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‘We're an Irish-Canadian-French household. I'm finally getting some return on my Leaving Cert French'
‘We're an Irish-Canadian-French household. I'm finally getting some return on my Leaving Cert French'

Irish Times

time25-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Times

‘We're an Irish-Canadian-French household. I'm finally getting some return on my Leaving Cert French'

Ruairí Doyle had no intention of moving from Ireland again after a three-year spell working for Google in London. With a background in software engineering and digital media, he felt ready to settle back in Ireland when the opportunity came up to establish the Dublin office of Press Reader in 2017. The Canadian-headquartered firm, which provides readers with digital access to a wide variety of international publications, quickly promoted the Rathnew native, bringing him to Vancouver two years later and subsequently appointing him chief executive in 2022. Press Reader is a 25-year-old privately owned business, headquartered in the Canadian city with operations in the Philippines and Dublin. It employs more than 460 people worldwide. It provides digital aggregation of many of the world's leading newspapers and magazines, ebooks and, shortly, audio books from more than 120 different countries in 60 languages, with clients including libraries, hotels, corporate and private customers, airlines and cruise ships, among others. READ MORE [ Why has Vancouver become so attractive for Irish immigrants? Opens in new window ] Meeting his Quebec-born wife, Kim, has sealed the deal on living and working in Canada, and the couple are now happily raising their two sons and enjoying the outdoor lifestyle in the thriving west-coast port city in British Columbia. 'It's an Irish-Canadian-French household – the kids are bilingual. And I'm finally getting some return on that higher level Leaving Cert French I was pushed towards. 'It can be challenging at times, with me being from Ireland and Kim being from Quebec. We don't have the support network of grandparents around. We do our best to instil a bit of Ireland and a bit of Quebec into the boys. We have hurleys and sliotars in the garden and maple syrup and cretons in the fridge.' The couple share a love of the outdoors, including snowboarding, kayaking, paddleboarding and camping, activities that are well catered for in the area. Doyle says he and his wife miss the cultural side of life they would have known growing up. Quebec and the east of Canada is much more established and familiar, with influences from French and Irish settlers, among others. There is a rich indigenous culture in the British Columbia region, however, which he says they are becoming increasingly appreciative of as they live there. We make friends with other parents and then, all of a sudden, they are shipping out as it is so expensive, so it can be quite a transient place Vancouver has a population of 662,000 – with the highest population density in Canada at more than 5,700 inhabitants per square kilometre – and its hinterland swells this figure to more than three million. There's a big tech scene in the region, with Seattle, home of Microsoft and Boeing, just over two hours away. There's a strong tech presence in Vancouver itself, with Google, Apple, Microsoft, Salesforce, Meta and Amazon, among others, having operations in the area. There is also as a strong start-up community. It's no surprise, then, that the city is a magnet for young migrant professionals. 'It could be compared to Melbourne with a great lifestyle combined with good career choices but there's also a healthy mix of established types with more credit in the bank.' The downside of this popularity is a housing crisis not dissimilar to that being experienced now in Dublin and many other European cities. Vancouver has consistently ranked among the most expensive cities in the world, with median house prices more than nine times median household incomes, according to one study. The average rent for a two-bedroom apartment is $3,480 Canadian dollars (€2,224). 'It's a hard city from an affordability point of view. We make friends with other parents and then, all of a sudden, they are shipping out as it is so expensive to get on the property ladder, so it can be quite a transient place. 'The challenge with Vancouver is physical. It's an attractive place to live with a limited supply of land and building. It's bounded by mountains, the sea, and the border with the US. Within 25 minutes you can be on the top of a ski hill; within two hours you can be in Whistler, one of the world's best ski destinations, so it attracts everyone who wants to dip into that lifestyle and that pushes up the property prices for everybody else.' Canada has found itself in the eye of an economic storm since the re-election of Donald Trump, and Doyle acknowledges the widespread concern about the economy now, with a lot of uncertainty about how a US-Canadian trade war will play out in the months and years ahead. 'We are starting to see the impact of tariffs on certain industries, not so much here, but in the east, in Quebec and Ontario, among steel workers and the automobile industry. People are feeling a strong sense of uncertainty, however, and businesses are preparing contingency plans for what might come.'

Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online
Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online

"The Kursk expedition was a disaster and a complete waste of life. Britain egged it on," says a March 15, 2025 post on X from Ian Miles Cheong, a far-right blogger who has previously spread other misinformation -- and whose posts have been repeatedly amplified by billionaire X owner Elon Musk. The post claims to show the Hull Daily Mail, a regional newspaper serving the port city of Hull in northeastern England, saying on its front page: "70,000 Ukrainian soldiers in the Kursk region died in vain. The UK poured hundreds of millions of pounds into Zelensky's crushing failure." Images showing the purported edition of the tabloid, dated March 13, circulated across X and other platforms, including Facebook, Instagram and TikTok. They spread as Zelensky said March 18 that Ukrainian troops would continue fighting in Russia's Kursk, despite Moscow's push to retake swathes of the area Kyiv captured in August 2024. The military situation in the Kursk region is a key issue at a time of intensive international diplomacy, including in the United Kingdom, to try to put an end to the three year conflict. But the supposed Hull Daily Mail headline blasting Zelensky over the Kursk incursion is a fabrication. "That story re Ukraine was a fake," said Lija Kresowaty, a spokesperson for Reach PLC, the Hull Daily Mail's parent company, in a March 18 email. Websites including PressReader, a digital newspaper distributor, show the outlet's true cover story March 13 related to a stabbing incident (archived here and here). "Boy found guilty of attempting to murder girl with a sword," the front-page text said. "Halloween camping trip turned into a nightmare when young teenager was stabbed ten times." Kresowaty told AFP the cover preserved by PressReader is "the correct front page from that day." It was not clear where the 70,000 figure cited in the fake headline about Kursk came from, or whether it has merit. Neither side of the conflict has provided verifiable casualty counts, as both Moscow and Kyiv do not typically disclose their military losses, and AFP does not cite each camp's claims on their adversary's fatalities. Zelensky told the US broadcaster NBC in February that 46,000 Ukrainian soldiers had died in the war that began with the 2022 Russian invasion. Independent Ukrainian war correspondent Yuri Butusov, meanwhile, said in December 2024 that his army sources estimated some 70,000 dead and 35,000 missing. AFP has debunked other misinformation about Russia's invasion here.

Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online
Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online

AFP

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • AFP

Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online

"The Kursk expedition was a disaster and a complete waste of life. Britain egged it on," says a March 15, 2025 post on X from Ian Miles Cheong, a far-right blogger who has previously spread other misinformation -- and whose posts have been repeatedly amplified by billionaire X owner Elon Musk. The post claims to show the Hull Daily Mail, a regional newspaper serving the port city of Hull in northeastern England, saying on its front page: "70,000 Ukrainian soldiers in the Kursk region died in vain. The UK poured hundreds of millions of pounds into Zelensky's crushing failure." Image Screenshot from X taken March 19, 2025 Images showing the purported edition of the tabloid, dated March 13, circulated across X and other platforms, including Facebook, Instagram and TikTok. They spread as Zelensky said March 18 that Ukrainian troops would continue fighting in Russia's Kursk, despite Moscow's push to retake swathes of the area Kyiv captured in August 2024. litary situation in the Kursk region is a key issue at a time of intensive international diplomacy, including in the United Kingdom, to try to put an end to the three year conflict. But the supposed Hull Daily Mail headline blasting Zelensky over the Kursk incursion is a fabrication. "That story re Ukraine was a fake," said Lija Kresowaty, a spokesperson for Reach PLC, the Hull Daily Mail's parent company, in a March 18 email. Websites including PressReader, a digital newspaper distributor, show the outlet's true cover story March 13 related to a stabbing incident (archived here and here). Image Screenshot from taken March 19, 2025 "Boy found guilty of attempting to murder girl with a sword," the front-page text said. "Halloween camping trip turned into a nightmare when young teenager was stabbed ten times." Kresowaty told AFP the cover preserved by PressReader is "the correct front page from that day." It was not clear where the 70,000 figure cited in the fake headline about Kursk came from, or whether it has merit. Neither side of the conflict has provided verifiable casualty counts, as both Moscow and Kyiv do not typically disclose their military losses, and AFP does not cite each camp's claims on their adversary's fatalities. Zelensky told the US broadcaster NBC in February that 46,000 Ukrainian soldiers had died in the war Independent Ukrainian war correspondent Yuri Butusov, meanwhile, said in December 2024 that his army sources estimated some 70,000 dead and 35,000 missing. AFP has debunked other misinformation about Russia's invasion here.

Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online
Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Fake newspaper cover on Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk spreads online

"The Kursk expedition was a disaster and a complete waste of life. Britain egged it on," says a March 15, 2025 post on X from Ian Miles Cheong, a far-right blogger who has previously spread other misinformation -- and whose posts have been repeatedly amplified by billionaire X owner Elon Musk. The post claims to show the Hull Daily Mail, a regional newspaper serving the port city of Hull in northeastern England, saying on its front page: "70,000 Ukrainian soldiers in the Kursk region died in vain. The UK poured hundreds of millions of pounds into Zelensky's crushing failure." Images showing the purported edition of the tabloid, dated March 13, circulated across X and other platforms, including Facebook, Instagram and TikTok. They spread as Zelensky said March 18 that Ukrainian troops would continue fighting in Russia's Kursk, despite Moscow's push to retake swathes of the area Kyiv captured in August 2024. The military situation in the Kursk region is a key issue at a time of intensive international diplomacy, including in the United Kingdom, to try to put an end to the three year conflict. But the supposed Hull Daily Mail headline blasting Zelensky over the Kursk incursion is a fabrication. "That story re Ukraine was a fake," said Lija Kresowaty, a spokesperson for Reach PLC, the Hull Daily Mail's parent company, in a March 18 email. Websites including PressReader, a digital newspaper distributor, show the outlet's true cover story March 13 related to a stabbing incident (archived here and here). "Boy found guilty of attempting to murder girl with a sword," the front-page text said. "Halloween camping trip turned into a nightmare when young teenager was stabbed ten times." Kresowaty told AFP the cover preserved by PressReader is "the correct front page from that day." It was not clear where the 70,000 figure cited in the fake headline about Kursk came from, or whether it has merit. Neither side of the conflict has provided verifiable casualty counts, as both Moscow and Kyiv do not typically disclose their military losses, and AFP does not cite each camp's claims on their adversary's fatalities. Zelensky told the US broadcaster NBC in February that 46,000 Ukrainian soldiers had died in the war that began with the 2022 Russian invasion. Independent Ukrainian war correspondent Yuri Butusov, meanwhile, said in December 2024 that his army sources estimated some 70,000 dead and 35,000 missing. AFP has debunked other misinformation about Russia's invasion here.

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