Mary Robinson: Sorry folks, you're to blame and I can't help

I won’t play the blame game.

This was the banner headline in last Sunday’s Sunday Times (Sub. Required) introducing an interview with former president Mary Robinson on the occasion of her return to Ireland after a 13 year absence.

Robinson then went on to play the blame game in unequivocal terms.

We can certainly put a great deal of responsibility on the banks and those with political responsibility, but it’s our own mistakes as Irish people, collectively. There was a sense of foolishness and, unfortunately, we’re now paying a high price.

The clear message here is that while the political system and banks had some responsibility it was the greed of ordinary Irish citizens that caused the catastrophe.

It should also be noted that the ‘we’ who will be paying the price does not include the ‘partially’ responsible bankers and politicians or, indeed, Mrs. Robinson herself.

The ‘we’ is strictly confined to the ‘greedy’ citizens desperately struggling to feed, clothe and provide shelter for themselves and their families while the non ‘we’ continue to live comfortable, non accountable lives.

Don’t misunderstand me; I have great admiration for Mary Robinson, she’s a woman of great courage and vision.

But it is depressing to realise that she, in common with the rest of our ruling elite, has no understanding whatsoever of the deeper cause of our destruction as a nation.

Nor can the ‘guilty’ Irish citizens expect any help in their hour of greatest need from this highly respected global leader.

I don’t want to get involved in the politics because as a former president it’s important to stay outside the political blame game.

So out of respect for a corrupt political system and the expensive and useless office of president this potentially great national leader has written herself out of any participation in the nation’s recovery.

Mansergh: Stupid or arrogant – or both?

Martin Mansergh speaking in our Parliament last Tuesday.

Deputy O’Mahony spoke about a five year old worrying about whether he would have to emigrate. I have a daughter who spoke in her teenage years of emigrating, but she is working in Ireland.

These things go around in cycles.

Emigration (enforced) goes around in cycles???

Mansergh is either an extremely stupid man or he is so filled with arrogance that he has become completely immune to the awful tragedy of emigration, I suspect the latter.

As for his daughter working in Ireland – well of course she is. She’s the daughter of a Fianna Fail Minister.

At least 4.5 million people would have to emigrate before such privileged citizens would need to worry about their circumstances.

Liar Lenihan reduces himself to scumbag status

Speaking on The Last Word (Wed. Nov. 24th), markets analyst, Paul Somerville said that Brian Lenihan should be nominated for an Oscar.

Lenihan, he said, while always sounding plausible is also always wrong.

I would be a little more direct – Lenihan is a plausible liar and his lies are invariably at the expense of the Irish people.

On the same programme, presented by Matt Cooper, Lenihan demonstrated that he’s just as ruthless as the scumbag Bertie Ahern when it comes to shifting blame and abdicating responsibility.

On the (damaging) delay in establishing NAMA.

I stayed up all night in Dail Eireann until six and seven in the morning listening to nonsensical arguments about NAMA…

The political system didn’t seem to agree at the time that it should be enacted as quickly as possible, the political system decided we should have a huge ideological argument about a particular approach to banking.

The suggestion here is that the Government should not have been subjected to any questions whatsoever regarding the establishment of NAMA. In other words, democracy should have been suspended while draconian legislation was being introduced.

On the very bad decisions made by government.

Keep screaming and making value judgements and don’t listen to answers.

On asking outside advisors to make a contribution.

David McWilliams?

He’s an interesting commentator but not very constructive.

Morgan Kelly?

He did call the fire correctly on a previous occasion but you don’t always call the fire correctly.

Moore McDowell?

I’d be delighted to see Moore McDowell tomorrow in the Dept. If he wants to give me a view on it, he’s more than welcome. I have huge respect for Moore McDowell.

The dismissal of McWilliams and Kelly is predictable, they don’t toe the party/government line, but McDowell should be asking himself some serious questions at such an endorsement by an incompetent politician.

On the suggestion that those at the top should show leadership by making a little more sacrifice in the national interest.

Matters of that type are not in the national plan because they don’t affect expenditure or receipts.

They do fill airwaves but they don’t save any money I can tell you or very marginal amounts of money and that’s why they’re not dealt with in the plan because the plan focuses on what will sort out our problems.

Reducing the minimum wage, cutting social welfare to the bone, etc, etc, will, apparently, sort out our problems.

On the question that Cowen is paid more than Barack Obama.

He doesn’t have the facilities of the White House.

This is the same answer that Bertie Ahern gave as justification for a proposed massive salary increase.

This arrogant/insulting reply reduces Lenihan to the same scumbag status as the former Taoiseach.

Lenihan should have been nailed to the wall after giving such a dismissive reply. He should have been forcibly challenged to explain and justify his answer.

Regrettably, Irish journalists have yet to evolve a killer instinct when it comes to challenging so called people of authority who have destroyed our country.

Power pay

Barack Obama, leader of the most powerful nation in the history of the world earns

$400,000 (€304,690, 25) per year.

Padraig McManus, CEO of the power company in a bankrupt, two bit banana republic on the edge of Europe, is handed

$985,000 (€750,000.00) per year.

Banks win, new quango wins – People lose

The Credit Review Group was launched on 6th April last.

The purpose of the quango is to ensure that small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) have access to credit from the banks who are participating in the NAMA scheme.

Borrowers can approach the CRG if they believe they have been treated unfairly by any of the banks availing of NAMA.

But, according to an RTE news report, the CRG cannot force banks to change their minds on any loan decision but banks will be required to comply with recommendations.

This is typical banana republic logic.

On the one hand we’re told that banks must comply (with recommendations) but they cannot be forced to do so.

This arrangement allows the state to say they’re getting tough while continuing to allow the banks do as they please.

The banks win, the new quango wins (big salaries and pensions) but, as always – the people lose.

Answer the question Minister

RTEs Richard Crowley had a very difficult time getting a simple answer from our lying Minister for Finance, Brian Lenihan, last Sunday (This Week, 21st).

The question was simple – How much are we going to borrow from the EU/IMF?

Crowley: How much are we looking for?

Lenihan: Blah, blah blah, blah…

Crowley: What’s the figure Minister, how much are we looking for?

Lenihan: Blah, blah, blah, blah…

Crowley: How much are we applying for on this loan?

Lenihan: Blah, blah, blah, blah…

Crowley: How much?

Lenihan: Blah, blah, blah, blah…

Crowley: Roughly

Lenihan: Blah, blah, blah, blah…

Crowley: Are we talking tens of billions?

Lenihan: Yes, we are talking tens of billions.

Crowley: So it could be 70, 80, 90 billion?

Lenihan: No, nowhere near that.

We’re borrowing €85 billion.

Ireland as a warning to others?

On the reasonable assumption that the EU/IMF are fully aware that an interest rate of 6.7% will destroy what’s left of our economy there can only be two reasons for such an imposition.

It’s the first shot in a negotiating process.

Or

The EU/IMF have decided that Ireland is expendable, that it’s economic and social destruction could serve as a useful warning to countries like Portugal and Spain to get their act together.

Ireland's nod and wink culture and pension losses

Recent comments by David McWilliams on pension losses.

This has all to do with, I wouldn’t say corruption, it’s to do with the extraordinary nod and wink culture in Ireland.

So much of Irish pensions were put into Irish banks by people who were paid by the Irish banks to put the pensions into the Irish banks.

Clients were told the pensions were safe by people who were being paid by the banks to say they were safe.

Yes, it’s called nod and wink in Ireland. Other jurisdictions call it by its name.

Eating the Irish

The attached article by Paul Krugman of the New York Times is well worth reading.

Krugman compares Ireland with Iceland and comes to some damning conclusions.

He does, however, leave out one important difference between the two countries.

When disaster struck, the people of Iceland took strong and immediate action.

They threw out the government and the corrupt bankers, put the former Prime Minister on trial and told the bond holders to take a hike.

In other words, they retained their self respect as a nation and took control of their own destiny.

New York Times
November 25, 2010

By Paul Krugman

Eating the Irish

What we need now is another Jonathan Swift. Most people know Swift as the author of “Gulliver’s Travels.” But recent events have me thinking of his 1729 essay “A Modest Proposal,” in which he observed the dire poverty of the Irish, and offered a solution: sell the children as food.

“I grant this food will be somewhat dear,” he admitted, but this would make it “very proper for landlords, who, as they have already devoured most of the parents, seem to have the best title to the children.”

O.K., these days it’s not the landlords, it’s the bankers — and they’re just impoverishing the populace, not eating it. But only a satirist — and one with a very savage pen — could do justice to what’s happening to Ireland now.

The Irish story began with a genuine economic miracle. But eventually this gave way to a speculative frenzy driven by runaway banks and real estate developers, all in a cozy relationship with leading politicians.

The frenzy was financed with huge borrowing on the part of Irish banks, largely from banks in other European nations.

Then the bubble burst, and those banks faced huge losses. You might have expected those who lent money to the banks to share in the losses. After all, they were consenting adults, and if they failed to understand the risks they were taking that was nobody’s fault but their own.

But, no, the Irish government stepped in to guarantee the banks’ debt, turning private losses into public obligations.

Before the bank bust, Ireland had little public debt. But with taxpayers suddenly on the hook for gigantic bank losses, even as revenues plunged, the nation’s creditworthiness was put in doubt. So Ireland tried to reassure the markets with a harsh program of spending cuts.

Step back for a minute and think about that.

These debts were incurred, not to pay for public programs, but by private wheeler-dealers seeking nothing but their own profit. Yet ordinary Irish citizens are now bearing the burden of those debts.

Or to be more accurate, they’re bearing a burden much larger than the debt — because those spending cuts have caused a severe recession so that in addition to taking on the banks’ debts, the Irish are suffering from plunging incomes and high unemployment.

But there is no alternative, say the serious people: all of this is necessary to restore confidence.

Strange to say, however, confidence is not improving. On the contrary: investors have noticed that all those austerity measures are depressing the Irish economy — and are fleeing Irish debt because of that economic weakness.

Now what? Last weekend Ireland and its neighbors put together what has been widely described as a “bailout.” But what really happened was that the Irish government promised to impose even more pain, in return for a credit line — a credit line that would presumably give Ireland more time to, um, restore confidence. Markets, understandably, were not impressed: interest rates on Irish bonds have risen even further.

Does it really have to be this way?

In early 2009, a joke was making the rounds: “What’s the difference between Iceland and Ireland? Answer: One letter and about six months.” This was supposed to be gallows humor. No matter how bad the Irish situation, it couldn’t be compared with the utter disaster that was Iceland.

But at this point Iceland seems, if anything, to be doing better than its near-namesake. Its economic slump was no deeper than Ireland’s, its job losses were less severe and it seems better positioned for recovery.

In fact, investors now appear to consider Iceland’s debt safer than Ireland’s. How is that possible?

Part of the answer is that Iceland let foreign lenders to its runaway banks pay the price of their poor judgment, rather than putting its own taxpayers on the line to guarantee bad private debts. As the International Monetary Fund notes — approvingly! — “private sector bankruptcies have led to a marked decline in external debt.”

Meanwhile, Iceland helped avoid a financial panic in part by imposing temporary capital controls — that is, by limiting the ability of residents to pull funds out of the country.

And Iceland has also benefited from the fact that, unlike Ireland, it still has its own currency; devaluation of the krona, which has made Iceland’s exports more competitive, has been an important factor in limiting the depth of Iceland’s slump.

None of these heterodox options are available to Ireland, say the wise heads. Ireland, they say, must continue to inflict pain on its citizens — because to do anything else would fatally undermine confidence.

But Ireland is now in its third year of austerity, and confidence just keeps draining away.

And you have to wonder what it will take for serious people to realize that punishing the populace for the bankers’ sins is worse than a crime; it’s a mistake.

Here we go again

Letter in yesterday’s Irish Examiner.

Here we ago again: ‘Look as foolish as you can and call every man sir’

THE then German ambassador to Ireland, Christian Pauls, made the mistake of laughing at our folly when addressing a group of German businessmen in Clontarf Castle more than three years ago, almost exactly a year before the banking crisis in the US became world news.

Ambassador Pauls depicted Ireland as a “coarse” country dominated by avarice. He pulled no punches, providing examples of a small country with a population of four million top-heavy with overpaid ministers, junior ministers and a retinue of others in political life living high on the hog.

The ambassador also spoke of medical professionals who dismissed the €200,000 offered to them to tend patients in public hospitals, as “Mickey Mouse money”.

He raised a laugh among the Germans in the audience when he spoke of the vehicular vanity of the Irish, recalling an occasion when he attended a concert performance. A public announcement was made to the effect that a 1993 car was causing an obstruction outside the hall.

Nobody left the hall to move it and Herr Pauls’ conclusion was, right or wrong, that we had reached such a level of snobbery that to be associated with a 1993 clunker would mean social death.

Our self-identification with expensive cars and sumptuous mansions bought on tick from the German taxpayer provided the Deutschlanders with an insight into the grotesque comedy of the feral and predatory Celtic Tiger.

The German ambassador was rebuked by the Irish government in all its preening glory and was subsequently recalled to his own country.

The truth often hurts in a country where then Taoiseach Bertie Ahern once told us we’d be the laughing-stock of the world if we continued to use pencils to cast our votes. So that we wouldn’t become laughing stocks, Martin Cullen ordered some shiny new toys in the form of evoting machines.

Unfortunately, although they’ve been charged to the Irish taxpayer, they are now in some junkyard or museum as icons of extravagance and utter ineptitude. Did the ministers and Taoisigh not have grannies who warned them that ‘wilful waste makes woeful want’?

John B Keane bequeathed to us the expression “cute hoor” and, although WB Yeats was invoked throughout the past week or so, John B understood what deprivation and emigration really meant to our ancestors.

In his play Many Young Men of Twenty, the Listowel writer has a woman bidding farewell to her sons about to emigrate to England to find work. Her advice to them is to “look as foolish as you can and call every man sir”.

The innate wisdom of her advice is the recognition that it is much better to be underestimated while quietly achieving than to flaunt so brazenly that others are waiting for you to get your comeuppance.

John B Keane wrote about rural Ireland in the 1950s and he saw the foibles of a people still sure of their birthright.

Sean O’Casey wrote about the Dublin slum-dwellers in The Plough and the Stars who veered from sentimental patriotism to an acceptance of harsh reality.

The 1916 Rising involved just the courageous few who were prepared to die for their beliefs while in Dublin city centre there were others who were busy looting shops.

Today’s white-collar looters have cannibalised our country, facilitated by those entrusted with its governance, the very same people now bragging about their remarkable cleverness in having the IMF arrive here to delve into the jiggery-pokery of our banking system.

We should almost be proud that Ireland is now the focus of world attention and that our “colleagues” and “partners”, even “friends”, are so concerned for our welfare.

Christian Pauls, must be laughing heartily at the bluffing of our Taoiseach and Minister of Finance.

The ambassador’s comments in Clontarf Castle in September 2007 were published as far afield as the southern hemisphere and were printed in The Australian newspaper at that time.

Maureen O’Donnell
Boreenmanna Road
Cork