Irish Populism Starts Stirring? Dublin Conference Airs Unease Over Hate Speech Bill
The conference was an important light in a country that is fast emerging as one of the last remaining total liberal holdouts.
The conference was an important light in a country that is fast emerging as one of the last remaining total liberal holdouts.
Irish PM affirms decision is Brussels’—not Dublin’s—to make.
The new Irish hate speech law will carry a penalty of five years in prison, potentially even for memes, thanks to the hard work of Soros-funded NGOs skewing the data to present one of the most tolerant societies as anything but.
When America sneezes, the world catches a cold. Ireland is now paralyzed by an involuntary expulsion of ‘woke’ air that managed to travel 4,000 miles across the Atlantic Ocean.
While Biggar ultimately concludes that progressive discussions of colonialism are flawed and overly simplistic, he does not fall into the opposite extreme in favor of every aspect of Western colonialism.
Irish police confirmed that no criminal proceedings were underway as speculation mounted that the right-wing ‘The National Party’ had undergone an internal coup.
Comparable in exasperation to recent Dutch protests, Irish farmers gathered to object to the imposition of nitrogen quotas, as the Irish government looks set to commence the mass culling of livestock to meet environmental goals.
Justice Minister Helen McEntee described increasing numbers as “a permanent change.”
In the latest battle between EU regulators and U.S. tech firms, Brussels claims that Apple benefited from tax breaks from the Irish government while Dublin struggles to keep both sides happy.
Irish elites are playing a delicate balancing act with majority opinion against NATO membership, despite stark warnings that the nation’s military is nowhere near up to scratch to defend against Russian sabotage.