aloyisious wrote: » One did not (unfortunately) ask questions when alkward situations arose. It was seen as insolence (getting above one's station). The only clergy I know of that questioned dogma or authority are Pastor Niemoller and Father Bernard Lynch.
Spring Onion wrote: » This. Where was the internal agitation during the decades of abuse, torture and murder? Where were the nuns and priests revolting internally at the way their organisation and turned so far away from the teachings of Jesus? Who stood up and said no more moving abusers on to new parishes? Where were the whistleblowers to reveal the horrors of the Industrial schools, the Laudries or the Mother & Baby homes? Did priests and nuns leave in disgust? I doubt it very much. As someone said, it wasn't a few rotten apples, the whole barrel was rotten if nobody tried to stop the Roman organisation's evil.
Bannasidhe wrote: » Yes - my mistake. Got me shillings and pound mixed up. Have corrected it now and provided links as to where I got the info. I remember a packet of Tayto costing 1d (or one penny) and that was the late 1960s.
RoadhouseBlues wrote: » I am sure there are genuine priests and nuns out there but they need to demand changes or else just leave their church.
Bellatori wrote: » When I was a child we still had farthings and threepenny bits (no rhyming slang please) and it was definitely 12d = 1s 20s= £1 = 240d and £1/1/- was a guinea. Lawyers charged in guineas because the poor old clerk got paid the shilling i.e. 10%. A bit like a manager of a pop group only oppressed. Then came diddle day... sorry I mean decimalisation day and my 1/10 packet of coffin nail number 10s now cost 10p (2/-) 2s=1 florin... It was a nightmare for the dyslexic like myself...
nagirrac wrote: » and not forgetting the glorious half crown, 2s6d They go for ~$7 apiece now on eBay
Bellatori wrote: » 2s=1 florin... It was a nightmare for the dyslexic like myself...
Wickerman1 wrote: » It has to start with removing religion from school syllabus. Our children are still getting this stuff shoved down their necks in every school in Ireland! As parents we seldom have a choice but to send our kids to a RCC school as they still hold control of the majority of schools in the land and sit as trustees dictating their curriculum. Religion and education need to be separated, at best should be an after school activity for those who want it.
Bannasidhe wrote: » 13 shillings = £1 14 shillings = A Guinea.
Neyite wrote: » I've found an article that says the state paid 10' (is that shillings??) per week per inmate by Galway County Council to the Bon Secors in the Home in Tuam. Women were to remain in there for a year, boys for 5 years and girls for 7.5 years. So, that was 520' for the mother, and an average of 3250' for a child = 3770'. Anyone able to understand pre-decimalisation money?? I havent a clue!
drumswan wrote: » The Nazi party are thankfully a relic of the past, the Germans have time and space to reflect, mourn and feel shame. The RCC on the other hand, are still very much with us in Ireland. First they need to be destroyed, then we can look at reconciliation.
Obliq wrote: » Yes, but what the hell is it about the Irish psyche that enables us to be brainwashed by an invasive religion? What makes the kind of black and white morality of the RCC so appealing to Irish people still? What made us accept such cruelty to each other? I think we need a collective sense of shame here, much like the Germans have tbh....
drumswan wrote: » The most ghastly part is that we had a totalitarian religious state that had people so brainwashed they handed over their own children to be beaten, tortured, starved, raped and murdered.
Cabaal wrote: » I agree, its awful. Parents.Family's felt immense shame when a unmarried women got pregnant, this shame of course didn't come from no where...it came from the catholic church So yes while the family's are somewhat to blame, they were effectively bullied/brain washed into believing this utter nonsense.
GCU Flexible Demeanour wrote: » No disagreement there. Alternatively, some people swear by Reiki.If incoherent, it will force the authorities to do something dumb. So, no. No to outrage, if it means we're not supposed to notice Reuters think someone dug up 800 skeletons in a place called "Toooo-am". I though we were supposed to be against ignoring things, and making stuff up.Ah, here. If it's been the subject of much media discussion and a couple of Oireachtas debates, it's not like it's a secret. And I'm not commenting on the "cumulative effect" of anything. The point is that some folk just don't know that the vaccination issue is already a matter of public record. I'd remind you again, I though we were supposed to be against ignoring things, and making stuff up. Talking of not ignoring things, I can't help noticing thisSurely this couldn't mean that some children were saved as a result of women being disempowered by an assertion of unlawful male paternalism?
Paulownia wrote: » The most ghastly bit of this whole story is that the girl's parents allowed them to be put in these places, even arranged to have them put in and in many cases never saw them again.
Lingua Franca wrote: » He's saying that a government official overstepping their brief to stop babies from dying of gastroenteritis is exactly the same as as men putting women into the laundries and the churches treating them like crap, because said government official was also male.
Obliq wrote: » Saved from being disempowered by male paternalism (of the time), puritanical Irish society and public opinion? Hardly.