Paul Smeenus wrote: » Whatever else about what sort of paper they may be, that's some front page from the Irish Examiner.
sydthebeat wrote: » Pic??
Paul Smeenus wrote: » Modern Ireland is a remarkably liberal, modern, progressive nation. Enviably so. But I think folk in their twenties and thirties tend to act like repression, poverty and Catholic conservatism was a lot further in the past than it actually was. Had I got married as soon as I was allowed, and lived down South, I would not, then, have been able to get a divorce - it was prohibited in the Constitution. I'm not yet forty five.
Zzippy wrote: » You'd have to find a woman to put up with you Paul. Or these days, even a man. You could even divorce him if it didn't work out...
Paul Smeenus wrote: » Hey! There's veritable queues of Irish womanhood (and indeed, manhood) lining up for the chance to encounter my raw sexual magnetism first-hand. I have been described, by trained medical personnel, as a "nuclear explosion of horny".
molloyjh wrote: » I was just waiting for "goddamn sexual tyrannosaurus" there. Missed opportunity Paul. Although the above did produce a chuckle....
MaybeMaybe wrote: » https://pbs.twimg.com/media/ErkBNBjXEAE1Xcs?format=jpg&name=large
OldRio wrote: » As one gets older and looks back at the past I realise the utter power the Catholic Church had over us. Indoctrination began whilst we were still in the womb. From birth to death. Evil manipulation. It was like Communist China, Stalinist Russia and Nazism all rolled into one. 'The Holy Catholic Church' Evil. Pure evil. 'Tell me your sins' 'original sin'
Squidgy Black wrote: » Not gonna lie Paul, all I got from that is "I'm old".
Paul Smeenus wrote: » Modern Ireland is a remarkably liberal, modern, progressive nation. Enviably so. But I think folk in their twenties and thirties tend to act like repression, poverty and Catholic conservatism was a lot further in the past than it actually was.
Buer wrote: » Whilst in chronological terms it's certainly not that long ago, the era of when the church had such a hold understandably seems like a completely different age to some. It's unrecognisable from the society we now live in and it's very hard for people to grasp how close they were to living in it. From a visual perspective, if you look back at Reeling in the Years on RTE, there's an incredible change that took place in about 5-7 years. If I was to look at footage from 2012 on television now, I could look at it and it really wouldn't seem very different from today. If you look at footage from 1992 and from 2000, however....it looks like a completely different era.Here's the episode from 1992 Watch the opening 2 minutes and you could honestly believe it's from the 1970s judging by the quality of footage, fashion etc. The fact that those opening 2 minutes also demonstrate the grasp of the church (interviewing a bishop about unemployment and the infamous X Case) goes hand in hand with that. The world became a vastly smaller place in the late 90s through technology and the advent of the Celtic Tiger changed the behaviour and mentality of us as a population forerver. It's hard for younger people to identify with the world that was in any respect prior to those times.
Deleted User wrote: » On a separate note it looks like republicans might actually turn on trump bar those in the party most exposed by their actions the last few months and those who fully embraced him. Loosing twitter has really neutered him, you still hear about him but very little from him. Speaks volumes of the power twitter wield.
errlloyd wrote: » Dems shouldn't impeach him. He's gonna be a massive problem for the Republican party for the next 4 years. Let them deal with it.
irishbucsfan wrote: » I hope they impeach him and it destroys his fundraising ability. He is stealing the money of these poor fools
Podge_irl wrote: » I am feeling significantly dumber for having watched this so far. I genuinely thought I would be inured to this level of brazen hypocrisy, but it turns out I am not.
Deleted User wrote: » Their two party system is disgraceful
Deleted User wrote: » It's astonishing how much Ireland has changed in such a short period of time and I think it's cultural impact is fascinating in many ways. I think you are right in that the current generation missed out on a huge transition in how we live, think, eat and interact but I'm glad my kids will grow up in a secular and more accepting world. I agree that things really took off in the 90s. I would say that joining the EU was probably the catalyst for it all but it was a remarkable shift in public life and impacted all aspects of society.