Will The Black And Tans Be Added To The Glasnevin Wall of Shame?

Further on the divisive “Wall of Remembrance” unveiled in the historic grounds of Glasnevin Cemetery on Sunday, a monument which partly pays tribute to the members of the British Army and Police who lost their lives during the Easter Rising of 1916, the motivation behind its erection was clearly heralded by the Glasnevin Trust in a statement from its chairman, John… Read More Will The Black And Tans Be Added To The Glasnevin Wall of Shame?

The New World Panama Order

Like some mad conspiracy theory from the outer reaches of the world wide web the revelations relating to the Panama-based law firm, Mossack Fonseca, have exploded onto our media consciousness with a bang, enveloping the great and the good of the global oligarchy in scandal. Or rather, they haven’t. In truth the bang was rather muffled, tempered by the inability of most people… Read More The New World Panama Order

The Great Betrayal Of Ireland’s Counter-Revolution

Back in 2014 I wrote about the “Great Betrayal”, the abandonment of an all-Ireland republic, an all-Ireland revolution, and an all-Ireland community through the actions of the Provisionals, the minority Collins-Griffith faction of Sinn Féin and the Irish Republican Army, following the signing of the “Treaty between Great Britain and Ireland” in December of 1921. In violation of… Read More The Great Betrayal Of Ireland’s Counter-Revolution

Donald Trump Questions The Geneva Conventions

Political commentators have been speculating for months that the Donald Trump campaign for the GOP’s presidential nomination would eventually, inevitably, go off the rails, and this seems to be the moment when the gold-plated train has well and truly gone tumbling. A series of flip-flop statements on abortion rights, and his apparent belief that 1) it… Read More Donald Trump Questions The Geneva Conventions

Not Merely Free But Gaelic 1916-2016

In August of 1915, Patrick H. Pearse, future president and commander-in-chief of the Provisional Government and Army of the Irish Republic, wrote a character study of the late Fenian revolutionary, Jeremiah O’Donovan Rossa, where he stated with approval that the latter was: “…not only ‘extreme’, but he represented the left wing of the ‘extremists’. Not only… Read More Not Merely Free But Gaelic 1916-2016

Evidence Of The Biggest Battle Known From Bronze Age Europe

The magazine, Science, has a fantastic in-depth article reporting on research carried out into a treasure trove of prehistoric finds from northern Germany which have turned the world of Bronze Age archaeology, and what we knew of warfare and society in western Europe some three millennia ago, on its head: “About 3200 years ago, two armies clashed… Read More Evidence Of The Biggest Battle Known From Bronze Age Europe

Russian Tank Meets American Missile In Syrian Proxy War

Whatever else one may say about the muddled involvement of the United States and the Russian Federation in the dreadful Syrian civil war it has certainly given the armed forces of both nations the opportunity to test out their military equipment in live-fire conditions. One of the latest examples of this proxy-contest between the world’s former superpowers is a minute and a half long… Read More Russian Tank Meets American Missile In Syrian Proxy War

A Catholic Priest And The Message Of British Guns Good, Irish Guns Bad

So a Roman Catholic priest, a Jesuit intellectual no less, condemns armed insurrection by a significant body of men and women against the colonial occupation of their island nation by a foreign imperial power, and their hope of establishing a democratic republic with equality for all persons regardless of gender, class or faith. Furthermore his words… Read More A Catholic Priest And The Message Of British Guns Good, Irish Guns Bad

Writer Barry Kennerk Replies To His Critics

My short post on Friday criticising the tone and content of the New York Times opinion piece, “Inventing the Irish“, has generated considerable interest over the last twenty-four hours, with some 50,000 views so far. Barry Kennerk, the author of the original newspaper article, has requested an opportunity to reply to this and the associated commentary, which I’m happy to publish below: “This… Read More Writer Barry Kennerk Replies To His Critics

The John Redmond Banner And Ireland’s 35,000 Dead

A quick update on the divisive 1916-2016 centenary banner erected by Dublin city council at the prominent Bank of Ireland building in College Green which features images of historical Irish politicians Henry Grattan, Daniel O’Connell, Charles Stewart Parnell and John Redmond. The inclusion of Redmond, the early 20th century leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party and its paramilitary wing, the Irish National Volunteers, has… Read More The John Redmond Banner And Ireland’s 35,000 Dead

The New York Times Argues That The Irish Are Actually British

The New York Times has published an extraordinary opinion piece by the writer, Barry Kennerk, on the significance of the centenary of the 1916 Easter Rising for contemporary Ireland. Extraordinary because it echoes an anachronistic view of our island nation that one would have expected to encounter a hundred years ago, not in 2016. It is essentially… Read More The New York Times Argues That The Irish Are Actually British

Improvised Armour, From The British Army 1916 To The Islamic State 2016

Just after 12 o’clock on the afternoon of Easter Monday, the 24th of April 1916, Patrick H. Pearse and his revolutionary colleagues were accompanied by an escort of volunteer-soldiers from the newly formed Army of the Irish Republic (or, Irish Republican Army) through the entranceway of the General Post Office on O’Connell Street, Dublin, to a point near the middle of the capital’s main thoroughfare. Looking understandably nervous the teacher,… Read More Improvised Armour, From The British Army 1916 To The Islamic State 2016

Two Irish Fantasy Writers On The 1916 Easter Rising

A quick post to recommend this short essay, “The Political Imagination: Irish Fantasy Writers and the Easter Rising“, by Rob Maslen over on the City of Lost Books blog. The article examines reactions to the 1916 revolution in Dublin and elsewhere from two different, if not unrelated, points of view. On the one hand there was James Stephens,… Read More Two Irish Fantasy Writers On The 1916 Easter Rising

Two Documentaries On The Kurdish War, Plus The Russians Get A Fright

A couple of recent video documentaries on the Kurdish struggle in Syria and Iraq. The first, “Kurdistan: Girls at War“, was broadcast last year by the Franco-German television channel, ARTE, focusing mainly on the fighters of the YPJ and PKK. Its interesting if slightly less questioning than it should be (and the title is a bit patronising). The… Read More Two Documentaries On The Kurdish War, Plus The Russians Get A Fright

Orange Is Not The Only Fruit, Just Ask The Mandarins Of The Alliance Party

So, the regional justice minister in the north-east, David Ford, has disdained an invite to the official celebrations in the capital marking the centenary of the 1916 Easter Rising. The leader of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland (APNI), which boasts of its supposed “cross community” credentials (by which it means it can attract some middle-class Catholic voters in the north who… Read More Orange Is Not The Only Fruit, Just Ask The Mandarins Of The Alliance Party

The Excusers And Apologists For The Bloody Sunday Massacre Are Still With Us

At the tail end of last year the former British army commander turned security “expert”, Tim Collins, writing in Britain’s conservative Sunday Telegraph newspaper on the Bloody Sunday Massacre of 1972, the attack on an Irish civil rights demonstration in Derry by UK troops that left fourteen men and boys dead, claimed the: “…Saville inquiry found that the IRA fired the first… Read More The Excusers And Apologists For The Bloody Sunday Massacre Are Still With Us

The Scottish Government Backs BBC Alba In The Wake Of Tory Budget Cuts

Last November I featured news from Britain on the decision by the Conservative Party government in London to make savage cuts to the public funding of S4C, the Welsh language television channel, and BBC Alba, its Scottish Gaelic equivalent. Now the SNP government in Edinburgh has intervened in the controversy, pledging to meet the fiscal shortfall in BBC Alba’s annual budget by continuing its… Read More The Scottish Government Backs BBC Alba In The Wake Of Tory Budget Cuts