bit less parroted is that this is an increase of €4m on the 2019 figures.

    This was the biggest increase in years, so even with these bad year numbers, we're looking at saving €4m a year by totally wiping out non compliance in Dublin, if we ignore the costs of enforcing compliance. €4m p/a is about 0.15% of the housing budget for 2020, so let's not pretend the arrears are what is preventing housing from being built.

    Not to defend non-payment of the rent you and I already heavily subsidise, on that I fully support garnishing benefits or wages at source.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,431 ✭✭✭Mortelaro


    jm08 wrote: »
    Conor McGinn lives in England (by choice presumably) and is a Labour MP whose Head of State is the Queen.



    If Sinn Fein introduced that Bill in WM, no one would have supported it. Do you not know anything?

    SF could have voted in any number of votes in Westminster including one for a referendum
    Many of these would have passed
    I do know that


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,431 ✭✭✭Mortelaro


    This approach to principles and core values - we can drop them to take advantage of a given situation - is what has the power swap were they are, down to it's lowest ever share of the vote.

    I'd believe you,only SF wouldn't turn down FF if they offered a coalition would they
    So your premise is full of holes


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