More than a week before the nationwide protest of Nov 1st I was invited to speak at the Dublin City Centre gathering.
As
it turned out I did not get the chance to speak but I had prepared
myself for that eventuality. A week in politics is a long time and I
was expecting that things would change and the list of people wanting to
address the crowd would mean that some would be bumped in favour of
others. Nevertheless I began to write what I thought were the important
things to say to people on the day.
The thoughts which
formed were numerous and my 'speech' was getting longer and longer. I
had so much to say and to try to condense it into a few minutes was
looking more and more difficult. On the morning of Nov 1st, after
mentally rehearsing for days, I actually changed what I thought I would
say and hoped it would capture the essence of the day, the significance
of the protest and perhaps give people something bigger to think about
than just an illegal bill for water.
This is the
'extended mix' of (a) what I had originally prepared, (b) the address I
finally hoped to give and (c) my thoughts today, the day after Ireland's
citizens took to the streets.
IRELAND - LESSONS IN SUFFERING AND SACRIFICE
It is said that "history has a habit of repeating itself".
Almost
a century and a half ago the ordinary people of Ireland were in the
midst of a holocaust. During the time of the famine peoople had no food
and children were hungry. One million people emigrated to escape the
hardship. One million more died of starvation. Families were evicted
from their homes by force and thrown out into the mud and the rain. It
was the bleakest time in our nation's history and the story of it is
known around the world.
At that time however, the
politicians did not go hungry. The people in authority, the police, and
the judiciary. Did not go hungry. The landlords, the gentry, the
businessmen and the wealthy did not go hungry. There was food aplenty
for those with means but the ordinary people suffered.
It happened because the potato crop failed.
Today, in 2014, more than 150 years later, the people of Ireland are suffering. Because the political system has failed.
Families
cannot afford three meals a day. Children going to bed hungry and in
the morning go to school hungry. In the past 6 years since the toxic
banks failed only to be saved by our polticians, hundreds of thousands
have emigrated to escape the hardship. Today, half a million families
are being threatened with eviction by these same banks. Homes are being
taken by the sheriffs by force and families thrown into the mud and the
rain. Thousands have died. Victims of suicide, pushed to the edge of
despair with no vision of a brighter future.
In 2014,
the politicians are not suffering. Their families are not hungry. The
bankers and businessmen and property developers and landlords are not
hungry. The wealthy are not hungry. Judges and Senior Gardai are not
hungry.
Why would they be? In a time of famine, it is the rat and the parasite that thrive.
In
1916 a few hundred men rose up and took the power back from an
oppressive regime. They did it not for themselves but for the people
and they gave the power to the people in the form of a Proclamation of
Independence and a Constitution. In 1937 the politicians destroyed that
constitution and took the power back for themselves.
In
eighteen months time we will be back in the capital to celebrate the
heroes of Easter 1916. And the politicians will have front row seats,
and give their inspiring speeches and patriotic laments about the
sacrifice that those men and women made to give birth to our nation.
The President and Taoiseach will host dignitaries and luminaries and all
manner of royalty, state and corporate wealth. The ordinary of people
will be barricaded out.
I don't think I will be
celebrating. I think I will go to some quite place and ask for
forgiveness. For if we return to this historic place in 2016, and have
not repeated what Connolly and Pearse and Collins did, then we will have
dishonoured their memory.
WE DON'T NEED STRENGTH OF NUMBERS - WE NEED STRENGTH OF RESOLVE
It doesn't take 100,000 people or 200,000 to do it. The number is not important. What's important is the resolve.
In
Ballyhea, a village in North Cork, a small group of people have been
marching every week for almost four years. They were marching for two
years before I ever heard about them. They inspired me and few friends
to march in solidarity against the bank and the bondholder bailout - the
noose that was put around our necks and the necks of our children.
Dublin Says No have marched for more than a year and half every week
without fail as one small group prepared to face down the might of the
government and say we will not go quietly.
The
Ballyhea group have had the resolve not just to march in their own small
town, but to travel to Brussels and demand meetings with the heads of
the Troika and plead for the Irish people ... something that Michael
Noonan hasn't had the balls to do.
The challenge
for us is to have the resolve of the people of Ballyhea to continue to
demonstrate our disgust and anger at our politicians. We will bring
Irish Water down, but the government will retreat and regroup to attack
us on another front. If we do not defend ourselves again and again, in
the face of repeated assault on our lives then we will have surrendered
the war to the masters of our puppet politicians.
DON'T READ THE HEADLINES - SEE THE TRUTH BEHIND THE SPIN
The (government) media will report that 10,000 marched in Dublin City today and 100,000 marched across the country.
I say that each one of us represents 10 people who could not be with us today.
Each
of us represents friends and family who could not make it. Our young
children. Our elderly parents. Our sick. Those who are working. We
also represent 500,000 homeowners, equating to more than a million
people under threat of repossession and eviction from the banks we
bailed out - afraid to leave their homes becasue the sheriff and the
banks are ready to move in and put them out on the street. Hundreds of
thousands of our friends and family who have emigrated since 2008
because they see no possibility of a future in the country of their
birth. And thousands of friends and family who did not make it to see
this day - victims of suicide through desperation and despair.
If
there are 300,000 people marching in Dublin, Cork, Limerick, Waterford,
Galways, Dundalk, Mullingar, Clonmel, Cavan, Donegal and the small
towns and villages of Ireland, then there are 3 million people
protesting against a political system that has betrayed and abandoned
them to the jackals of the banks and the multinational corporations
preying on their lives.
IRISH WATER - JUST ONE SYMPTOM OF THE REAL DISEASE.
Irish
Water is not the problem. It is just the latest symptom of the disease
that is steadily killing out country. The disease is our political
system. Corrupt, broken, wasteful, unjust, inhumane.
Our
politicians, who we elected to represent us and serve us, betrayed and
abandoned us in 2008 when they guaranteed the deposits of the super rich
with the taxes of working men and women; when they bailed out the banks
of Ireland, Europe and the US who financial experts and economists now
agree should have been allowed to fail; and when they bailed out the
bondholders of Wall St and London and Tokyo - gamblers who bet on a
terminally sick dog - the Irish economy.
The infusion
of money into the banks was authorised by the European Central Bank on
the condition that the money printed for the infusion would be taken
back out of the Irish economy over time so that the economy would not
overheat and reignite the fuse that would bring us to the point of
meltdown for a second time.
When the politicians turned that promise into a contract written in blood the fate of generations was sealed.
As
a promise it could have been broken ... after all that's what
politicians do. But as sovereign debt, it became the chains with which
to bind the people of Ireland into a life of slavery. We live to work
and we work for absentee landlords and paymasters who will not go hungry
while Ireland suffers a new holocaust.
There were other symptoms
along the way to November 1st 2014. The household charge, which we
fought off only to have it mutate into a much stronger and untreatable
Property tax. The removal of medical cards from even children with
serious illness and medical conditions. The Universal Social Charge: a
tax that by the inclusion of 'Universal' in the title seems somehow
noble and even unifying. The closure of hospitals and cuts to health
services. The removal of critical educational support for those most in
need. There were other attacks to subsections of society that,
although massively punitive to those affected, would be small enough to
go unnoticed by most and those hit would be of such a small number as
could be easily ignored, if their voices were ever heard.
But we
could not ignore water. Whether it was a tax too far, a human right, a
public service not to be privatised, a political and administrative
fuck-up, a charge on something that was not fot for purpose or some
other reason, we marched for water.
When Irish Water is consigned
to the scrap heap, along with now-third-hand meters and the board have
had their fleet of mercs taken off them, the disease will still be
there. Festering. Designing a new attack which will produce a new
symptom. And maybe we will treat that symptom. And maybe we will beat
it too. But the disease will remain.
Politics is the disease.
The politicial system is cancerous. And polticians are not the ones who
will cure it. If your waiting for politicians to make things better
then you'd better prepare your funeral sooner rather than later.
We
elect them to represent us. They are supposed to work in service of
the public. But politics in Ireland is not about Public Service. It is
about Self Service. And by Christ do they help themselves.
WE ARE THE CURE
Treating
the symptoms will only gain us temproary relief. We need to address
the cause of our ills and that is the political system.
It will not take much to do this.
The
solution is NOT a new government; it is NOT more politicians; and it is
NOT more political parties ... not under the current system.
The three most important solutions to our ailments (in my opinion) are these:
1.
The reinstatement of the Right of Recall which was part of Ireland's
original (and usurped) constitution which stated that the people, by
simple petition in sufficient numbers, could demand the dissolution of
Dail Eireann. With this power, a small proportion of the numbers who
marched on November 1st could remove the government and call a general
election.
2. The abolition of the Party Whip System. This
insidious distortion of free speech completely silences the voices of
the people in every constituency who send their representatives (TDs) to
Dail Eireann. There is no democracy when local TDs are used simply as
voting cards to implement EU and corporate policy drafted by the
unelected masters of the party leadership.
3. A complete reform
of Oireachtas salaries, expenses, perks and pensions which attract
career politicians who have more interest in self service than public
service.
Another important change would be the electoral process
of the Seanad which should be the watchdog of government. Personally I
think a reassessment of our membership of Europe is a life and death
issue for the future of our nation. The old argument of "well, Europe
was good to us...we got grant money ...and agricultural money ... and
were attractive to foreign multinational investment etc etc" is all
meaningless now. We're paying back everything we EVER got from Europe
... with serious interest. The EEC we joined in 1972 is a totally
different beast to the EU that exists today. It was originally a
political community of nations aimed at improving trade. Today it is
the trading floor for European workers wages, bought and sold by
corporate and banking giants, holding governments to ransom, bleeding
every opportunity for profit under a banner of progress and prosperity.
These are the things we should be marching for even more than taxes and charges and cuts.
Change the system. Cure the disease. Or watch your country die a slow and painful death.