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The Ireland that still works

The Ireland that still works

Irish Post19 hours ago
THIS Ireland might be a small island on the edge of Europe.
An often wet, windy, place facing out into the Atlantic.
It's beautiful and, if you ever leave and come back you realise just how it is very, very green.
It's distinctively itself with a long cultural history.
The world is more different now though than even twenty years ago.
Due to communication advancements and technology what happens in New York happens in Newtownmountkennedy too.
For good or for bad, take your pick, we're interconnected in ways unimaginable even a decade ago.
Loud, noisy, insistent, the modern world is in rural Cork as much as it is in Chicago.
Which is why, in an increasingly tense, unstable world, even apparently slight things can take on a much larger echo.
We are, much to our detriment, becoming increasingly inured to the crass and rash things the President of the United States says.
He has clearly operated along the principle of saying the unsayable so often that it becomes everyday.
He utters the shocking thing so much that we are no longer shocked. With a world teetering on God-only-knows-what one more little cruel aside from a man dedicated to such sayings can appear utterly trivial.
It shows, though, the bar at which we now operate.
Not only that but this casual cruelty leaks everywhere now. It sets the tone.
In response to the shocking shooting dead of two politicians in Minnesota Trump was asked if he would call the Governor there to, presumably, sympathise and offer support.
This was his response. 'I think the Governor of Minnesota is so whacked out. I'm not calling him. Why would I call him? The guy doesn't have a clue. He's a mess. So I could be nice and call him. But why waste time?'
What is most disturbing about this is not that Trump would say such a thing, such an utterly cruel thing, but that we now think so little of it that it doesn't even come anywhere near a headline.
One of the enduringly fine things about Ireland is the way society works. We have problems, of course, prejudice, bigotry, we have unpleasant people, people you just want to avoid. We're not the Hollywood Ireland of smiling leprechauns and rainbows.
Ireland is a just a country like any other country. A place like every other, full of the whole gamut of humanity.
What we do have, though, is a society that works.
Yes, we have enormous housing problems, enormous health inequalities, we do a lot of things in a way that I would disagree with intensely. But on an everyday level society works.
It works because people treat each other with understanding and patience and kindness.
Of course, there are exceptions to this too but the overall impression you get from interactions in Irish society is that people are friendly and considerate.
It might sound trivial but it is the very thing that oils society along, that makes it work, that makes life pleasant. It is not trivial but essential.
In everyday discourse, for instance, people are calm and obliging.
It is not nothing. If, for instance, we conducted ourselves the way people do online, the President of the United States, for instance, who behaves like an online troll, what would that be like?
If we engaged in endless petty resentments and regurgitated vitriol and an inability to display civility even at the most extreme moments, what would that be like? Isn't that the worry?
Our culture is now so influenced by outside, technologically inspired, behaviours it has to be a concern that one of the planet's most influential men is like this.
Not so long ago teachers expressed concern about the influence of online influencers on young Irish men in particular.
What if our culture becomes open to the idea that this casual cruelty and arrogance is the way we should conduct ourselves?
Ireland's smallness and geography has shaped the country and the people.
Technology makes so much of that irrelevant.
It makes us vulnerable to things we wouldn't have imagined.
How ironic that people fear the country will be changed by the immigrant family down the road working hard for a better life but not by the loudmouths yelling awfulness through the devices they always have with them.
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Miriam Lord: Guests sang Donald Trump's signature tune at the US ambassador's bash until embarrassment got the better of them
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Miriam Lord: Guests sang Donald Trump's signature tune at the US ambassador's bash until embarrassment got the better of them

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That joke will soon wear thin. Also present was the Canadian ambassador, Dennis King. He wasn't in the least bit bothered about Donald Trump's musings on turning Canada into the 51st US state. Dennis and his wife Jana Hemphill, both former political journalists, found the idea highly amusing. They held their own garden party last week for Canada Day. They had a moose called Bruce and a dugout canoe on the lawn. Bruce was stuffed. Rather like the crowd in Deerfield after a feed of mini hot-dogs, burgers, fries, ice-cream and sweeties. Tánaiste Simon Harris on stage with US ambassador to Ireland Edward Walsh and his wife and daughters. Photograph: Dan Dennison Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Harris spoke on behalf of the Government. It was a very long speech, probably because he had to wrap up strong comments on Gaza in a lot of soft soap about our mutual bond, shared history and how the two nations 'are intertwined in each other's stories'. As the grand finale fireworks display burst across the sky, America the Beautiful blared from the speakers. Then the opening strains of Trump's signature tune hit the air and the beer- and bourbon-soused guests jumped up and began singing along and doing the actions. 'YMCA!' they roared until, suddenly, some of them realised what they were doing and stopped, ever so slightly embarrassed. This was the highlight of the night Another refreshing first for Verona Murphy Verona Murphy made history late last year when she was elected as the Dáil's first female Ceann Comhairle. It's a very busy life: not only does Verona police Dáil proceedings, she chairs the Houses of the Oireachtas Commission, which oversees the running of Leinster House along with various other procedural committees. 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Mary McCarthy: Three months off school is outrageous. Here's what we could learn from other EU countries
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Mary McCarthy: Three months off school is outrageous. Here's what we could learn from other EU countries

It leaves too much up to family circumstances. And for primary-school kids, in Ireland we are overdue subsidised summer camps that run past lunchtime. Now that I live in Belgium, I see how children's summer experiences vary so vastly back home. For some it's a fun blur of Irish college, sailing camp, holiday homes out west or trips to Portugal. And then some kids go nowhere. The CSO found in May one in five adults cannot afford to take their children away for a week-long holiday – and it's worse for renters and single parents. In every country, lower-income families are on the back foot, with parallel lives for the well-off and the struggling. But allowing teens a quarter of the year to roam free intensifies the unfairness. Ireland has 167 days of secondary school; most EU countries do between 180 and 190. We don't do fewer teaching hours, but as my kids get older I understand how school is more than academics. It needs to teach you how to apply yourself, that you can relax when you have done the work; how to be an asset to your community; to understand how the world works; and the confidence to claim your place in it. With an extra, say, three weeks of school in Ireland at secondary to bring us more in line with the EU norm of primary and secondary schools, this would allow more buffer to develop our kids holistically. For example, the extra three weeks of school my 16-year-old got this year has meant more PE – three times a week instead of the once a week he got in Ireland, with extra skills like how to change a bike tyre or a fuse. All of the school years do volunteer work once a month, like cleaning the park. Classes are longer, with flexitime for homework and help available if stuck. My cleaner in Brussels has teenagers, and every second year in June they go on exciting school trips abroad – to Malta and Switzerland, countries he has never been to, or expects to ever go to. You must pay €500, but he pays in instalments from September. Having two months of holidays for my secondary-school children instead of three has taken the pressure off. There is time for a camp (if they agree); for a holiday; for babysitting work; and lounging around. The camps their pals did were out of my price range and I felt guilty at the inevitable screen time Last year in Ireland the three months went on for ever. The camps their pals did were out of my price range and I felt guilty at the inevitable screen time. There are so many teens in Ireland sitting around on social media because they are too old to attend the GAA Cúl Camp and too young to become a camp leader there. Which is assuming they even like sports. Again, we leave so much up to chance. A well-off pal tells me: 'Duh, Irish college is the unofficial school for June.' But fewer than one in five go. The Department of Rural and Community Development told me 27,583 attended Irish college last year. With 425,433 kids enrolled in secondary schools, assuming it is mainly first and second year that go, that means around 19pc go. Included in that number was the 431 who went to Irish college on the Deis Gaeltachta scheme. This year there was extra funding in the budget and the department expects the 800 allocated scholarships to be used. This is excellent, but still translates as just three or four pupils from each of the 235 secondary Deis schools. An improvement but still largely one summer for the rich secondary kids, another for the rest. And while the increasing numbers going to the school summer provision in July, aimed at those with additional needs and at-risk kids, is another achievement, still just 59,338 took part last year, the vast majority are primary pupils. A teacher friend says the holidays are sacred and we need schools for exams. And yes, there's a retention crisis, but how do other countries manage? We must remain open-minded as our world changes. AI will help with workload and when AI starts correcting the state exams, they will mark them in a jiffy. What is also making me nice and relaxed this summer is the wide availability of full-day, subsidised summer camps. Your local area, or commune, organises them and they cost around €50. You can pay for private camps that offer a wider selection, but they are still reasonably priced. My 12-year-old tells me I have more time to play table tennis with him – I'm more fun than last summer I miss our wonderful libraries in Ireland and the Park Run, but it's a weight off to know I can get my work done no hassle. My 12-year-old tells me I have more time to play table tennis with him – I'm more fun than last summer. Next week, my eight-year-old is happy to go to a football camp that runs from 8am to 6pm, if needed, with a hot meal thrown in. Same price as a 10am to 2pm camp in Ireland. I can't believe my luck. It is like they assume parents work here. Imagine that.

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