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Your own personal crusade

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,004 ✭✭✭Eggs For Dinner


    To keep the Shinners away from Government and to bring back full size Curly Wurlys. No preference on the order of importance


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Have you, or have you ever had your own personal crusade?

    Did you love( or hate) a politician so much you got too invested in their cause.

    Did you get on the abortion battle?

    I would say my heavy involvement "on the ground" for the recent referendums were my last real "crusades". I have not really had one since. Which is probably a good thing as on top of all my hobbies I was totally burning myself out and even had one spectacular nervous breakdown which I thankfully recovered quickly from.

    But I haven't found anything I am all that emotionally invested in. I have totally given up on climate change issues and become depressed by the actual effects of some of the supposed "Achievements" in the field.

    I think the closest thing I have now - though covid seriously curtailed it - is the little "Jedi Acadamy" I set up for some local problem kids which turned them around from absolute gouriers to really genuinely nice people. All under the guise of an "actual" Jedi curriculum.

    But thats more a project than a crusade.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,024 ✭✭✭Carry


    Crusading against stupidity and ignorance for decades, but gave up since I finally understood that stupidity and ignorance is a pandemic spread and institutionalised by governments and civil services.

    I keep on fighting in every day life (ignorant people I have to deal with, stupid paper-pushers, general dickheads) but I'm feeling like Don Quixote fighting windmills.

    I try to be tolerant as far as possible, but tolerating stupidity and ignorance is damn hard work.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]



    I have a few crusades at varying stages of life.

    One of my more successful ones is to rid the walks around Howth of the dreaded Ragworth. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobaea_vulgaris

    I walk around Howth a lot, it’s a fantastic place. I noticed Ragworth starting to take hold about six years ago and, as I was taught by my Dad, a part-time farmer, to pull one when ever you passed it, did so. The only way to get rid of the weed is to pull it, and it’s primary roots, out.

    It’s a continuous task but I think I’ve got it under control.
    That's great. I don't know if this is true, but we were told as kids that ragwort is actually illegal, so you have to pull it when you see it. The hours we spent as kids, bent-double from pulling ragwort, to keep our parents out of jail. Well done on your crusade, it's an admirable one that may well save an animal's life.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,740 ✭✭✭Foweva Awone


    I probably harp on about addiction and recovery a bit because, well, I'm in recovery. And I met so many wonderful people along the way, lots of whom are still trapped in addiction. I've also lost some really good friends who died in addiction, most at a really young age, including many young mums.

    I'm also a big supporter of harm reduction (e.g. maintenance programs, needle exchanges), which can be kinda controversial ... Not everyone is ready for recovery, sometimes the best you can do is help keep them alive until they're ready and willing to give recovery a go.


  • Posts: 2,725 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    That's great. I don't know if this is true, but we were told as kids that ragwort is actually illegal, so you have to pull it when you see it. The hours we spent as kids, bent-double from pulling ragwort, to keep our parents out of jail. Well done on your crusade, it's an admirable one that may well save an animal's life.

    Pulling on a stinking willie might seem like a good idea, but it’s actually been found to be one of the best providers of nectar for pollinators.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,024 ✭✭✭✭EmmetSpiceland


    That's great. I don't know if this is true, but we were told as kids that ragwort is actually illegal, so you have to pull it when you see it. The hours we spent as kids, bent-double from pulling ragwort, to keep our parents out of jail. Well done on your crusade, it's an admirable one that may well save an animal's life.

    Is that one not an “irritant”? Gives you blisters or some such?

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



  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Pulling on a stinking willie might seem like a good idea, but it’s actually been found to be one of the best providers of nectar for pollinators.
    Is that true? It's hardly worse than leaving it there, blowing in the wind for a whole summer?

    I know you're supposed to immediately stuff it into a bag, not dangle it around.
    Is that one not an “irritant”? Gives you blisters or some such?
    Haven't tasted it myself, but sometimes cattle and horses will accidentally eat it if the flower is chopped, and it's toxic to the liver, and not curable. Or so the warning goes.

    You might be thinking of hog weed?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,639 ✭✭✭completedit


    Elon Musk. There's something about fawning over a multi billionaire that just irks me. It almost feels as if I have a personal vendetta against the man which might be more bizarre than the fanboys who idolise him.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,740 ✭✭✭Foweva Awone


    I also support a hedgehog rescue. Hedgehog Rescue Dublin on Facebook, if anyone wants to get involved. So many rescues out there looking out for bigger animals, which is great, but hedghogs are seen as pests and often ignored. Big supporter of the underdog I am!! (Or underhog, if you will!!)


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I also support a hedgehog rescue. Hedgehog Rescue Dublin on Facebook, if anyone wants to get involved. So many rescues out there looking out for bigger animals, which is great, but hedghogs are seen as pests and often ignored. Big supporter of the underdog I am!! (Or underhog, if you will!!)

    Doesn't the guy who has the "Critter Shed" podcast in Dublin also support that? Love that guy. Collie Ennis his name is. Think he supports something on frogs too. So frogs and hogs.


  • Posts: 2,725 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Elon Musk. There's something about fawning over a multi billionaire that just irks me. It almost feels as if I have a personal vendetta against the man which might be more bizarre than the fanboys who idolise him.

    He’s also loved by people who are into Bitcoin and other cryptocurrency. Another group of appalling humans.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,024 ✭✭✭✭EmmetSpiceland


    He’s also loved by people who are into Bitcoin and other cryptocurrency. Another group of appalling humans.

    The “Tony Stark” masked slipped long ago and now he’s proven himself to be a bigger, and more shameless, self-promoter than Edison.

    His environmental “credentials” are, now, in the toilet with his adoption of cryptocurrencies and NFTs. He is a disgrace.

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



  • Registered Users Posts: 8,711 ✭✭✭keano_afc


    Like a couple of others who've posted, very passionate about gender woo-woo and the damage its causing to kids.

    If you told me 5 years ago that we'd have to campaign to stop children being prescribed drugs that will make them sterile because they have mental issues with who they are, I wouldn't have believed you.


  • Posts: 16,720 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Am determined to get more allotments and community gardens set up throughout the country and also locally. Going to be a long road (given how poor we are on this compared to other countries) but will be good for so many people when more are made available.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,114 ✭✭✭PhilOssophy


    My own personal crusade is raising the issue of "charities". For every decent charity, there is a bunch of charlatans who realised they were on to a good thing. There is more than 1 "Console" style charity and weeding them out has to become a priority.
    €213m being spent by DCC on homeless services in the capital alone, on top of the 80m spent to directly fund the plethora of homeless charities it is the ultimate waste of money. Where.is.all.the.money.going.
    Turn off this tap, spend it on housing people, and forget about funding these charities. See how quick these CEO's on 250k squirm when they realise people are on to the industry they have created.
    Unpopular opinion which will probably be lit upon. I don't care.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,700 ✭✭✭Feisar


    I think the closest thing I have now - though covid seriously curtailed it - is the little "Jedi Acadamy" I set up for some local problem kids which turned them around from absolute gouriers to really genuinely nice people. All under the guise of an "actual" Jedi curriculum.

    But thats more a project than a crusade.

    Pretty cool nonetheless.

    First they came for the socialists...



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,024 ✭✭✭✭EmmetSpiceland


    I think the closest thing I have now - though covid seriously curtailed it - is the little "Jedi Acadamy" I set up for some local problem kids which turned them around from absolute gouriers to really genuinely nice people. All under the guise of an "actual" Jedi curriculum.

    But thats more a project than a crusade.

    When you say “actual”, is this something that is George Lucas “approved”?

    Or something you got from an online ‘Star Wars’ site or, even, a “fan site” or did you come up with your own Jedi “rules” based on the films, novels, cartoons and, other, “iterations” of the story?

    “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: 13,510 ✭✭✭✭kowloon


    Finally, worthy opponents for my Sith academy.

    Also, Elon Musk is a businessman who used money he made from finance to buy an electric car company and take credit for the intellectual achievements of others. In agreement with EmmetSpiceland, calling the company Tesla is really disrespectful to Tesla considering how much he behaves like the man who screwed him over.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Feisar wrote: »
    Pretty cool nonetheless.

    Thank you - yeah I think it is too. It has brought me a lot of personal pride and well being and a feeling of achievement.
    When you say “actual”, is this something that is George Lucas “approved”?

    Or something you got from an online ‘Star Wars’ site or, even, a “fan site” or did you come up with your own Jedi “rules” based on the films, novels, cartoons and, other, “iterations” of the story?

    Well I put "actual" in quotes for that very reason. There is nothing "actual" about it. I made it up myself. Basically I looked at the Jedi and what they do and I came up with a curriculum that taught them the same things were possible - and substitutes were not.

    So for example the Jedi are trained swordsmen and hand to hand combatants. So since I am trained in fighting for over 15 years I worked with some other higher level trainers and then with some people who train actual sword fighting to come along and help.

    The Jedi are also trained ambassadors and sometimes multilingual. So since one of my girlfriends is a translator / interpreter in German and Spanish we worked on giving the kids a grounding in the history and cultures of a few nations on our planet and some basic formal and informal greetings and phrases from each. So they could be dropped into nearly any country on earth and they'd be able to get some basic greetings / appeals for help / points across in any of them.

    When it comes to the mystical mindcontrol and making objects float - of course that can not be trained. But I and a few of my contacts have a grounding in magic and illusion and sleight of hand and such forth. So where Jedi things are not possible - we have been teaching them showy substitutes.

    And so on. You get the idea without me writing a novel :)

    Mostly though its just giving the kids attention and guidance and entertainment and an outlet - where they were otherwise neglected and bored. And I found that kids that others had written off as "irredeemable" and "gouriers" and "ferral" and "wild animals" were anything but. They were just - lost. They have literally gone from the kind of kids who would physically accost and intimidate little old women trying to carry their shopping home - - to kids who now periodically visit those same little grannies to see if they are alright during covid and need any help or work done around the house or garden.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,317 ✭✭✭Dublin Spur


    Mostly it's the judiciary that gets me excited, mainly in the area of sentencing, in particular

    The abolishment of concurrent sentencing in the courts, consecutive should be the default.
    A Life sentence should always mean incarceration for the rest of your Life, no exceptions.


  • Registered Users Posts: 270 ✭✭beerguts


    Thank you - yeah I think it is too. It has brought me a lot of personal pride and well being and a feeling of achievement.



    Well I put "actual" in quotes for that very reason. There is nothing "actual" about it. I made it up myself. Basically I looked at the Jedi and what they do and I came up with a curriculum that taught them the same things were possible - and substitutes were not.

    So for example the Jedi are trained swordsmen and hand to hand combatants. So since I am trained in fighting for over 15 years I worked with some other higher level trainers and then with some people who train actual sword fighting to come along and help.

    The Jedi are also trained ambassadors and sometimes multilingual. So since one of my girlfriends is a translator / interpreter in German and Spanish we worked on giving the kids a grounding in the history and cultures of a few nations on our planet and some basic formal and informal greetings and phrases from each. So they could be dropped into nearly any country on earth and they'd be able to get some basic greetings / appeals for help / points across in any of them.

    When it comes to the mystical mindcontrol and making objects float - of course that can not be trained. But I and a few of my contacts have a grounding in magic and illusion and sleight of hand and such forth. So where Jedi things are not possible - we have been teaching them showy substitutes.

    And so on. You get the idea without me writing a novel :)

    Mostly though its just giving the kids attention and guidance and entertainment and an outlet - where they were otherwise neglected and bored. And I found that kids that others had written off as "irredeemable" and "gouriers" and "ferral" and "wild animals" were anything but. They were just - lost. They have literally gone from the kind of kids who would physically accost and intimidate little old women trying to carry their shopping home - - to kids who now periodically visit those same little grannies to see if they are alright during covid and need any help or work done around the house or garden.

    Jesus buddy I have a combination of admiration for you and also feel like you need professional help. This sounds like a grown ass man larping with a plastic light saber toy in a field


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,614 ✭✭✭WrenBoy


    Elon Musk. There's something about fawning over a multi billionaire that just irks me. It almost feels as if I have a personal vendetta against the man which might be more bizarre than the fanboys who idolise him.

    He's companies have developed some some serious kit though in fairness. He's like Lex Luthor that forgot to be evil... so far anyway.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,510 ✭✭✭✭kowloon


    WrenBoy wrote: »
    He's companies have developed some some serious kit though in fairness. He's like Lex Luthor that forgot to be evil... so far anyway.

    His companies, yes, but nobody goes around calling Jeff Bezos a genius because of all the money Amazon are pumping into AI.
    Musk knows just enough to fool people into thinking he's the ideas man. Listen to him talk about hyperloop for an example of him buying into a bull**** idea that will never work.
    beerguts wrote: »
    Jesus buddy I have a combination of admiration for you and also feel like you need professional help. This sounds like a grown ass man larping with a plastic light saber toy in a field

    I don't know, seems like he has successfully tricked some kids into education.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    beerguts wrote: »
    Jesus buddy I have a combination of admiration for you and also feel like you need professional help. This sounds like a grown ass man larping with a plastic light saber toy in a field

    Hah thanks. It's funny you should say that because I was only last weekend all over the field covered in 5 different kinds of Nerf gun and ammunition. So you are probably not far off :)

    But there is nothing childish about learning actual Jujitsu - fencing - sparring - or knife combat. Some of them are olympic sports you know.

    But it is interesting that a simple space opera like star wars can wrap up what is essentially "education" in a wrapper that gets children engaged in things they otherwise might not be. When was the last time you tried to get mid-teenagers to sit down and learn some history and culture of morrocco - learn how they would greet the king of morrocco if they ever met him in his own language - and then move on to sitting still for 30+ minutes of mindfullness meditation :) And then after all that to want to come back for more the next day?

    EDIT: Tricked into education - nice way to put it Kow.


  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    When you say “actual”, is this something that is George Lucas “approved”?

    Or something you got from an online ‘Star Wars’ site or, even, a “fan site” or did you come up with your own Jedi “rules” based on the films, novels, cartoons and, other, “iterations” of the story?

    Best run of scare quotes yet.
    The “Tony Stark” masked slipped long ago and now he’s proven himself to be a bigger, and more shameless, self-promoter than Edison.

    Tony stark was, to be fair, an arms dealer. Maybe not the analogy you wanted there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,324 ✭✭✭JustAThought


    Not sure I agree at all with ‘ex’ delinquents being taught how to spar with knives. At ALL.

    Proper bee in my bonnet about crime and sentencing and no consequences for juvenile crime .

    Also about the rising self entitlement of many on the backs of work and taxes of others.

    Occasionally do the rounds and ring politicians offices to carp on - no point complaining about what you have if you don’t strive to change it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 505 ✭✭✭zanador


    I have none. My life is busy enough without needing to champion the underdog or promote a cause or shout about an injustice.

    What if you were the underdog or suffered injustice?


  • Posts: 2,725 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I think taxAHcruel is missing a trick here by not selling this inspirational story to Disney. Could see a movie being made about it, or, at the very least, an animated series.

    William H Macy (or even Mark Hamill!) plays a man walking home from the shop one day in a less salubrious part of New York when he is set upon by some unruly teenagers. Battered and bruised he returns to his apartment where he considers phoning the cops. Instead he opens a beer, and puts in place a plan to change the lives of these kids for the better by teaching them in the way of the Jedi.

    Along the way he faces ridicule, suspicious parents, visits from child protection agencies, and numerous other barriers. Yet he doesn't give up, as he is already versed in the way of the Jedi, and understands that he can change the lives of these kids for the better. And he succeeds. I'm talking lots of montages and cutaways here - maybe more than in any other movie ever. The final one being the most poignant. He's in a nursing home, and while watching TV, sees one of the kids he taught in the way of the Jedi get up on stage and get sworn in the President of the United States. A brief smile, as his fragile fingers gently grasp a lightsabre.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,510 ✭✭✭✭kowloon


    Tony stark was, to be fair, an arms dealer. Maybe not the analogy you wanted there.

    But the whole point of Tony Stark is he's this genius inventor. Elon wants to be seen that way, he even has a cameo in one of the Iron Man films. But Elon isn't that genius inventor and some people seem to lap it up anyway.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    zanador wrote: »
    What if you were the underdog or suffered injustice?

    I've been the underdog, in a way. I've suffered an injustice. I've been bullied and cast aside.

    I care about people and their experiences but I'm not in a position to champion a cause or promote change. I'm a regular flawed person.

    There can be an abundance of ego among crusaders.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,024 ✭✭✭✭EmmetSpiceland


    Tony stark was, to be fair, an arms dealer. Maybe not the analogy you wanted there.

    Tony Stark is not real, F.

    EksIy3aW0AEIsK-.jpg

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



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 475 ✭✭AdrianBalboa


    They have literally gone from the kind of kids who would physically accost and intimidate little old women trying to carry their shopping home - - to kids who now periodically visit those same little grannies to see if they are alright during covid and need any help or work done around the house or garden.
    And if these grannies don't want their former accosters coming into the house, what then? Do the younglings "use The Force?"


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 475 ✭✭AdrianBalboa


    WrenBoy wrote: »
    He's companies have developed some some serious kit though in fairness. He's like Lex Luthor that forgot to be evil... so far anyway.
    Oh no, he hasn't forgotten.


  • Posts: 3,801 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Tony Stark is not real, F.

    EksIy3aW0AEIsK-.jpg

    I know that, but does Tony Stark know that?

    Anyway I do like to troll the Reddit Elon musk channel myself with “did he land one of those rockets yet, lads”, “landing a reusable rocket is 90% of the work, any old fool can send a rocket up” and “bring back the space shuttle”.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 505 ✭✭✭zanador


    I've been the underdog, in a way. I've suffered an injustice. I've been bullied and cast aside.

    I care about people and their experiences but I'm not in a position to champion a cause or promote change. I'm a regular flawed person.

    There can be an abundance of ego among crusaders.

    This is true there can be a lot of ego. I was thinking of for example the Gavin Glynn foundation who turned an injustice in their son's medical needs (having to fly to another country for treatment, unfair anyway and defo not affordable for most) into a huge foundation that supports other families in the way they were supported at a local level.

    They are crusaders too. I think it's the ones who use more energy expressing their opinion than addressing issues that are annoying?


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Not sure I agree at all with ‘ex’ delinquents being taught how to spar with knives. At ALL.

    It is interesting that many people who have been trained how to fight are often the least likely to seek a fight out - or they seek non violent ways to resolve situations. It comes with the discipline and the humility that well thought martial arts can bring.
    And if these grannies don't want their former accosters coming into the house, what then? Do the younglings "use The Force?"

    It hasn't been an issue. You might do well to suspect I was delicate in how I approached introducing such an event. I did not just pile them all on to some unsuspecting grannies door step without discussing with her first or anything. I do have some social empathy and cop on you know :)


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    zanador wrote: »
    This is true there can be a lot of ego. I was thinking of for example the Gavin Glynn foundation who turned an injustice in their son's medical needs (having to fly to another country for treatment, unfair anyway and defo not affordable for most) into a huge foundation that supports other families in the way they were supported at a local level.

    They are crusaders too. I think it's the ones who use more energy expressing their opinion than addressing issues that are annoying?

    There certainly are amazing people out there who push the status quo and try to fight injustice and stand up for those who can't. There are also people who do that in small ways, for example speaking up when a friend is being treated badly, making a complaint, reporting a crime.

    Power comes in many guises and I think wherever you have the oppressed you will have those who use the situation for their own gain. It's dressed up as caring but really it's feeding their own ego. A simple example would be shouting from the rooftops that you did a nice thing.

    Absolutely. You get that a lot here. I've a feeling a lot of the strong opined among us do next to nothing about the cause they hold so dear.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,809 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    There are millions spent on drug addiction rehabilitation for people per year. It’s over a billion per decade here in Ireland.

    Yet, people through no fault of their own, who have strokes, acquire nerve disorders, and a myriad of other non addiction related illnesses, who need rehabilitation to walk again, function again in society have such a fücking dismal time trying to get funding for the NRH or Doolaghs Park physical rehab facility etc...

    There is a great level of education re: addiction that kids are enabled with, constantly from x age, if they still ‘choose’ to walk down a path that actually actively damages their health as they know it will... why the fûck should they be given priority for treatments and healthcare, over say a 35 year old who has a non self inflicted medical condition and worked and contributed through taxes all their life, only to be told...” sorry, funding for your rehabilitation is not available, but we instead are writing a cheque for Anto here to go get the help he needs, to escape a situation he put himself in.”

    Not saying we shouldn’t help people who became addicted to whatever but in fairness we need to be looking after people with acquired brain injuries, nerve disorders and other long term illness.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,721 ✭✭✭StupidLikeAFox


    ....
    €213m being spent by DCC on homeless services in the capital alone, on top of the 80m spent to directly fund the plethora of homeless charities it is the ultimate waste of money. Where.is.all.the.money.going......

    That is incredible if its true. Do you have a breakdown on what its spent on?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,114 ✭✭✭PhilOssophy


    That is incredible if its true. Do you have a breakdown on what its spent on?

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/dublin-homelessness-services-to-cost-213m-next-year-1.4416301#:~:text=Dublin%20City%20Council%20is%20raising,presented%20to%20councillors%20this%20week.

    Bear in mind, this is on top of 80m in funding direct from the tax payer, in addition to all the fund raising done by homeless charities. All for less than 10k homeless people.

    There's 2 problems - cutting this finance would be a political football, and there are several charities doing the same thing in a supposedly different way.

    It is absolutely BONKERS.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,721 ✭✭✭StupidLikeAFox


    Mental. In the next five years thats 1bn spent in the capital alone, and probably won't put a dent in the problem


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,184 ✭✭✭riclad


    this probably includes drug treatment services,
    running hostels,.
    also the council has a deal to rent houses for 10 years,
    it would cost less just to build more council houses,
    than say pay rent on a 100 private houses for 10 years.
    the government owns alot of empty sites all over dublin.
    the local authority has a limited no of 1bed units avaidable,
    they wont give a 3 bed house to a single person.
    someone living in a hotel is classified as homeless ,
    eg a single mother with 2 children.
    alot of the money maybe goes on paying rent to hotels .


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    The replacement of the old recipes of fizzy drinks (containing around 40 calories upwards of sugar per 100 ml) with either no sugar or low-sugar versions. The only fizzy drinks that still taste acceptable are coca cola, pepsi, club orange and club rock shandy. Lucozade with 35 calories of sugar per 100 ml is would be drinkable if they didn't also add sweeteners but is so unsatisfying compared with its 70 cal sugar per 100 ml predecessor. When I go to buy a fizzy drink or cordial the vast majority of them contain sweeteners. I absolutely hate that Coca Cola are clearly trying to phase out the real coke and make the disgusting "Coca Cola Zero sugar" their flagship product - get fuc;ked, and take your disgusting bitter unsatisfying crap with you.

    Di';ckhead governments implementing laws that sound good to people who don't think much about them but are in fact sh'it and remove peoples freedom of choice, and yet the don't tackle the issues that matter most like mismanaging the economy for decades such that owning a home like previous generations did will be out of reach for all but the highest earning non-singletons for my generation and those coming after me.

    And everyone is such a know it all nowadays due to the internet that they can't just drink the sugar water without worrying about the health effects or weight gain. There were far more obese people in the 90s and 2000s than there are now yet nobody acknowledges this - it is in this culture where it is becoming rarer to be overweight that the stigma factor is becoming attached to full sugar drinks and this is ruining it for those who want to drink them with as little guilt as we did in the 2000s and before.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,809 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    It’s very uncool to criticize drug addicts these days, despite drug use and addiction being a pathway navigated through choices... pretty much 100% of the time.. ie... “ yeah, I’ll take some “ ie. not somebody holding down a person and forcing them to use x drug... we fall over ourselves as a society to fawn over, reward and assist drug users / addicts over people who have medical illness by virtue of just acquiring it through non lifestyle choices...


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 505 ✭✭✭zanador


    Strumms wrote: »
    There are millions spent on drug addiction rehabilitation for people per year. It’s over a billion per decade here in Ireland.

    Yet, people through no fault of their own, who have strokes, acquire nerve disorders, and a myriad of other non addiction related illnesses, who need rehabilitation to walk again, function again in society have such a fücking dismal time trying to get funding for the NRH or Doolaghs Park physical rehab facility etc...

    There is a great level of education re: addiction that kids are enabled with, constantly from x age, if they still ‘choose’ to walk down a path that actually actively damages their health as they know it will... why the fûck should they be given priority for treatments and healthcare, over say a 35 year old who has a non self inflicted medical condition and worked and contributed through taxes all their life, only to be told...” sorry, funding for your rehabilitation is not available, but we instead are writing a cheque for Anto here to go get the help he needs, to escape a situation he put himself in.”

    Not saying we shouldn’t help people who became addicted to whatever but in fairness we need to be looking after people with acquired brain injuries, nerve disorders and other long term illness.

    Like all these things I don't think it's an either or. I'd like to see proper legislation around the decriminalisation of drugs such as Portugal did because it is proven to work. And I'd like universal healthcare with equal access for all like the NHS is supposed to be.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,809 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    zanador wrote: »
    Like all these things I don't think it's an either or. I'd like to see proper legislation around the decriminalisation of drugs such as Portugal did because it is proven to work. And I'd like universal healthcare with equal access for all like the NHS is supposed to be.

    I hear what you are saying but I would urge caution...Proven to work in Portugal doesn’t mean it would work here... the psychological traits of the Irish and addiction are complex.

    Has to be an either or to an extent as the money to help everyone and deal with drug and non drug health issues isn’t finite.

    I’m proof, I was denied a certain medical treatment for my health yet addicts get serious resources and help.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 505 ✭✭✭zanador


    Strumms wrote: »
    I hear what you are saying but I would urge caution...Proven to work in Portugal doesn’t mean it would work here... the psychological traits of the Irish and addiction are complex.

    Has to be an either or to an extent as the money to help everyone and deal with drug and non drug health issues isn’t finite.

    I’m proof, I was denied a certain medical treatment for my health yet addicts get serious resources and help.

    I hear you, I'm in the public system and get zero support around my mental health. In fact I would say what I get negatively impacts me.

    However, that doesn't mean I want to take the supports or resent the supports others get. Id want to see everyone getting supports. Money isn't finite but a huge overhaul of the health and social systems is possible and would get us much further along than blaming individual groups in society just simply in terms of solving the problems whatever the ins and outs of who people think are deserving. And trying to work out who's deserving that everyone can agree on.

    How we do that though is up for much debate and is exhausting to even think about.


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