The Heelers Diaries

the fantasy world of ireland's greatest living poet

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Location: Kilcullen (Phone 087 7790766), County Kildare, Ireland

Monday, February 01, 2010

the lying persecutors of the ancient church

The Irish Times had one purpose and one purpose only in publishing a gerrymandered survey claiming sixty percent of the general public want the church to be prevented from taking any role in the education of our children.
Listen folks.
When was the last time that sixty percent of the Irish people agreed with the Irish Times about anything?
The Irish Times returned losses of a hundred million dollars last year.
That's after the usual accountancy tricks to conceal their real losses.
They've got no mandate.
And when was the last time the Irish Times was right about something?
Anything?
Remember the lies they propagated in the past.
The Irish Times spent the Cold War telling us Russian Communism represented the scientifically inevitable progression of human society.
Chief among those perpetrating that particular lie, was Seamus Martin, the pro Soviet Irish Times political editor whose brother just happens to be Archbishop Diarmuid Martin.
Archbishop Diarmuid Martin... he who is so keen to throw his brother Bishops to the wolves at the merest hint of innuendo from the Irish Times and or Judge Yvonne Murphy.
The Irish Times spent the Gulf War (the one following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990) telling us the Iraqi people would fight to the last man against the Americans to keep Kuwait.
The great Maggie O'Kane claimed to have interviewed "a gentle Iraqi man who breeds budgies." She claimed the gentle budgie breeder told her: "I will strangle George Bush with my bare hands."
And then the Americans went in and Saddam Hussein's invincible army of gentle Muslim warrior budgie breeders... ran away.
In the initial aftermath of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, Sean Cronin of the Irish Times announced: "There is no Kuwait on my hundred year old map of the world."
He accepted the annexation of a peaceful country.
Not only did he accept it.
He championed it.
He applauded it.
In the pages of the Irish Times.
My God.
These people have no shame.
A lot of independent countries that weren't on Sean Cronin's map would be under the shadow of the scythe if Sean Cronin's twisted views were to prevail.
Including one called Ireland which was part of the United Kingdom at the time Cronin's map was made.
And that's where the Irish Times comes in again.
The Irish Times has no loyalty to this country.
The Irish Times has no appreciation of the Catholic traditions which have ensured our survival as a nation for 1500 years.
A few weeks ago the Irish Times printed an article by a failed politician called John Bruton.
John Bruton once led a party in Ireland called Fine Gael which my family had traditionally supported.
Fine Gael had a reputation for being marginally less corrupt than Fianna Fail.
John Bruton claimed in his recent Irish Times article that the nation State had failed humanity and that from here on in, countries would be run by supra national committees, appointed by bodies such as the United Nations or the European parliament.
Of course we should remember that John Bruton was abysmally unpopular and led Fine Gael to historic defeats at the hands of the Irish electorate.
He was the man who would be king.
Now having increasingly edged out its Christian members, Fine Gael is contemplating life with a couple of dozen seats.
I guess the people let John Bruton down.
I guess the people let Fine Gael down.
I guess the people let the Irish Times down.
It wasn't a big jump for John Bruton to abandon the whole idea of democracy.
But the rest of us might want to think twice about it.
John Bruton doesn't believe clever fellows like himself should be at the mercy of the electoral whims of the proletariat.
The Irish Times believes the same.
For over forty years the Irish Times has published opinion polls suggesting Irish people want legalised abortion.
Every time we hold a referendum on abortion, the people roundly reject it.
The Irish Times has been more successful with its falsified polls on divorce legislation.
These polls were contrived in order to provoke our weak corrupt governments into holding two referendums on divorce.
The first referendum proved yet again that the Irish Times opinion polls had been arrantly falsified.
The people roundly rejected divorce with the right to remarry.
We took the tough decision, to uphold our existing laws, where divorce existed but did not include the right to remarry.
We did this because we had seen what the sexual revolution and divorce culture had done to family life in other countries.
Immediately after the vote, Jean Tansey of the Irish Times was facilitated by the national broadcaster RTE in going on air to tell the Irish people: "You've disgraced yourselves again."
Jean Tansey was also a leading member of an organisation styling itself Divorce Action Group.
Funny old world.
So the people rejected divorce for the reasons I've stated.
But that didn't stop the Irish Times.
It never does.
With their gerrymandered opinion polls and their allies in the judiciary and RTE, they once more compelled the government to hold a referndum which nobody wanted.
And Ireland finally voted for divorce.
Supposedly.
The margin of victory was 0.1 percent or some such.
Improbable in all respects.
And nothing near the thumping majority predicted in the Irish Times fake opinion polls.
The Irish Times and Jean Tansey claimed that divorce legislation would mean a reduction in violence within marriage.
The Irish Times and Jean Tansey claimed that divorce legislation would mean a reduction in violence against children within the family home.
Three dead babies already this year.
A continuing explosion of violence in the domestic setting.
Wives murdering their husbands, husbands murdering their wives, a veritable maelstrom of bloodshed.
I've gotta say it.
Jean Tansey and the Irish Times have a lot to answer for.
They are the disgraces.
I say it again.
When has the Irish Times ever been right about anything?
Here is the news.
The Irish Times is a profoundly unpopular media entity serving the interests of shadowy figures who believe themselves to be the elites of our culture and to be entitled to rule us without accountability.
That's what the Irish Times is.
But the Irish Times has noticed that people are starting to talk back to it.
The purpose of its latest gerrymandered survey this week on attitudes to the church in education, is to sow the excruciatingly false notion in the public mind that the people of Ireland actually agree with the anti Catholic persecution currently being steered through our culture by the Irish Times and its allies.
The Irish Times is not going to stop this until we stop them.
I'm telling you gentle readers.
Turn the other cheek, is not meant to be a justification for oppressors.

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