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The Saker
A bird's eye view of the vineyard

offsite link Alternative Copy of thesaker.is site is available Thu May 25, 2023 14:38 | Ice-Saker-V6bKu3nz
Alternative site: https://thesaker.si/saker-a... Site was created using the downloads provided Regards Herb

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Dear friends As I have previously announced, we are now “freezing” the blog.  We are also making archives of the blog available for free download in various formats (see below). 

offsite link What do you make of the Russia and China Partnership? Tue Feb 28, 2023 16:26 | The Saker
by Mr. Allen for the Saker blog Over the last few years, we hear leaders from both Russia and China pronouncing that they have formed a relationship where there are

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The Saker >>

Public Inquiry
Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005

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Public Inquiry >>

Human Rights in Ireland
Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.

offsite link Julian Assange is finally free ! Tue Jun 25, 2024 21:11 | indy

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Human Rights in Ireland >>

Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link The Losing Battle to Get Public Sector ?TWaTs? Back in the Office Thu Jul 25, 2024 19:06 | Richard Eldred
Years on from Covid, Civil Service 'TWaTs' (Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday office workers) are harming productivity and leaving desks empty. The Telegraph's Tom Haynes explains how this remote work trend affects us all.
The post The Losing Battle to Get Public Sector ?TWaTs? Back in the Office appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

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The post ?Prepare to Go to Jail,? Judge Tells Just Stop Oil Art Vandals appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Hundreds of Thousands Are Ditching the Licence Fee ? And It?s a Crisis for the BBC Thu Jul 25, 2024 15:00 | Richard Eldred
With an £80 million revenue drop and growing calls for a licence fee boycott, BBC bosses are struggling to prove that Britain's biggest broadcaster remains worth the cost.
The post Hundreds of Thousands Are Ditching the Licence Fee ? And It?s a Crisis for the BBC appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link The Democratic Party Clown Show Continues, With Giggles Replacing Bozo Thu Jul 25, 2024 13:00 | Tony Morrison
Biden's sudden exit and the canonisation of his hopeless VP is a dismal chapter in American politics ? one that will further erode trust in the democratic process, says Tony Morrison.
The post The Democratic Party Clown Show Continues, With Giggles Replacing Bozo appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link ?Climate Change? Used to Justify Government?s Record ?Investment? in Renewables. Cui Bono? Not the T... Thu Jul 25, 2024 11:05 | Richard Eldred
The Government is using the excuse of 'climate change' to justify the largest taxpayer 'investment' in wind and solar farms in British history.
The post ?Climate Change? Used to Justify Government?s Record ?Investment? in Renewables. Cui Bono? Not the Taxpayer appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

Lockdown Skeptics >>

The riddle of Mr Sands

category international | history and heritage | opinion/analysis author Friday May 05, 2006 18:21author by erse Report this post to the editors

25 years ago today after a hunger strike of 66 days, Robert Gerard Sands more commonly known as Bobby Sands died. He had been born on the 9th of March 1954 and was only 27 when he died.

He was serving a 14 year sentance for possession of firearms, a pistol which had been found in car in which he and 4 others had been travelling. His trial in 1977 saw other charges relating to a bomb which had been planted nearby the car dropped for lack of evidence. It was not his first experience of imprisonment. He had joined the IRA in 1972 and that same year been interned and held without trial till 1976. Of his 27 years' life, only 17 were spent in freedom.

Ireland as they say - was different then.
Bobby Sands Street in Tehran (prior to his death this was Winston Churchill Street)
Bobby Sands Street in Tehran (prior to his death this was Winston Churchill Street)

& it is vitally important for younger readers to spend some time reflecting on those differences, and what forces brought Bobby Sands to internment, to IRA activism, to the Crown Prisons of Lonk Kesh / the Maze and saw him begin a fast on March 1, 1981 at only 26 years of age. That fast would turn into a hunger strike, and see him elected to Westminster as MP for Fermanagh & South Tyrone on the 9th of April 1981, with 30,492 votes to 29,046 for the Ulster Unionist Party candidate Harry West, less than month later his life would end in globally recognised martydom.

go to the links you youngsters and learn :
http://www.bobbysands.ie/ where you may also read the poetry he wrote in prison.
http://larkspirit.com/hungerstrikes/bios/sands.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_Sands
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/troubles/hungerstrikes/

Recent commemorations have been many and global, you could start learning about the legacy of Mr Sands by using our search engine. & varying it a little. This link might even help -
http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?search_text=hunger...trike

Prolonged fasting or Hunger Strikes are not really a good way of achieving political goals.

Today's commemorations as reported by the Irish State news-provider :-
http://www.rte.ie/news/2006/0505/sandsb.html
as reported here :-
http://indymedia.ie/article/75867

author by tomaspublication date Fri May 05, 2006 20:30author address author phone Report this post to the editors

very interesting that when the sinn fein of 2006 commerates the death of bobby sands, that the family of bobby sands has nothing to do with sinn fein's capitalizing on the 81 hunger strike.

author by tomas - shame on you sinn feinpublication date Fri May 05, 2006 20:34author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Brendan McLaughlin sits jack-knifed in his wheelchair, a knot of gathered anger, and snaps the filter off another cigarette. He hasn't been able to taste tobacco, or much else, since the stroke he suffered seven years ago, so breaks the tips off before smoking them . . . 40 a day . . . right down to his kippercoloured fingers.
Photographs and republican paraphernalia wainscot the walls of his council bungalow . . . photographs of volunteer graves, pictures of famous IRA men, a bodhran made in Portlaoise jail. But it's a pencil sketch of the 10 men who carried their protest right to the end that draws his eye.
"You see them boys up there?" he says. "They died for nothing."
He's angry about a lot of things . . .
Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness ("scum bastards"), the peace process ("a sell-out") and the Brits ("no business being here . . . never had, never will").
"They're all getting ready to sit in Stormont, " he says, "when there's still a war to fight."
Paralysed down one side, he's no longer capable of prosecuting that war, but it goes on in the theatre of his head.
"I haven't changed, " he says. To him, it's a badge of honour. "See the rest of them . . . all them other boys you're talking to . . . they have changed.
They're supporting what's going on.
McGuinness and Adams . . . accepting the 26 counties! Accepting the six!
They're sitting in Dail Eireann. Now they're sitting up in Stormont.
"The next thing they're going to do is go on the police board and you know what that means. They're following the same lines as Michael Collins and Eamon de Valera. It's Irish history repeating itself, that's what it is. What did Michael Collins do? He turned the gun on his own men in Dublin. De Valera . . . what did he do? He got into power and done the same thing in the '40s. IRA men killed. The same thing will happen when they go on this police board. You can take it from me."
His two teenage boys come in and out at regular intervals. He's separated from their mother, who lives just a few doors away.
"We still get on okay. I'm easy-going.
I try not to get down, " he says, anxious not to sound like an ornery old man trapped not only in a wheelchair but in a perpetual past.
To him, the Troubles were part of a long continuum that started eight centuries ago and will only end once the last British soldier has left and Ireland is unified. Ten or 15 years ago just about every republican he knew believed this. Now, all he sees is compromise and fudge. "Money, big jobs, big houses . . . that's all it's about, " he says.
In 1981, he was 29 and well into a 12year sentence for possession of a pistol when he was chosen to replace Francis Hughes, the second man to die, on the hunger strike. But less than a week into his fast he was rushed to hospital suffering from a perforated ulcer and internal bleeding.
The aim of the hunger strike was to crank up the moral pressure on the British government by way of a series of drawn-out, highly publicised deaths. A sick hunger striker was a liability. The doctors said that a combination of gangrene, blood loss and oxygen starvation to the brain would have killed McLaughlin within 48 agonising hours. The IRA took him off the protest.
"I'd have gone the whole way, " he says. "I'd have done it. They [the prison authorities] were putting the food in the cell every day, hoping I'd have a nibble. I was too f**king hard for that. I'd no fear of death. I've been around too many corners in my time."
Would he have gone on hunger strike had he foreseen where the republican movement would be 25 years on? "Probably not, no. It's sad that 10 men died. And for what? See, I knew the best of them boys. Joe McDonnell was in the cell next to me. I knew Bobby Sands as well. I think they'd turn in their graves, them 10 there, with the way things are now."
His voice rises an octave. "Hit them in England, that's what I say. Forget about this country. I said that over 30 years ago. Hit them in their own country, where it hurts."
Some of his old comrades, who ask about him and still think fondly of him, say that it's being largely housebound and cut off from the mainstream of republican thinking, that has him still thinking about the conflict in abstract terms.
"No, it's just that they've changedf and I haven't, " he adds, flashing a proud smile, then twists a cigarette in the bottom of the ashtray and lights another.

author by erse - (iosaf)publication date Fri May 05, 2006 23:24author address author phone Report this post to the editors

By thinking you work your Freedom.

Oliver Sheppard RHA (1865-1941) taught at the College of Art in Dublin, whose students today were on the front of the newspapers in Ireland - protesting. He cast his bronze of Cu Chullain in the winter of 1911 to 1912, only in 1936 was it placed by the Irish state acting through the last Irish Free State minister for Post & Telegraphs in the GPO, Dublin as a memorial to the 1916 rebellion.
Cu Chullain the Ulsterman. whom they only approached when the raven started eating him

The Citizen by Richard Hamilton (1924 -2005) was painted as oil on canvass as a dyptich on two panels with dimensions of 200 x 100.9cm and 200x100cm, between 1981 and 1983. The dyptich formed part of a three series reflection on the conflict in the north of Ireland and was supposed to stylise a "dirty protester" in Long Kesh / The Maze as a Christian Martyr . The other two of the three paintings by Hamilton are The Subject 1988-9 shows an Orangeman, a member of the order dedicated to defend Unionism in Northern Ireland. The State 1993 shows a British soldier undertaking solitary patrol on a street. Many dismissed them as naive. Though Hamilton had earned respect for his treatment of Irish subjects since the 1940's with attempts to illustrate James Joyce's "Ulysses". The Citizen was first displayed alongside an installation of drawings of Long Kesh its prisoners and those worke there by Rita Donnagh his partner, in an "art endevour" which was welcomed to the wrath of Thatcher in London with a grant from the GLC under Ken Livingstone. The Citizen was then purchased by the Tate Gallery London in 1985, but due to display space limitations did not hang before the public until 2000 and the opening of the second Tate Gallery.

It was 9 years after Mr Sand's death.

I'm not "waffling" by posting these 3 illustrations, Nor am I really offering any analysis, I just thought that this category "history and heritage" was the best place to drop these pebbles in the nation's consciousness, in nations' consciousness, the riddle of Mr Sands is as much a British riddle as any other.

If you wish to fight the British state today and its continued lobby to have "Bobby Sands street" in Tehran changed back to "Winston Churchill Street" (where indeed there embassy is located) you can do the electronic petition thing here :- http://www.labournet.net/events/0402/sands1.html http://www.irlandinit-hd.de/sub_misc/bsands.htm

Or if you really wanted to be p-o-l-i-t-i-c-a-l you could suggest to both the Iranian and British governments that they rename all their streets, avenues squares and malls - either "murderer" or "martyr" and number them the sensible yankee way.

Bobby Sands poetry touched me years after I had first felt the politicisation his slow death caused.
I like many readers / collective members was only a kid. Many of our readers weren't even alive. Some of our other readers could fit it all into a narrative. pit pat But I was just a kid. & I didn't know how to paint, I didn't know what was happening, but I like many of you, stored it up in my "curious cerebral net" & decided I'd ask questions about it later.

= Ask questions!

May Bobby Sands. & all the others who died in the Irish / British conflicts
Rest in Peace.

Richard Hamilton (1924 - 2005) painted "the Citizen" between 1981 and 1983
Richard Hamilton (1924 - 2005) painted "the Citizen" between 1981 and 1983

Oliver Sheppard RHA (1865 - 1941) cast this bronze in the winter of 1911 to 1912. (not 1916)
Oliver Sheppard RHA (1865 - 1941) cast this bronze in the winter of 1911 to 1912. (not 1916)

 
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