Feb 07 2007

Jaysus!

Published by Fence under Irishify, Sport

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Talk about a blood injury

I’d say he had to change his jersey and all before he came back on.


And now for something somewhat different:

A Chara, - How ironic that in the week when we finally have had to accept that we are killing the planet with our over-use of energy, the main cause for celebration should be the playing of a football match under a megawatt blaze of floodlights, following a beautiful sunny spring afternoon.

The challenges of the years ahead in saving the planet will indeed be painful. - Is mise,

And it is terrible, I sorta agree with him. Not entirely though, cause yes, waste of energy, but dude, “the Stadium of Light” looked fantastic. And they did need a proper game to test the floodlights, and if you really want to moan about a waste of energy you should complain about all those shops who leave lights on 24 hours a day, just so you can see their fancy displays when you are coming home drunk from the pub.

Of the ones who feature tvs in their window displays, and leave them playing films all night long too.

Tags: Denis Hickie, energy efficient, injury, letters to the paper, The Irish Times

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May 17 2006

Sail away with us, on a boat to Wales

Published by Fence under Irishify, Ramblings

EDITED Looking for the Gift Gub Munster Song? Click Here, but is missing the very beginning and was just recorded from the radio, so quality might not be the best.


There is this meme doing some of the rounds of the Irish Blog’verse, asking are you an Irish conservative? I’m not doing it cause its all about yes no questions and I don’t do yes no questions. Well, I do when they are the sort that ask do you do yes no questions, and i answer no. But you get the general idea.

I especially don’t answer closed question when they aren’t in fact closed but wide open to interpretation. Are taxes too high for instance. Too high for what? Which taxes? See my confusion set in?

So I’m not joining in the fun. Sides I know what I am; A Cheese-Eating Surrender Monkey! Erm. No, that’s not it… Oh yes, a liberal, authoritarian, left-leaning, conservative, cherry-picker. See. Easy.

On to the non-political part of today’s post ;)

Today at lunch I went for a walk.[1] You’d think I’d have gone sometime last week. You know, when it wasn’t raining. But no, almost every other day I just do the 10/15 minute walk to wherever I’m eating and back again. But today, with the rain, I decided it’d be a good day to take a random wander in the opposite direction to the way I always go. I don’t know why.

Still, it is nicer to walk in the park when its raining, less people out enjoying the weather you see. And it isn’t like it was lashing, just a soft rain so I didn’t get soaked or anything.

Maybe I was just in good humour cause Veronica Mars has been greenlighted for a thrid season. Or because Paul O’Connell looks like being fit. Come on, its only a few days to go, you didn’t really expect me to say nothing about the rugby now did you? I was going to link to this morning’s Gift Grub, but for some reason whenever I upload my copied version it comes back with a file error. So I’ll have to wait till after work and see what I can do from home. It was Daniel O’Donnell and Ronan Keating singing a Munster inspired song all about Daniel O’Connell and Donncha O’Dulaing. [2]

I’ll leave you with a letter stolen from today’s Irish Times:

Madam, - Fine Gael, reverting to its Civil War roots, has decided that the teaching of Irish should no longer be “compulsory”.

Yet party leader Enda Kenny has suffered compulsory English throughout his school years (13 years or so), and still offends against its grammar and syntax.

Perhaps it is time for us to admit that the teaching of English (and of mathematics, if many third-level science lecturers are to be believed) has also failed, and to declare that all currently “compulsory” subjects will in future be optional. - Yours, etc,

Linknotes:
  1. and I was right not to organise to meet you NM cause at just after 12 I got a call from Minion saying he wouldn’t be in due to illness. So I had to take my lunch early while Minion-eile was still here. See, genius am I
  2. (yeah yeah, you furriners don’t know any of these people (some of you anyways, I tried to footnote this footnote, but it didn’t work ) but that’s funny right.)
Tags: Blogland, Irish politics, Irish Times, letters to the paper, meme, Munster, Paul O'Connell, rugby

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Jan 04 2006

why the f**k is it called dolphin’s barn? Who keeps dolphins in a bleedin’ barn?

Published by Fence under Ramblings

You’d really have to wonder what some people have to complain about. Recently there has been a string of letters whining and moaning about Dublin Bus. First off, and for the record, I have never ever had a problem with a bus driver, apart from the crazy russian dude who tried to do his route at light speed, shouting to all his customers and listening to classical music as he went, but even he was amusing. And yes I have waited and waited for a bus that never came, but for the most part that had to do with the fact that the line only had one bus every 30 minutes and it took longer than that to make it through traffic depending on what time you were travelling at.

Anyways, the most recent complaints to The Irish Times have been about the lack of change. See Dublin bus don’t give change. They ask you to have the exact fare, and if you don’t you’ll get a little bit added on to your ticket that you have to bring along to O’Connell st and exchange it for the cash.

Shane O’Sullican writes (sub’s re’q):

Madam, - 2005 has seen a flurry of comment about “Rip-off Ireland”. My vote for “Rip-off of the Year” goes to Dublin Bus for its continuing mistreatment of customers who do not have the exact fare.

According to Dublin Bus over 150 million passenger journeys will have taken place on their buses this year. If even one in every 15 of these journeys is undertaken by someone without the exact change and who pays 10 cent over the going rate, the surplus to Dublin Bus is over €1 million this year alone.

While paper refunds are produced on request, the unfortunate bearers must make their way to O’Connell Street to claim their refund, a pilgrimage that I doubt many people bother to make. - Yours, etc,

What a moaner. The surplus to Dublin Bus, as he puts it, can’t be kept by them. There is no best before date on the ticket, so you can go back in 10 years with your horde if you so wish. Or at least I think you can. And even if they did get to keep it, so what? The actual surplus would be nothing like €1 million, I’ve been in to exchange my change tickets, and I’ve had to queue. Therefore people do make the long and ardous journey down the main street in the city and collect their money. I doubt they do it for every single 10 cent, instead they do the sensible thing and wait til they add up. The in you go with bits of paper and come out with a fiver, or a tenner.

Honestly what is the big deal?

And if he doesn’t want to face the ordeal of Dublin city centre he could always give the fare to a charity and let them go in with a bucket load of paper slips to be exchanges for cash.


I wrote most of this yesterday, just before leaving work, and then wandered around the shops, left my overdue and still unread copy of Anansi Boys back to the library[1] and then purchased a couple of books in Chapters[2] I got Twenty Years After by Dumas; the first book in the Sarantine Mosaic trilogy by Guy Gavriel Kay; and The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler. this last one because NM has mentioned these Philip Marlow books are worth a read. And it was cheap.

Found myself up by the kino, so popped and the only thing I hadn’t seen that was on at the right time, and that I actually didn’t not want to see[3] was Merry Christmas, and the only thing I knew about that film was that it was in one o’dem furrin languages, and set in WWI. I went anyways.

Only for some annoying woman to walk by and knock over my popcorn[4] luckily only spilling a tiny bit, but still, that stuff expensive man. Anways, was really thinking I shouldn’t've bothered when the credits started and the seemed to go for ages. But I’m really glad I went. I’ll stick a review up over at Moving Pictures eventually, but I just thought I’d tell you all here that if you have the chance you should go see this film. Really great. Although you will be required to read some subtitles. The film is in French, German and English[5] and is based on the accounts of the unofficial truces during World War I over christmas along the trenches.

So if it is showing near you off you go and take a peak. It’ll put you in a really good mood.

Linknotes:
  1. still really want to read it
  2. the 2nd shop in Dublin, not one of the chain stores in the US
  3. Flightplan was on around the same time, but despite vaguely wanting to go see it at some stage cause who doesn’t love Sean Bean, it just didn’t appeal at all
  4. Boo! Hiss!
  5. often with a very strong scottish accent
Tags: Dublin Bus, letters to the paper, moaners, shopping, The Irish Times

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Jul 11 2005

A knowledge of history is important

Published by Fence under Current Affairs, Musing

when you are writing a letter to the papers.

I’m referring to a letter I saw in the Sunday Times (I think) about London’s reaction to the bombings. I can’t find it online, so I’m forced to rely on my memory, but the gist of it was that this bombing will not work. That other countries have tried to take over England; The Romans, the Vikings, the French, the Germans and the Irish. Tried and failed.

Quite a statement don’t you think.

Especially when you consider that the Romans did conquer England. I’m not too familiar with the Viking impact on Britain, but has anyone ever heard of the Normans? 1066 and William the Conqueror? Yup, that was the Frenchie-Normans taking over England. And I don’t think that the Irish ever tried to take over England?

Obviously the sentiment was that ” we’ve been bombed before and we’ll get through it again” Fair enough. And it is a good attitude to have, just don’t pretend that England has always been apart from the rest of the world. England is not made up of one genetic race, standing against all would be invaders, it is a cultural identity that has been developed as different waves of migrating people have impacted and changed the “native” populations.

Tags: history, letters to the paper, terrorism

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Jun 29 2005

Who here can say OTT?

Published by Fence under Sport

Last Sat. saw the first test match between the British and Irish Lions and the New Zealand All Blacks. I made a brief mention of it, but haven’t really commented on it since.

Continue Reading »

Tags: Brian O'Driscoll, British and Irish Lions, letters to the paper, Lions05, meeja, rugby, spear tackle, The Irish Times

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Mar 23 2005

Death of Wasps

Published by Fence under Ramblings

And no, not the death of W.A.S.P.s, I’m talking about the insect here.
Was browsing on New Scientist and noticed the back page featured a question on what eats wasps (apart from stupid birds). Turns out there are quite a few wasp-eaters out there

“Returning home late one night I heard the persistent buzzing of a wasp in the kitchen window. It appeared to be struggling around at the bottom of the window, unable to fly properly. A tiny red spider was attached to the underside of its abdomen. The spider must have been some 20 times smaller than the wasp and was positioned where the wasp was unable to mount a counter-attack.
The next morning revealed an empty, transparent wasp exoskeleton
- from New Scientist’s Back Page (link may die in a week or so)

Tags: letters to the paper, New Scientist, wasps

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Feb 22 2005

Letter of the week

Published by Fence under Current Affairs

"Could I take this opportunity to ask if
Sinn Féin now supports the location of an
incinerator in Cork?

-Letter in the Irish Times

Tags: Irish politics, letters to the paper, Sinn Féin, The Irish Times

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