Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all! We have been experiencing an issue on site where threads have been missing the latest postings. The platform host Vanilla are working on this issue. A workaround that has been used by some is to navigate back from 1 to 10+ pages to re-sync the thread and this will then show the latest posts. Thanks, Mike.
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

Who is Ireland's worst journalist?

123457

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 326 ✭✭MyLove4Satan


    Do you also believe Gemmas claim that the Northern Ireland Troubles were a staged event?




    No. I disagree with a lot of what she says. I hate her Catholic Revivalism with a passion, but I refused to exist within a simple polemic that we discount every opinion and statement a person might make based on the ones we do not like.



    The Lockdown - at this stage is an abomination - and the agenda it services is politicians and senior civil servants intoxicated on protocol and bureaucracy to the point whereby they have lost the run of themselves and the best the Irish media can do is cheer-lead them while distracting the public consciousness for the billions of people the world over who are not in lockdown and are not all dead.


  • Registered Users Posts: 124 ✭✭clytemnestra


    Thank you for posting this. It exposes the exaggerated claim in Clytemnestra's post.

    And quiver in indignation all you like but I did not "downplay" his crime. I don't know what part of the word "reprehensible" you chose to misunderstand.

    You downplayed his crimes when you referred to his victim as a young woman. She was a child.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,846 ✭✭✭Economics101


    Strange how some journalists, like the curate's egg, are good in parts. For example Fintan O'Toole: good theatre critic, very good on the beef tribunal years ago, and brilliant with his Brexit pieces, especially in the Guardian.

    However when it comes to the health service and equality-related issues he reverts to Dave Spart mode.


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 6,543 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sheep Shagger


    Have said it before....Conor Pope.

    Are people as stupid as he writes for 'consuner affairs'

    You know what he will be writing about next week based on his tweets his week - less than average and now he gets TV air time as a so called 'expert'.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,452 ✭✭✭✭AndrewJRenko


    No. I disagree with a lot of what she says. I hate her Catholic Revivalism with a passion, but I refused to exist within a simple polemic that we discount every opinion and statement a person might make based on the ones we do not like.



    The Lockdown - at this stage is an abomination - and the agenda it services is politicians and senior civil servants intoxicated on protocol and bureaucracy to the point whereby they have lost the run of themselves and the best the Irish media can do is cheer-lead them while distracting the public consciousness for the billions of people the world over who are not in lockdown and are not all dead.

    How specifically does the lockdown benefit politicians and senior civil servants?


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,023 ✭✭✭✭EmmetSpiceland


    How specifically does the lockdown benefit politicians and senior civil servants?

    It’s all about “control”, A. If you can’t see that then you should try switching to bottled water.

    “It is not blood that makes you Irish but a willingness to be part of the Irish nation” - Thomas Davis



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,800 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    Terry Prone....

    Something quite ‘off’ about that one... no interest in the counter views of any other individual... like a blogger rather then a journalist.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,359 ✭✭✭RabbleRouser2k


    Strumms wrote: »
    Terry Prone....

    Something quite ‘off’ about that one... no interest in the counter views of any other individual... like a blogger rather then a journalist.

    She has a permanent brain injury, from a car accident years ago.
    She was also left with serious facial injuries, and had to get extensive surgery to correct it, dental implants too because her teeth were knocked out.

    I think she's most definitely an 'odd' individual, especially many of the things she has said. But some of that I, I wonder how much of it is tied into her brain injury.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,800 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    She has a permanent brain injury, from a car accident years ago.
    She was also left with serious facial injuries, and had to get extensive surgery to correct it, dental implants too because her teeth were knocked out.

    I think she's most definitely an 'odd' individual, especially many of the things she has said. But some of that I, I wonder how much of it is tied into her brain injury.

    Impossible to know, you’d need to be a psychologist I’m guessing to suss all that out..

    You’d wonder though what the editor at times must be saying.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,122 ✭✭✭BeerWolf


    All of TheJournal.ie's ... they copy/paste everything.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,359 ✭✭✭RabbleRouser2k


    BeerWolf wrote: »
    All of TheJournal.ie's ... they copy/paste everything.

    They're practically dead right now.

    Those 'clickbait' sites have a shelf life, and The Journal's been trimming it's crew over the last few years.

    I mean, if Buzzfeed, Huffpo, and others are letting staff go, despite being a larger organisation, then you just know The Journal is not gonna last much more.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,339 ✭✭✭The One Doctor


    They're practically dead right now.

    Those 'clickbait' sites have a shelf life, and The Journal's been trimming it's crew over the last few years.

    I mean, if Buzzfeed, Huffpo, and others are letting staff go, despite being a larger organisation, then you just know The Journal is not gonna last much more.

    If The Journal dies, Boards will die too. Media is dying all over the world, good riddance.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,359 ✭✭✭RabbleRouser2k


    If The Journal dies, Boards will die too. Media is dying all over the world, good riddance.

    There's a difference between media and forums.

    Boards isn't a digital media journalistic site.

    But notice how quickly the 'digital media' sites bottomed out? Buzzfeed, Huffpost, DailyEdge, Joe.ie etc... all reliant on clicks, and then later clickbait.
    Many were told that 'print would die'... yet the decline of digital media was far quicker than print media.


  • Registered Users Posts: 296 ✭✭jack747


    Des Cahill. I’d say he’s not sound either.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    jack747 wrote: »
    Des Cahill. I’d say he’s not sound either.
    I'd say he's a terrible drip. Has big 'Glory Days' energy about him. You know the way you'd be meeting him in a roadside bar and he'd be going in and you'd be going out, and he''d snort "here, stay back, have a few drinks" but all he'd keep talking about is old Cuala GAA games, glory days.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,503 ✭✭✭✭Mad_maxx


    Journalism is very poor in this country, groupthink dominates


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 6,543 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sheep Shagger


    The UK based 'Dublin Live' that is actually owned by the Mirror group.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,261 ✭✭✭Hangdogroad


    The UK based 'Dublin Live' that is actually owned by the Mirror group.

    They also own Cork Beo. Complete gash "news" site that relies on copy and paste jobs.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,717 ✭✭✭YFlyer


    The guy with Jemma.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,025 ✭✭✭3DataModem


    This is challenging to answer.

    Tempting to answer with "the one I agree with least" but I guess 'worst' means "the one who misrepresents the facts based on their own agenda" which means the winner is almost all of them.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,717 ✭✭✭YFlyer


    3DataModem wrote: »
    This is challenging to answer.

    Tempting to answer with "the one I agree with least" but I guess 'worst' means "the one who misrepresents the facts based on their own agenda" which means the winner is almost all of them.

    John Waters?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,067 ✭✭✭✭fryup


    Mad_maxx wrote: »
    Journalism is very poor in this country, groupthink dominates

    and that's why i admired Eamon Dunphy ...he was always a maverick


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,503 ✭✭✭✭Mad_maxx


    fryup wrote: »
    and that's why i admired Eamon Dunphy ...he was always a maverick

    safely establishment posing as a rebel , thats dunphy and always was


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,300 ✭✭✭✭razorblunt


    They also own Cork Beo. Complete gash "news" site that relies on copy and paste jobs.

    Cork Beo is an absolute joke.
    The Evening Echo has been a joke for years and they can barely put a website and daily edition out, yet Cork Beo think there's some sort of market share to be had, mostly from creating articles based on social media posts or when McDonald's will reopen.

    D'Echo has resorted to a weekly section where they (used to) go on to buses and have a chat with folk on there about ... stuff.
    You'd be mortified for all involved when you read it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 326 ✭✭MyLove4Satan


    How specifically does the lockdown benefit politicians and senior civil servants?


    When this all blows over and Varadker is taking up some EU, UN or Globalist Woke NGO/QUANGO cushy number you can get back to me.

    As for Holohan, he used the pandemic as a kind of cynical 'Road to Damascus' in order to bury his appalling behavior/legacy with the Cervical Cancer horror. The spin this time last year was out of control with an artist hired to paint 'Dad' as Superman on a high traffic location with the 'artist' being told to mentioned 'that WOMEN wanted a poster of Dr Holohan'. It was pure Tony Blair/Bill Clinton level image massaging. Right down to him being touted for Freedom of the City.

    Apart from the RTE propaganda bureau, I can't think of anything who has capitalize more on the C19 than politicians and civil servants. They are 'heroes' now. For basically doing what the UK did - because the UK did it - and none of them had the cognition/balls to apply independent thinking. It's still going on.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,078 ✭✭✭trashcan


    Mad_maxx wrote: »
    safely establishment posing as a rebel , thats dunphy and always was

    Indeed. Drinking in the horseshoe bar with PJ Mara and the likes. What a rebel.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,452 ✭✭✭✭AndrewJRenko


    When this all blows over and Varadker is taking up some EU, UN or Globalist Woke NGO/QUANGO cushy number you can get back to me.
    How many examples from our long history of politicians taking EU, UN or global NGO roles would it take to convince you that this has nothing to do with Covid?
    As for Holohan, he used the pandemic as a kind of cynical 'Road to Damascus' in order to bury his appalling behavior/legacy with the Cervical Cancer horror. The spin this time last year was out of control with an artist hired to paint 'Dad' as Superman on a high traffic location with the 'artist' being told to mentioned 'that WOMEN wanted a poster of Dr Holohan'. It was pure Tony Blair/Bill Clinton level image massaging. Right down to him being touted for Freedom of the City.
    Wow. Just Wow.

    The government/civil service did not hire any artist to paint any pictures of Tony Holohan. Presumably you've heard that repeated so many times in the fun circles that you hang out with that you failed to notice it is an absolute lie. The only image massaging going on round here is by you.

    Apart from the RTE propaganda bureau, I can't think of anything who has capitalize more on the C19 than politicians and civil servants. They are 'heroes' now. For basically doing what the UK did - because the UK did it - and none of them had the cognition/balls to apply independent thinking. It's still going on.

    I haven't heard too many people describing politicians as heroes. I don't follow the opinion polls religiously, but from what I recall, the government parties were coming out pretty badly in recent months.

    And again, you're factually wrong to say we followed the UK - quite the reverse. The UK went off on their solo run on herd immunity, until they eventually realised how many citizens they were going to kill (with the emphasis on the mostly elderly mostly tory voters), and backtracked to follow what Ireland and the rest of the world were doing.

    So you might want to see if you find any actual facts to back up your bitterness?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,874 ✭✭✭Edgware


    Mad_maxx wrote: »
    safely establishment posing as a rebel , thats dunphy and always was
    A bull****ter


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,874 ✭✭✭Edgware


    How many examples from our long history of politicians taking EU, UN or global NGO roles would it take to convince you that this has nothing to do with Covid?


    Wow. Just Wow.

    The government/civil service did not hire any artist to paint any pictures of Tony Holohan. Presumably you've heard that repeated so many times in the fun circles that you hang out with that you failed to notice it is an absolute lie. The only image massaging going on round here is by you.



    I haven't heard too many people describing politicians as heroes. I don't follow the opinion polls religiously, but from what I recall, the government parties were coming out pretty badly in recent months.

    And again, you're factually wrong to say we followed the UK - quite the reverse. The UK went off on their solo run on herd immunity, until they eventually realised how many citizens they were going to kill (with the emphasis on the mostly elderly mostly tory voters), and backtracked to follow what Ireland and the rest of the world were doing.

    So you might want to see if you find any actual facts to back up your bitterness?
    The elderly weren't mostly Tory voters so stop spouting ****e. Look at the figures in the big traditional Labour constituencies.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 489 ✭✭grassylawn


    For me it's Fintan O'Toole as all he does in his writing is state the obvious. Who do you think is Ireland's worst journalist?
    It must be opposite day. He's the best Irish journalist and his work is insightful.

    I suppose the worst Irish journalist probably isn't very well known.

    I don't like John Waters though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,640 ✭✭✭SHOVELLER


    Humphries was always over rated and believed in his own hype. Where is he now!

    Dunphy. Clown of the highest order.

    Kimmage. Drugs, drugs and drugs. Yeah we got it decades ago.

    Sunday World and the herald are dog****.

    Is it fair to throw the mentally ill in here? O'Doherty and Waters.

    Winner is Mick McCaffery an "investigative" journalist. Same as Jayson Blair.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1 QueenT


    Kirsty Blake Knox - dreadful journalist - vindictive, nasty, unpleasant person.
    Her 'journalism' is full of her own appalling personal bias and agenda. Nasty bitchy targeted attacks with a very twisted sense of humour.
    Red top rubbish, have no idea why or how she is still employed as no-one has any respect for her.
    She has no idea of the damage that her malice has caused.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,452 ✭✭✭✭AndrewJRenko


    Edgware wrote: »
    The elderly weren't mostly Tory voters so stop spouting ****e. Look at the figures in the big traditional Labour constituencies.

    From https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/dec/21/age-not-class-is-what-divides-british-voters-most
    This time, the Conservatives’ vote share among the over-65s was more than 60%.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,131 ✭✭✭Billy Ocean


    Eamon Sweeney is brutal, attention seeking piss alot of the time.


  • Registered Users Posts: 265 ✭✭SnazzyPig


    QueenT wrote: »
    Kirsty Blake Knox - dreadful journalist - vindictive, nasty, unpleasant person.
    Her 'journalism' is full of her own appalling personal bias and agenda. Nasty bitchy targeted attacks with a very twisted sense of humour.
    Red top rubbish, have no idea why or how she is still employed as no-one has any respect for her.
    She has no idea of the damage that her malice has caused.

    I've just google that name and read the first article that turned up - woeful crap.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,359 ✭✭✭RabbleRouser2k


    QueenT wrote: »
    Kirsty Blake Knox - dreadful journalist - vindictive, nasty, unpleasant person.
    Her 'journalism' is full of her own appalling personal bias and agenda. Nasty bitchy targeted attacks with a very twisted sense of humour.
    Red top rubbish, have no idea why or how she is still employed as no-one has any respect for her.
    She has no idea of the damage that her malice has caused.

    Sort of reminds me of Amandra Brunker's 'writing'.

    Brunker would try and start fights in her columns, literally going after teenagers or model's for saying the wrong thing.
    Then she'd start spreading rumours about other people. I suppose they (and her) were lucky that social media hadn't become the virus it is now, or else she'd have tried to do what Laura Whit-less did in regards to one journalist.

    The venom and... jealousy(?) some of these people have towards others is disgusting, honestly.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,654 ✭✭✭✭For Forks Sake


    Sort of reminds me of Amandra Brunker's 'writing'.

    Brunker would try and start fights in her columns, literally going after teenagers or model's for saying the wrong thing.
    Then she'd start spreading rumours about other people. I suppose they (and her) were lucky that social media hadn't become the virus it is now, or else she'd have tried to do what Laura Whit-less did in regards to one journalist.

    The venom and... jealousy(?) some of these people have towards others is disgusting, honestly.

    Ah, Brunker, now there's a name I'd forgotten about.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,359 ✭✭✭RabbleRouser2k


    Ah, Brunker, now there's a name I'd forgotten about.

    That was the moment Oxygen died (the festival I mean, not the chemical element).

    RTE put up an edited one, to make her 'vocals' sound better... didn't help. Christ, I still think she's the worst excuse for a journalist to ever be given paper.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,806 ✭✭✭BalcombeSt4


    Kevin Myers, horrible person.


  • Registered Users Posts: 264 ✭✭Fantomas9mm


    Ewan MacKenna is an unemployable crank and conspiracy theorist operating in the same sphere as Paddy Cosgrave. His Dunphy-Lite thing was never much good to be honest, and that’s why he was a sports journalist. He now has an enormous chip on his shoulder and likes to blame ‘the establishment’.

    His Twitter feed is really appealing to the peanut gallery at this stage.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,654 ✭✭✭✭For Forks Sake


    This is the single worst thing ever committed to print in this country.
    Worse than any of Barry Egans vapid witterings. Worse than any of Niamh Horans emptyheaded nonsense.
    Dreams die with death of Katy
    Mon, Dec 10, 2007, 00:00

    The last time I was on the Late Late(before my current flirtation with an icy demise) was six months ago, that early summer night when Eoghan Harris, Eamon Dunphy and myself fought over the mind and meaning of Bertie, and Harris nudged history a little off course, writes John Waters

    Sinead O'Connor sang I Don't Know How to Love Himas only she can sing. Dunphy and I had a bet on air that Harris helped me win, and Katy French flirted for charity with a python, some maggots and miscellaneous unthinkables as only Katy could flirt.

    I was drawn to her afterwards. We shook hands, said hello and she was gone. It was to be the only time we would meet but it got her into my head. God, she was beautiful. I don't mean just physically.

    She had a beauty that suggested itself as emanating from an infinity within. She seemed to believe anything was possible and her smile convinced you, for an instant, that she was right. I wanted her dreams to come true.

    She was a child. She was my daughter and Eoghan's daughter and Eamon's daughter and Pat's daughter and Bertie's daughter. She was your daughter, your little sister. She was a child of Ireland in the time of its rebirth.

    I am crying, writing this. How can you cry for someone you've only once said hello to? Katy was the daughter of our dreams, in the sense that it was the dreams of her people that gave birth to what is tritely called her celebrity. We have these words to box off the lucky/unlucky ones who act out our fantasies, while we stick safely to the grandstand. We refer to them as celebs, implying a different species. But they are human beings, filled like the rest of us with desire, distinguished only by willingness/ opportunity to rush in where others fear to tread.

    The old saw has it wrong: those who volunteer to act out our fantasies in public are both fools and angels. Driven by longing beyond knowing, their folly arises from a failure of awareness, experience, wisdom.

    Driven by angelic recall, they plod on clay feet into the mire of three-dimensional reality. They do not know, are not conscious, that their appetites are infinitely greater than the world's capacity to satisfy them.

    Katy French was a personification of our fantasies, of our sense of what we were becoming, of how we might unfold ourselves. She was not the only one, but in the immediate past was perhaps the most spectacular light on the skyline, a meteorite of desire plummeting through the Irish zeitgeist. You may dismiss it as frivolity but only, with respect, if you think in cliches and fixate on the superficial. For most of us, it is not wisdom that keeps us from danger, but lack of opportunity, or fear, or a deadly piety posing as virtue. Katy had found a way of being that promised her it could slake all her human cravings. She had manoeuvred herself into a position where everything humanly desirable seemed to be within reach, and was careering forward on the path opening up in front of her.

    She did not, other than literally, die of whatever it will say on her death certificate. She died of desire, of being utterly human.

    What can I say? The dream is over.

    As for lessons, I don't know. In the past decade, we have, most of us, conducted searches for meaning in places previously inaccessible to us. We acquired means and freedom beyond our wildest.

    We knew that money couldn't buy us love, but still gave it a shot. We sensed that freedom is a complicated word, but tried to keep it simple. Be, for tomorrow we die.

    As Pope Benedict reminds us in his new encyclical, we have no idea what we would really like. "We do not know this reality at all; even in those moments when we think we can reach out and touch it, it eludes us." All we know is that it is not what we have.

    God is a concept by which we measure our longings.

    I'll say it again.

    God is a concept by which we measure our longings.

    As Katy did not comprehend the limits of her human capacity to pursue her angelic yearnings, neither, anymore, do the rest of us. If we did, she might be alive. Our culture left her struggling for life, because we have neglected to keep it alive with the knowledge of what it means to be human.

    Katy's death was the result not just of her foolishness, but of our collective helplessness. We do not know what to say to our children as we kiss their brows before allowing them into a world utterly, terribly changed, because that is what we desired. We do not understand the meaning of freedom.

    And so, dear friends, we'll just have to think it up all over again. The dream is over. Our daughter Katy is dead. And so too, and not by the way, are our sons Kevin Doyle and John Grey. The dream is over.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,305 ✭✭✭✭branie2


    Kevin Myers, horrible person.

    Agreed; he has nasty views on Michael Collins


  • Registered Users Posts: 636 ✭✭✭Tomaldo


    This is the single worst thing ever committed to print in this country.
    Worse than any of Barry Egans vapid witterings. Worse than any of Niamh Horans emptyheaded nonsense.

    How or why? I'm no fan of John Waters but he seems to be paying tribute to someone who died too young.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,359 ✭✭✭RabbleRouser2k


    Tomaldo wrote: »
    How or why? I'm no fan of John Waters but he seems to be paying tribute to someone who died too young.

    She died by her own hand. She took cocaine, she knew the risks. This isn't someone being tragically hit by a car. Or succumbing to an illness after all treatment options were gone.

    She used cocaine. She was one of many who used cocaine. Her death is no more tragic than the thousands who die worldwide, despite the warnings, because they took drugs.

    If you want to talk tragic-look at all the innocent people who get murdered every year by the very gangs she helped fund.

    Anthony Campbell was 20 years old-he was an innocent bystander who was shot dead because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
    Nobody's ever been charged for his murder.

    He's tragic. He didn't deserve what happened to him.
    https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/still-no-justice-for-innocent-plumber-20-shot-dead-ten-years-ago-today-35286696.html


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Kacey O'Riordan or the journal


  • Registered Users Posts: 636 ✭✭✭Tomaldo


    She died by her own hand. She took cocaine, she knew the risks. This isn't someone being tragically hit by a car. Or succumbing to an illness after all treatment options were gone.

    She used cocaine. She was one of many who used cocaine. Her death is no more tragic than the thousands who die worldwide, despite the warnings, because they took drugs.

    If you want to talk tragic-look at all the innocent people who get murdered every year by the very gangs she helped fund.

    Anthony Campbell was 20 years old-he was an innocent bystander who was shot dead because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
    Nobody's ever been charged for his murder.

    He's tragic. He didn't deserve what happened to him.
    https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/still-no-justice-for-innocent-plumber-20-shot-dead-ten-years-ago-today-35286696.html
    I agree, Anthony Campbell didn't deserve to die nor did Katy. Prohibition caused both their deaths. If u want to get rid of these evil gangs then legalization has to be tried, if not, these gangs will continue to thrive 'cos people get enjoyment from cocaine and over 99% of users do NOT die from it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,800 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    Tomaldo wrote: »
    I agree, Anthony Campbell didn't deserve to die nor did Katy. Prohibition caused both their deaths. If u want to get rid of these evil gangs then legalization has to be tried, if not, these gangs will continue to thrive 'cos people get enjoyment from cocaine and over 99% of users do NOT die from it.

    Didn’t deserve to die , but the ‘choices’ they made were behind the reason they did.

    Prohibition was not responsible for them dying. Them choosing to procure and use an illegal substance was...

    Legalizing it ?

    You’ll have it more freely available, it will be normalized, so you’ll have more people using, more people addicted, the intensely negative social impacts, health impacts, addiction, using driving etc....

    No way in the world legalize it.

    Don’t do it...simple... want a relaxant ? See your doctor... want a good night out, have a few beers / wines within reason...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,357 ✭✭✭✭Larbre34


    Ireland's worst journalist is Brenda Power.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Finoun Sheehan
    I remember him on the Vincent Brown show declaring that 'Kenny was gone' when there was a heave in the party against him. He lasted another 6 years.
    Even though he was utterly wrong he got promoted shortly after.
    These people are media engineers. It's all about keeping a high profile, getting on the top tv and radio shows.
    Journalism is dead in the western world.
    Look at the US Whitehouse Corp. They can't handle the fact Trump has gone and they are reporting on a regular boring president now.


  • Registered Users Posts: 636 ✭✭✭Tomaldo


    Strumms wrote: »
    Didn’t deserve to die , but the ‘choices’ they made were behind the reason they did.

    Prohibition was not responsible for them dying. Them choosing to procure and use an illegal substance was...

    Legalizing it ?

    You’ll have it more freely available, it will be normalized, so you’ll have more people using, more people addicted, the intensely negative social impacts, health impacts, addiction, using driving etc....

    No way in the world legalize it.

    Don’t do it...simple... want a relaxant ? See your doctor... want a good night out, have a few beers / wines within reason...

    I love the way anti-drug supporters try to pass off opinions as fact when they're talking about the future, will u lend me ur crystal ball, I wanna clean the bookies out. Have a few beers, alcohol kills far more people than cocaine and that's regulated with quality controls and hygiene standards etc unlike the production of coke. As this thread is about journalists, one of them who was on that LLS said u can't get good coke in Dublin.


  • Advertisement
This discussion has been closed.
Advertisement