The Blindboy Podcast - Catherine Connoly

Episode Date: September 23, 2025

A chat with Catherine Connoly, an indepedent politician who would like to become President of Ireland  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Calgary, also known as the Blue Sky City. We get more sunny days than anywhere in the country, but more importantly, we're the Canadian capital of Blue Sky Thinking. This is where bold ideas meet big opportunity, where dreams become reality. Whether you're building your career or scaling your business, Calgary is where what if turns into what's next. It's possible here in Calgary, the Blue Sky City. Learn more at Calgary Economic Development.com. Scan the van man's handbag, you jangley Madigans. Welcome to the Blind Buy podcast.
Starting point is 00:00:37 If this is your first podcast, consider going back to an earlier episode to familiarize yourself with the lore of this podcast. You know, before I continued, this week's podcast, I'm chatting with Catherine Connolly, who would like to become president of Ireland, all right? I don't usually do this, but when I have a guest on, especially someone like Catherine Connolly, I'm going to get people listening to this podcast, listening to this episode who never come here to listen to anything. I'm going to get a lot of Leinster Rugby Daz. Embittered Lensder Rugby Daz are currently listening. Men call Donald and Brendan,
Starting point is 00:01:14 who use terms like the adults are in the room, or student union politics, who become very hot under the collar and excited about the idea of sending other people's children to war. So Brendan and Donald and Declan Of course, can't forget the Declan's Maybe a Nealus Certainly a Nile
Starting point is 00:01:35 There's a Nile contingent I know that you're listening And I'm going to make it really easy for you Look, the interview is at 17 minutes-ish And because if I don't do that It's just going to be Facebook comments He wouldn't stop waffling
Starting point is 00:01:49 He wouldn't stop waffling At the start of the podcast He was waffling, waffling the whole time Self-Agrandizing Waffle So it's a podcast. This is a podcast. You have the capacity and ability and agency to fast forward. Okay?
Starting point is 00:02:04 So the chat with Catherine Connolly begins at 17 minutes. Okay. And go there. There's nothing else here for you. And just like this real centrist idea, right? That to have any type of politics that are about compassion or the public good is student union politics. Or to say things like, can we get the adult? in the room, the adults in the room, when any political idea is put forward that has to
Starting point is 00:02:33 do with a social net, with compassion, with being kind to people. What you're saying there really is, you're an adult now. Have you not noticed that the world is actually really evil? Have you not noticed that systems of power, that the most powerful people actually do really fucking evil things? Have you noticed that? And that to be an adult, what you're supposed to do is quietly go along with it, while presenting a solemn veneer of propriety and politeness.
Starting point is 00:03:00 Have you not noticed that? Are you not an adult? You need to go along with this because if you don't, it's student union politics. Only 20-year-olds, only 20-year-olds who haven't seen what the world is really like try to speak truth of power. Only 20-year-olds in student unions who aren't in the real world. Only those people believe in things like equality and compassion and human rights and fairness.
Starting point is 00:03:24 Okay? I'm one of the adults in the room here which means that the world is evil and I'm going to participate in that but I'm going to do it in a really polite way in a really polite way with a suit and I'm going to behave really solemn
Starting point is 00:03:39 about it. So that's what it means when you say the adults are in the room or student union politics. It's a very cowardly and manipulative position. Donald or wry might be if you rise before I begin I want to remind you about
Starting point is 00:03:54 my radio show is debuting tonight on BBC Radio 6 if you can access that at 11 o'clock tonight it's called grounding it's a music show where they've asked artistic neurodivergent artists to speak about being neurodivurgent and to select some music for two hours and last night's episode was Gary Nomen, he presented an episode and then tonight it's going to be myself. And I'm very proud of this piece of work because I got quite a bit of freedom. Freedom to not only select whatever music I want to select, which I adored that opportunity because in a previous career I was a music producer and songwriter. I adore music with all my heart and I love speaking about music. so to get two hours to select tunes and to speak about them I've been waiting for that
Starting point is 00:04:52 opportunity my entire career and I also just get to speak about what it's like being autistic and what it's like to specifically to be an autistic artist so tune in tonight BBC Radio 6 the show is called grounding it's on at 11 o'clock at night and then I've got two hours on the radio tomorrow night I have another show and tonight is a book creativity tomorrow is about how I escape. Again, 11 o'clock at night. And then the last episode is next Monday, the 29th at 11 o'clock at night. I think if you're living in Ireland, you can listen to it live via digital radio. But if the English queen is on your money, if you take money out of your pocket and the English queen is on it, then you should be able to listen to
Starting point is 00:05:41 to this episode on the BBC player or the BBC Sounds app I believe so that's grounding with myself Blind by Boat Club 11 o'clock tonight tomorrow night and next Monday so people living in Ireland what can you do? BBC commissioned it
Starting point is 00:05:58 alright so you'll have to find creative ways to listen to it so I'm very proud of this radio show very very proud of it another thing as well this sounds like I'm sucking my own flute this week but I just have to get these things out of the way My documentary Blind by the Land of Slaves and Scholars, which I made for RTE, in fairness to him, I made it for RTE last year, that's now been, it's been shortlisted for the Greerson. The Greerson Trust Documentary Awards. Again, it's a British documentary awards. Not sucking my own float. It's one of the most prestigious documentary awards in the world. I'm very happy to be nominated for that. Not just for me, but for all the people who work very hard to make the documentary happen.
Starting point is 00:06:45 I'm up for the shortlisted for the best presenter award. I mean, that feels lovely. I worked very hard, so it's nice to have acknowledgement from... It's the industry, it's the industry at the highest level, going fair play to you, a good job. So the work is shortlisted for the award, not me. And many people contributed to make that work good enough that it could get nominated for such an an award, including the contributors on the documentary who I had a chat with. And I want to give a shout out to Mancon, Mancon, Magin, who Mancon's been on this podcast about
Starting point is 00:07:23 five or six times. And also, Mancon was in this documentary, this documentary about early medieval Ireland. And we had a wonderful chat. But again, this is this thing that pisses me off about television. So me and Mancon had a fantastic chat in this documentary and we edited. edited it down into the bits that we could use to suit the format of television. But the best conversation that me and Mankan had was the one that wasn't recorded. Me and Mankan, like Nockneray is this collection of passage tombs up in the mountains of Sligo, like thousands of years old. Beautiful scenery just steeped in history. And we needed to get some drone shots.
Starting point is 00:08:09 You know, a drone was flying around. to get shots of me and Mancon, walking around knocked away because it's so visually stunning. But me and Mancon circled that ancient passage tomb. I'd say for about a half an hour. And during that half an hour, it's just me and Mancon chatting, just chatting about whatever. But it wasn't being recorded. Only the visual was being recorded, not the audio. And if I had my way, if I had my way, like Artisan,
Starting point is 00:08:41 RTE came to me, what do you want to put on TV? Do you know what I want to put on TV? Me and Mancon circling that tomb for a half an hour, chatting about whatever. There's your TV show. Fuck off. That's what I'd like to make because that's like Beckett. That's performance now. But the format of television does not allow for that. With TV, things need to be edited and presented in a certain way so that it fits the language of television. This language that isn't really relevant anymore but we still do it. And I get like I'm not blaming anybody there going someone stopped me from making the TV that I want to make. No, it's TV is a format and if you want to make television you have to stick to a format. I mean it was it's my production company
Starting point is 00:09:28 that made the TV show so I'm choosing to make something within the television format because it's been commissioned as a piece of television and I try my best to challenge those boundaries and create something that's fucking post-television, but even my production company is called Conla's Well. And Conla's Well is, it's the well of wisdom, it's an ancient well that is a portal to the other world where all knowledge exists. Because it was mentioned in the Dinshenkenshenkis, and the Dinkshenkshens, which I'm probably pronouncing wrong, was the lure of places, a type of early, medieval Irish list of names, list of names and places. A list of names and and why are certain areas called this and where did the names come from?
Starting point is 00:10:15 So Kunla's Well is there in the Dinshenghis. But how do you think I know about that? Because fucking Mankan told me. Because Mankon, Magin told me he'd go and read the Dinshinkas in Irish. Mancon's body of work is a continuation of the Dinshinkas in our time. But anyway, I'm thinking of Mankan. I'm thinking of Mankan because he's very, very sick at the moment. If you've been watching the news, Mankan has been diagnosed with cancer and it's pretty serious.
Starting point is 00:10:47 And my thoughts are with him and my heart is with him. He's a wonderful person and there's nobody like Mankan. There is nobody else like Mankan who is doing what Mankan is doing with the knowledge that Mankan has. He's a mad cunt. He's a beautiful mad cunt. And whether it's the Irish language. folklore, Irish mythology, he brings a mad eccentric energy to this space which can sometimes feel a little bit exclusionary because it's so solemn so I'd ask you all
Starting point is 00:11:22 please to send out I mean what are you gonna do thoughts and fucking prayers just keep Mancon in your thoughts he said publicly he doesn't want a bunch of people contacting him but engage with Mancon's his books his podcasts his writing and his ideas, and then just hold them in your fucking head, go out for a walk in nature and have a think about Mancon, attune your nose to the black current tang of fox's piss, stare at a nettle, watch a crinkly autumn leaf get born again in the soil, and have a little think about Mancon and the wonderful work that he's created over the years, and let it inspire you and then create something with it.
Starting point is 00:12:05 We've got a presidential election coming up here in Ireland. Literally a month from today, 24th of October, you'll be able to vote for the next president of Ireland. Now, the president in Ireland is a... It's a strange role because it is largely symbolic. Like the Irish president wouldn't have the type of powers that would say that the American president would have. But the president is also the guardian of the constitution. They can refer bills to the Supreme Court to see if it's constitutional or not. The President signs bills into law and can refuse if they feel that the procedures aren't being followed.
Starting point is 00:12:50 But it really depends on how you define power. The most powerful thing I think an Irish President can do is how they create discussion, they create public debate. the Irish president can draw attention to issues that might be ignored. I mean, we've seen this with, I mean, Michael D. Higgins, the current president of Ireland, who I had him as a guest on this podcast about two years ago, I think, and Mary Robinson. I mean, Michael D. Higgins frequently, frequently will bring up discussion about housing in Ireland, about how the government isn't fulfilling its role in housing. He'll call out the government on how the housing crisis is as a result of policy.
Starting point is 00:13:39 Or he'll call out the genocide that's happening in Gaza. And if our politicians are sticking their heads into the sand and the media is sticking its head into the sand, you want an Irish president. You want a president who speak about issues that matter that actually impact people's lives and isn't afraid to challenge the dominant political narrative. And that's the power of the Irish presidency. and what you want, you want someone who's a critical thinker, who has empathy, who's thoughtful in their speech, who can communicate, who has the capacity to take complex ideas, a president
Starting point is 00:14:15 should be able to democratise speech. That if an issue appears to be, you know, full of jargon or complex, you want an Irish president who can democratise these ideas so that absolutely everybody can understand these concepts. And you want to get a bang as well. You want to get a bang of a good person off him, don't you? You want to just get the vibe that this seems like a decent person, a decent human being who legitimately cares and isn't an absolute fucking snake.
Starting point is 00:14:45 I mean, that the great irony of the Irish presidency I find as well is, it's very Irish. Like going back, I mentioned there Cunnel as well, you know, on the other world. I've spoken about the other world and many podcasts. this pre-Christian Irish idea where linear time doesn't exist. And instead what you have is this world and then this mirror reality, this other world. And in this world, in Irish mythology, there's battles and fighting and scarcity and pain and hardship.
Starting point is 00:15:17 But in the other world, the mirror world, endless food, endless fun, endless joy, endless sex, no pain, endless life. endless knowledge and wit and wisdom. And the way we elect people in Ireland is a bit like that. We elect the politicians who do not have our best interests at heart, who have lovely smiles on their faces, but they're policies, they push neoliberal policies and take social safety nets and privatise them. I mean, the housing crisis is the obvious example.
Starting point is 00:15:55 We consistently vote in parties that just perpetuate the housing crisis, it's what we do. But then with the president, it's like the other world, the mirror reality. You vote in a government who uses their power, who act in the interests of profit and giant corporations instead of human beings. But then you vote in a president who doesn't have the power to change any of it, but is great at talking about what it would be like if it was changed. And then we get to go, oh God, listen to Michael D. Higgins there talking about homelessness and the benefit of social housing
Starting point is 00:16:30 and calling out genocide, wouldn't it be great if Michael D. Higgins wasn't president and if he was actually Taoiseach and could do something about it? Ah, fuck it. Better vote for Fina Gale and Fianna Fahl again. It's the pre-Christian other world.
Starting point is 00:16:44 There's misery in this world, but there's a parallel reality where everything is class. Having said that, I'd like the next president of Ireland to be someone, someone who is actively calling out bad government policy.
Starting point is 00:16:56 someone who is speaking compassionately and empathically about human issues, about issues that are actually affecting the human beings in Ireland. I think it would be a very sad situation if for the next eight years you have a president who just shows up the ceremonies and has old party allegiances and doesn't call out the government
Starting point is 00:17:23 and just smiles and gets on with it and shows up and gives Donald Trump his shamrocks once a year. So my guest in this week's podcast is Catherine Connolly. Catherine Connolly wants to become President of Ireland. She's an independent Irish politician. Years of experience. Used to be a clinical psychologist. She was a barrister.
Starting point is 00:17:45 And has a good track record of being compassionate, speaking compassionately. A lot of the chat that we had is about neoliberalism, how public services in Ireland have been privatised over the years to the detriment of the average human being. We also spoke about neutrality and the triple lock. Ireland is a neutral country. We do have an army, the defence forces, who are deployed as peacekeeping, very, very important peacekeeping units around the world. There's a thing called the triple rock, triple lock.
Starting point is 00:18:21 The triple lock currently means that Irish defence forces can only be deployed on peacekeeping missions if it's approved number one by the government, number two, by the entire Irish Parliament, the doll, and number three, there must be a UN mandate. And this exists because we're a neutral country and certain interests at the moment would like to remove this triple lock. And that might compromise our neutrality. Ireland's neutrality is quite a valuable thing and I speak to Catherine Connolly about this so without further a jaw
Starting point is 00:18:55 here is my chat with Catherine Connolly so Catherine Connolly thank you so much for coming along to the Blind Boy podcast Yeah, false you wrote I'm really Do you know what? The first thing I wanted to ask you about it is okay so obviously you want to become president of Ireland
Starting point is 00:19:14 okay? Yes I'm really fascinated by the fact that you have a background in clinical psychology. Yeah. Like, I'm a huge fan. I trained to be a psychotherapist myself a long time ago. I'm a massive fan of psychology. And I find, I mean, look, my job is being a podcaster.
Starting point is 00:19:35 So I find that a knowledge of psychology helps me to understand the human condition. It's, like, it helps me to have empathy. It helps me to have empathy and to understand people. And especially when it comes to understanding people that I don't agree with. If I don't agree with a person's opinions, I find that my knowledge around psychology helps me to arrive at a kind of an empathy for people to disagree with. And the first thing I just want to ask you is, do you ever draw upon your background in clinical psychology with the job that you do as a politician or what you might want to bring to the presidency? absolutely but I'd say that I learned empathy on the floor of my house at home with 14 siblings
Starting point is 00:20:23 we learned about empathy and solidarity and understanding well before I ever went on a journey of getting degrees and further education so I just I think perhaps it's in reverse the answer is in reverse to what you're saying I think psychology gave me the confidence and the ability to reflect back and to articulate experiences.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Because you grew up in one of the first social housing estates in Galway, didn't you? I did. I did in a place called Shantala, our old ground, Shantalov. I would consider it an absolute privilege, the background I came from. And I think my father and mother gave me that ability and gave all of my siblings that ability to realize we were privileged. And there were seven boys and seven girls. And as I said, we learned about equality. and social justice on the ground in the house and gave us a perspective on life that perhaps it was easier for us to have
Starting point is 00:21:24 given that my mother died young and my dad took over and then my eldest sister and then another sister. So we got different perspectives on life very, very, very early in our lives. I suppose the reason I'm asking you is I mean a huge issue
Starting point is 00:21:41 that people are facing today in Ireland is housing, you know, access to a four housing is a lot more difficult now. And I think it's a fantastic thing. If we had a person as president who was able to have the lived experience and empathy of having grown up with that social net, in Ireland, like there's an emergence of
Starting point is 00:22:03 almost like the American thing, make Ireland great again. Yes. And I hear this simplistic narrative where people want to heart back to an imagined past where everything was cated, and everyone had white skin whereas really
Starting point is 00:22:17 what I think people want again is a social net access to social housing unions, workers' rights full-time contracts yeah these things have disappeared and people don't know why
Starting point is 00:22:31 and people feel very confused yeah I think I think you're saying an awful lot there you know I don't look back with a lens that says everything was good there were certainly more social housing without a doubt and there was certainly a fantastic community spirit in Chantala where I grew up
Starting point is 00:22:49 and a sense of home and a sense of belonging, absolutely, and that was crucial. We were grounded. We were grounded with common sense, actually. I think what has happened with housing is a direct consequence of a neoliberal agenda where we have made products out of everything. So a house has become a product to be bought and sold as an investment and the same with health
Starting point is 00:23:17 I was on the health forum for 10 years of my life from 2006 I think to 16 and I watched the dismantling of our public health service I watched as home care was privatised
Starting point is 00:23:31 an essential service where the old helper and the health executive were doing a good job and then they privatised everything and the same thing with public nursing homes a complete reversal in terms of percentage and less than 20% are now public nursing homes
Starting point is 00:23:51 and over 80% are private for profit and I watched all that with a sense of utter despair and frustration clearly I spoke out about it as it was happening but they told us it was better it was the neoliberal ideology that privatisation is good and less state involvement better and the opposite is correct actually and so the state moved back entirely
Starting point is 00:24:20 from providing public housing so I was on the city council in Galway from to 99 to 2016 17 years and we stopped building social housing or public housing in 2009 not a single public house was built after that and so that was until about 2020 and we've been playing catch-up ever since.
Starting point is 00:24:45 So the government policy, the whole way along, has been instrumental in the housing crisis. And I might mention one other element to me that was absolutely detrimental in intensifying the housing crisis. And that was the introduction of the housing assistance payment, which was enshrined in legislation that if you got that housing assistance payment,
Starting point is 00:25:11 which allowed you to source a private house, market rent being paid, market rent being paid to the landlord through a combination and maybe we'll go back into the actual intricacies of it. But I'll stick with the general point. You were then considered housed. You were taken off the housing waiting list.
Starting point is 00:25:29 You were housed in a private house with absolutely no security of tenure with public money directly into private landlord's pocket. and to me that is a key element of the housing crisis because we bolstered the private market and we have kept the prices, rent prices, extraordinary higher or allowed them to get higher and higher with public funds. Now, I have no difficulty with people getting assistance to pay their rent.
Starting point is 00:25:59 My difficulty is that the housing assistance payment, we were told in no uncertain terms that that was the only game in town. and so we privatized the provision of public housing and we did it in a way that was absolutely disingenuous and unacceptable to me. Because that's something, I tried to speak about that issue as much as possible because what I find is,
Starting point is 00:26:29 so on the ground when I speak to people, they're not aware of this. Like when I think of something like HAP, or just neoliberalism, in general. How I simplify it via storytelling, as I say to people, this is, it's, neoliberalism is almost a way for public money to be funneled into private hands, like something like HAPT there that you've mentioned. You've got a person who needs access to affordable housing. You've got a taxpayer who's like, okay, I'd like to pay for a person to have affordable housing. And then
Starting point is 00:27:03 you have a landlord in the middle who's effectively erecting a tax. toll booth. It's as if the wealthy have put a toll booth between taxpayers and people who need to benefit from tax. And then you see this funneling of money. But then what results from that, what I find is this sense of confusion. Like you have the emergence of the far right in Ireland. You have people who think that we do not, that the housing crisis exists because there are immigrants here and like I
Starting point is 00:27:41 how are you finding this when you're canvassing are you speaking to people about this are you do you even a word like neoliberalism
Starting point is 00:27:48 right even that word itself like I know what neoliberalism means because I went to the trouble of finding out
Starting point is 00:27:54 what it means but it's one of those words that even when you mention it to the average person it creates more confusion yeah in one way
Starting point is 00:28:03 in one way you're right but you know I've canvassed in a good few elections now and particularly the last three general elections the one in the 20, the one in 24
Starting point is 00:28:17 and 2016 and I just missed out by 17 votes in all of those elections nobody asked me for a reduction in taxes and so there was a theme a common theme from the people and we knocked on as many doors as we possibly could
Starting point is 00:28:35 And the theme was, we'll pay taxes but we want services in return. We want public childcare, an integrated public transport system and public housing. And we want to extend the remit of those that can have public housing. And so what really they were looking for are the core ingredients of a republic. Yeah. You know. The evidence of the tax being used. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:29:04 Exactly. And that doesn't mean that perhaps people will say, of course, we want taxes reduced. But it wasn't the message. The message was services, please, two people going out to work to pay an astronomical mortgage and then paying another mortgage the equivalent of for childcare. And of course, the government will say they have done a lot and they have to reduce the cost of childcare and they've brought in different schemes. But what we should be doing is providing public childcare. as the model. Yeah. That's what the model should be and we should be providing public housing.
Starting point is 00:29:40 And, you know, I think this always has been a snobbery from the top down, never really discussed in relation to what I prefer to
Starting point is 00:29:48 call public housing. Yeah. And there should be a mixture of people that can avail of public housing. Obviously, to own a house
Starting point is 00:29:57 and I've the privilege of owning my house now is also important. And there's a fallacy or I can't think of a stronger word, we're talking about affordable housing, which is a nonsense. Houses at 300,
Starting point is 00:30:10 350 and 400,000 and rising are not affordable. So all of the language has been inverted, in my opinion, misuse of language to confuse and to confound. And as if the housing crisis happened
Starting point is 00:30:28 by accident or overnight or the equivalent of, when it is a direct consequence of public policy. And, you know, the Housing Commission was set up by the government because of pressure from people on the ground on us, as has happened in relation to Palestine and the genocide in Palestine, the constant pressure. So if we stick with housing for a moment, because of the constant pressure and the opposition, finally the government said, we'll set up a housing commission. They did that. The Housing Commission did their work and came up
Starting point is 00:31:02 with some great recommendations. The most important one was that a radical reset of housing policy. Radical reset of housing policy. That has never been taken on board by the government. What they're doing is pushing more schemes. And I've often described it like a jigsaw of pieces, a jigsaw of housing pieces with absolutely no overall vision.
Starting point is 00:31:30 And do you think there's a deliberate attempt to confuse the public around this? Not like myth truth, but... I certainly think this has been a failure to have an open and honest debate. The nearest we got to that was the Housing Commission and that the Housing Commission invited submissions from various entities all over the country. And it really is worth reading. and that was an open and an accountable way that they did their business, came up with recommendations and conclusions.
Starting point is 00:32:08 Really, they've been ignored. So in that sense, in that sense, there is a failure. Maybe the government is not setting out deliberately, but there certainly is a failure to explain in a rational, of course they can't. They can't do it because then they'd have to admit that their housing policy hasn't worked and hasn't worked for quite some time
Starting point is 00:32:32 and I guess they're never going to do that something I've just while we're on the topic and because you lived through it as a politician when we use the phrase
Starting point is 00:32:43 neoliberalism we tend to think of we'll say Thatcher or Reagan and how these things came about in Britain and America we know that story
Starting point is 00:32:52 but when did you start to see this emerge as a policy in Ireland and when did you start to because you are there when did you start to go this doesn't sound good
Starting point is 00:33:03 well thank you for that question really because you know it it occurred to me forcibly when we started doing corporate plans
Starting point is 00:33:15 for a city council and a huge effort going in to corporate plans and the language of the market and I always found that extremely difficult I was a chair
Starting point is 00:33:27 of a strategic policy committee for a while and so I had the experience of sitting on the corporate policy group and so much time and effort to producing a corporate plan and then of course city manager was changed to CEO yes and it's something that never set comfortably with me because it's my firm belief that as an elected member I'm there to serve the public and I believe a city council and its team, particularly the manager, and I have difficulty calling them CEOs because it's not a business. A council is there to serve the people of the city, of the county. And that was where it really was brought home to be forcibly. You saw this corporate language and corporate
Starting point is 00:34:16 restructuring creeping into what used to become. Not creeping in, blatantly, blatantly, not creeping in at all. I think what really... Was it the 90s, Catherine? Like, whenabouts? I only became a counsellor in 1999. Okay. So I'm talking about into the 2000s.
Starting point is 00:34:35 Okay. Yeah. I really wasn't involved in politics until 98, 99, in the word of, you know, a councillor or elected person. But from 9, I sat then from 99 onwards and I was mayor of Galway from 2004 to 2005. And again, as mayor, I chaired all the meetings, I did that, we traveled, we did everything. I never missed a meeting to my recollection. And we also put through a city development plan, which I might come back to, because again, it illustrates. We identified the problems and the solutions, but they weren't implemented.
Starting point is 00:35:13 But just on my year as mayor, I really found it difficult in the sense of going to different social events. that was 2004 to 5 and watching neoliberalism at its peak so I remember being at an auction for charity and a minicar was auctioned and I can't at this remove I can't remember but it was up at 70 or 80,000
Starting point is 00:35:42 way back then and rising and so we were looking at services in terms of charities and we were corporatising all our services at the same time. And I found that very, very difficult. I was at more events where I think I couldn't eat. I think I lost a lot of weight that year. Just simply, it didn't sit well with me at all.
Starting point is 00:36:11 It was an absolute privilege to be mayor. It was a privilege to meet people. but I'm talking about on a different level the corporate events I went to and of course the fall came very shortly after that I served 2004, 2005 and the fall came in the next few years and it was very obvious to me
Starting point is 00:36:31 that we had an economy that was just simply going the wrong direction Yeah, very briefly now let's have a little a little ocarina pause I don't have my ocarina with me this week We're just going to have to sit with that. You know, I quite like not having the ocarina to tell you the truth. We're going to sit with that, sit with the anxiety of it.
Starting point is 00:36:54 What I do have is I've got a book called Meditation for Dummies. It's actually isn't a bad book at all. A book about meditation. For dummies, cracking book. I want to get more into meditation. I do basic mindfulness stuff, but really, I've been putting it off, but I want to get into cultivation meditations. To meditate in such a way that you can cultivate certain emotions,
Starting point is 00:37:18 I'd really love to do that. Not right now, though. I'm going to hit myself into the head with this book, and you're going to hear some advertisements. All right. I'm not even going to explain this to you, Donnell, if you're listening to this podcast. I'm not even going to tell you what this is about.
Starting point is 00:37:36 All right, here's some adverts. Time to check on the skies. It's another sunny day. in Calgary. Forecast calls for high levels of economic activity. Late afternoon, we've got a burst of potential in a place ranked North America's most livable city. Tomorrow, blue sky thinking in the blue sky city should hold steady, and the outlook remains optimistic throughout the week. So come grab your dreams and enjoy watching them take hold. It's possible in Calgary, the blue sky city. For the full economic forecast, visit calgary economic development.com.
Starting point is 00:38:14 powers the world's best podcasts. Here's the show that we recommend. On a new season of Heaven Bent, son of a prophet. My name is Jedediah Hartley. My name is very specific. Like, he named me based off of a prophetic dream that he had. Like, my very identity is, like, tied to my father,
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Starting point is 00:38:59 Oh Do not hate yourself into the head With meditation for dummies That's a toughy Oh, I'm going to headbut it. Better. All right, that was the Ocarina pause. I'm going to have to just explain that.
Starting point is 00:39:25 Christ. Look, we need a pause for adverts in the fucking podcast. I usually play an instrument called an ocarina. I don't have it at the moment. So I just don't want people surprised by adverts. I don't want an advert to jump out. Jump out. It's Chesco.
Starting point is 00:39:41 We're here to... Buy Fanta and Tesco. I don't want that jumping out at people. So what I do is I create a pause. And this week I hit myself into the head with a meditation book. You don't need to know about it done. I doubt you're coming back. Support for this podcast comes from you, the listener,
Starting point is 00:40:03 via the Patreon page, patreon.com forward slash the blind by podcast. This is a fully independent podcast. All right. This is a listener-funded podcast. It's fully independent. No one tells me what to do. This is a podcast whereby I get to interview a possible presidential candidate for the Irish presidential elections. A million people are going to hear it.
Starting point is 00:40:33 And then I'm going to hit myself into the head with a meditation book. And I'm actually really proud. Very, very proud that that's what this space is. and that I have the freedom to do that very proud of that and it's only possible because this is listener funded so if you like this podcast
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Starting point is 00:41:35 It's a wonderful model based on kindness and soundness. Or it's student union politics. you can call it that if you like. If you are signing up to the Patreon, try and avoid doing it on the iPhone app, especially if you're a new patron because Apple take 30%. And when you do go to the Patreon page,
Starting point is 00:41:56 there's nothing there. I don't post on there. I don't because I don't want people who pay to get more than people who don't. I'd like everybody to get the exact same experience whether they pay or not. And also, it keeps the podcast fully independent. So any advertisers that come along
Starting point is 00:42:14 They do so in my terms And no advertiser can tell me Can tell me Can direct the content in any way All right We're coming up to the I think it's the nine year anniversary Could be the eight year I'm shit at maths
Starting point is 00:42:27 Coming up to it On the 27th of October I believe Next month We're coming up to the anniversary And this has been working fine For all those years Upcoming gigs I'm in Derry
Starting point is 00:42:41 this Saturday, all right? There's about five tickets left for that. Derry's nearly sold out. But if you want to come up to Derry, that's, where is it? The Millennium Theatre, this Saturday. I don't know what date that is. Is it 27th?
Starting point is 00:42:53 I don't know. This Saturday, I'm in Derry. Come along to that if you want, live podcast. And I'll just give my UK tour a little plug. Even though this is a year away. It's October 26, because I need a little break.
Starting point is 00:43:06 October 26 is my next tour of Scotland, England and Wales. But I announced it last week and quite a lot of the tickets actually fucking went quickly. So October 26, ages away, but do get the tickets if you want to come because you'll be disappointed. Brighton, Cardiff, Warwick, Bristol, Guildford, London, Glasgow, Gateshead, found out where Gateshead was. It's basically the bottom. It's underneath Newcastle. It's the other world of Newcastle. It's the parallel Newcastle.
Starting point is 00:43:43 I want to know why I've heard of Newcastle but not heard of Gateshead. I want to know why the cultural footprint of Gateshead. I was told that Viz Comic actually comes from Gateshead and not Newcastle. This is something I want to investigate. I'm all about Gateshead. Then I'm in Leeds. I don't think I said I was in Leeds last week, but I'm in Leeds and then Nottingham. That's happened in October 26.
Starting point is 00:44:08 Fane.co. UK forward slash blindbuy to get tickets for those gigs, right? Now, back to the chat with the incredibly interesting Catherine, Catherine Connolly. And, like, one of the great things a president can do in Ireland is to bring about discussion, a narrative is a margin, which is one that's based on hatred and blame. And, like, the other thing I think neoliberalism does is it puts us in such a state of confusion that we tend to punch down or punch the person beside us because what's happening above us
Starting point is 00:44:43 is so utterly confusing. Absolutely. I would agree with you. It's very much a focus on the individual and that if you study hard and you work hard, you'll succeed. It's very much divide and conquer. But I don't think a blind boy
Starting point is 00:45:00 that that applies to the majority of people in Ireland. And it's certainly not my experience going around the country. since the third week or fourth week of July. And I've been to many, many places and communities. And I don't, I think people see what's going on. I don't think they're looking for simplicity. I think they're looking for language that can be trusted.
Starting point is 00:45:26 Okay. They're looking for, they're looking for integrity. They're looking to be heard to articulate what they feel. And I think the divisiveness that you're talking, about and that loud voice is coming from a small group of people and that's encouraging to hear. Yeah, I think
Starting point is 00:45:45 it is and I think I understand some of their concerns we have a major housing crisis that's going on too long and the government have left a vacuum on an awful lot of these topics and so
Starting point is 00:46:00 when there's a vacuum and lack of leadership certain people will blame the wrong person and I think there's a duty on broadcasters I think there's a duty on the local radio stations not to get caught up with this actually and not to conflate immigration and the asylum process
Starting point is 00:46:25 and I think issues are being conflated by certain outlets and I think it's quite disingenuous and also a very risky thing to do so going around when I've done many many interviews I highlight that repeatedly if it's put to me about
Starting point is 00:46:45 do you agree with an open door policy in Ireland do you agree that they're getting everything they and them and I say first of all there's no open door policy it's quite difficult to get into our country it's actually quite difficult
Starting point is 00:47:01 and I try to explain that it's not helpful to whoever is into refune me to conflate people coming into our country to work with work visas of different duration which is quite hard to get
Starting point is 00:47:16 and people seek an asylum running away from war and persecution which any given time is actually quite low. The figures are quite low in the past it was somewhere around 15,000 that rose up to around 25,000 give or take so there have been low
Starting point is 00:47:34 high peaks and lows. They're people who come here as asylum seekers and seek refugee status. And that is quite a difficult process. Now clearly, clearly the system needs to be more effective with decisions and appeal mechanisms more effectively used and decisions made. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:47:58 But that has never happened and the system of direct provision which was introduced 25 years ago was to be a temporary measure and 25 years later we're still operating a direct provision system which really creates division and segregation
Starting point is 00:48:17 and it is also allowing the owners of hotels and other accommodation units to make obscene profits that's the other thing as well like how do you feel about that Like that's, sometimes I view direct provision as it's almost a way for private interests to milk people's misery. That they're profiteering from the most vulnerable members of society. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:48:47 And it was set up that way and it has been allowed to continue that way. So again, you know, while the direct provision should have stopped, we've had numerous remorse, We've had recommendations from a circuit court judge, a retired circuit court judge, in relation to improve in direct provision. We've had reports from the Ombudsman for children. We've had a report from Catherine Day, well-respected public servant, who said this direct provision should stop. Her solution was a little difficult for me, and maybe I'll come back to that blindboy, because her solution was to house people in the community. and to me there was a failure to recognise the extent of the housing crisis
Starting point is 00:49:31 but absolutely wonderful report to say stop direct provision it is not working well it is wrong and I won't miss quarter but it's all set out and then we got a paper a green paper or white paper from government also a green it should be stopped and a quarter of a century later
Starting point is 00:49:50 we're still paying public money to owners of hotels and other units like I've said who are making obscene profits. And that's, I can never accept that. And in fact, if I go back, I remember on the city council in 2000 or 2001 when we received our first asylum seekers to the city and I had a motion to welcome to the city
Starting point is 00:50:13 and a certain councillor who will remain nameless and I won't mention them. I said, oh, some things are better left alone. Some things are better left not said. You know, so there was always a double way of dealing with what we
Starting point is 00:50:30 were doing rather than embracing people who were coming to our country, helping them to integrate once they got the refugee status, and realizing that diversity is a blessing. It's an absolute gift. And parallel with that
Starting point is 00:50:46 then, of course, we're utterly reliant on foreign workers. And so I had the privilege of standing with the Indian community a few weeks ago celebrating Independence Day and they moved from where they had
Starting point is 00:50:59 planned to hold their celebration to St Mary's College which is a Diasan College in Galway because they felt safer there and I thought
Starting point is 00:51:07 that was an appalling indictment and I stood with them and then the figures that I had to hand at that stage 18,500 of our nurses and midwives
Starting point is 00:51:18 are from India our health system would collapse without those that have come from abroad to work in our system, many of them leaving family behind, many of them sending over remittances to their family
Starting point is 00:51:31 to keep them going. Everything that Irish people did. You know, when we go back, my aunts went to England and sent home remittances. And those remittances were worth so much to the Irish economy. And they were really, never really valued or taken into account. So if I go back again, I think the conflation of asylum seekers with people coming to our country seeking work, and actively encouraged by business as employers because they need the workers. When I was down at the Ploughing Championships, one of the biggest problems identified
Starting point is 00:52:05 was the shortage of labourers. So all of these issues need to be teased out in an open way so that people understand and the vacuum that has been left by successive governments have allowed a narrative to emerge that does not reflect the reality on the ground. Why do you want to be President of Ireland? Because I feel we're at a crucial point in our history
Starting point is 00:52:35 where peace has become, I don't like the word dirty, but an unacceptable word. Peace has become an unacceptable word. And we have normalized war and genocide. And I think I have to use my voice, as I've done in the doll, to champion the cause of peace we need my voice and other voices to champion the cause of peace
Starting point is 00:53:01 we have absolutely nothing to lose and everything to gain by championing peace in the world and indeed we have a duty under our constitution to look to peaceful resolutions to conflict I think climate change poses an existential threat I think I have to use my voice
Starting point is 00:53:21 to articulate that in as best as I can. And then just maybe going around in a circle, the communities on the ground. The amount of work being done by communities in every town, village and rural area and in cities is just phenomenal. And I can give you many examples, which we might come back to.
Starting point is 00:53:44 But the amount of work, and it's not recognised, So we have people working on low wages, people working in CE schemes, volunteers, a whole range of people carrying out essential work that it's not sufficiently recognised by any government and under-resourced and understaffed. So those three themes I would use my voice over and over, but I think it's time that we have a voice that's not afraid. to go against the consensus when necessary. And the consensus from the government parties is that war, I don't think they're saying this, but this is the message I'm taken from them. War is a solution to conflicts.
Starting point is 00:54:33 And we can't free ride on other countries and our neutrality is free riding and the triple lock is no longer fit for purpose. This is from a Taoiseach that told us the triple lock was an essential part of our neutrality. War has become privatized now too. Yes. And that's something that deeply concerns me.
Starting point is 00:54:56 Like something I want to ask you, and I want to be cautious that this doesn't veer into conspiracy territory, right? But my gut feeling is that there's lobbying groups in Ireland who represent the billions that are to be made in the defence industries, in the war industries. And I feel as if Ireland is being lobbied, to get rid of the triple lock and to up our defence spending
Starting point is 00:55:21 for business, for the business of war. Absolutely. I would agree with you. How do you feel about that? I would agree with you. I have no hesitation in saying that the lobbying group for the military industrial complex everywhere is really, really a cause of concern to me. And in fact, they're not hiding the fact that the military industrial complex
Starting point is 00:55:42 is the way that you can have your economy thrive. We've seen this in Germany. We see this in England, where they're cutting back on social welfare. And so the military industrial complex is being put forward as the solution to failing economies. And it is truly worrying. Absolutely. Like even over in America, like if you look at the militarization of the police in America over the past 30 years, like so much of that is because there's towns in America.
Starting point is 00:56:17 and the entire economies depend upon the local factory that makes tanks, the local factory that makes guns. And then those tanks and guns ended up going to police forces really, really cheap simply because they needed to keep making them to keep economies surviving. And that type of stuff really, any time, even there with direct provision, it's like I don't feel confident about something being solved when there's so much money to be made from perpetuating the problem.
Starting point is 00:56:50 Why would anyone want to end war when so much money is being made and generated with the industry of war? And it's one of those things that concerns me about neoliberalism, the privatisation of things which should be public and education. That's the other one.
Starting point is 00:57:08 Yeah. You know, my personal opinion is that something like a university, universities shouldn't be run for profit university should be run for education I'm a fan of things operating so that it loses money you know what I mean
Starting point is 00:57:22 like the arts for instance I always say with the arts the arts should lose money fund failure because if you fund failure you get occasional excellence but if you try and fund success people get scared
Starting point is 00:57:38 especially with creativity you get scared and you don't take risks fund risk taking fund failure back to the military thing because I know our neutrality is a huge part of our soft power internationally. We saw there with
Starting point is 00:57:52 like we've got a huge cultural footprint the cultural footprint of Ireland is massive. For such a tiny country, even something as simple as like Halloween like Halloween is ours, you know? Yes. We've this massive cultural footprint
Starting point is 00:58:08 and the international community frequently squints in our direction for ethical guidance and our neutrality is key to that and the fact that we're we've done enough war we had 800 years of it absolutely
Starting point is 00:58:21 you know what I mean I would agree with you there's so many topics there I think we need you and we need other platforms and forum to allow a discussion on all of these topics it often occurs to me
Starting point is 00:58:36 that we're a post-colonial country but our administration is still colonised in their minds lines. They don't want to hear that. No, they don't. But I think we haven't achieved the aims of a republic at all.
Starting point is 00:58:52 And I'd love to see a movement to realizing what a republic really means. And neutrality is part of that. And it's been the narrative again is that narrative that neutral, we want it everywhere. And we want to free ride on other countries' armies. We want them to protect us. Our best protection is our neutrality used in a very positive, proactive manner. And we have, as you've said yourself, we have a huge cultural footprint internationally. And we have gained their respect, our peacekeeping forces, and the word peacekeeping forces.
Starting point is 00:59:35 Just like the guard, the force, so we have a defence force, not an army. We have the forcey cousintha and we have the guard of Shikana, the peace guards. And so we should be using our history and our emergence from colonization, our emergence from a famine, our emergence from the conflict in Northern Ireland, building on all of that and on the Good Friday Agreement, using all of that experience to become peacemakers in the world. But the narrative all of the time is being laid in a certain direction. And I believe we should have a referendum on losing the, changing the trip a lot.
Starting point is 01:00:26 Absolutely. And it would be give people their voice, let people use their voice, and let's have an open, rational discussion. on this subject. One thing when you were speaking there about peacekeeping, just something I want to bring up because it was so unique and beautiful is, so Irish peacekeeping forces
Starting point is 01:00:47 that have been operating in Lebanon for over 30 years now. And one of the most beautiful things I ever saw was it was a TG4 documentary and they spoke to local Lebanese people who were basically living alongside Irish peacekeepers for 30 years. And these Lebanese people had full on Irish accents. Yeah. And it's what made it so different was it was an accent that was gained through empathy.
Starting point is 01:01:19 It wasn't there's soldiers here and we learned English through these soldiers. The way that this Lebanese person spoke like he was from Mayo, you don't pick that up with your ear, you pick it up with your heart. Do you get me? And what it shows. me was this man speaks like this because these soldiers, even though they're here and even though they have guns, they're not an occupying force. There's no secret threat here. You don't have to sheepishly approach these soldiers and make friends with them. No, this is different here. This isn't colonization. This isn't violence. Even though they have guns, this is something different. And it made me feel very proud of our neutrality. That these soldiers here are actually safe.
Starting point is 01:02:04 hidden agenda, this is proper neutrality. And I've never seen that anywhere. I've seen plenty of, even my own, Jesus, my granddad was in the IRA back in West Cork and they took English soldiers, they took auxiliaries as prisoners, you know, and they managed to find a little bit of camaraderie there with these people who were enemies. But there was a fear there, obviously. This was different. There was empathy with these Lebanese people who had, generations of soldiers from Mayo like that's the thing it's like
Starting point is 01:02:38 defence forces in Ireland it's family so like someone's dad was in Lebanon and then the sun is in Lebanon and you have this real relationship thing and that's so unique and I wish more people knew about it about the role of Irish peacekeepers
Starting point is 01:02:54 and that is actually peacekeeping it's very important point you're making and well done to Tiji Carr I didn't actually see it But we need more of that, actually, don't we, to show what's been going on. And that faith in the peacekeeping forces from Ireland, that's been repeated in other countries, in Africa, in Cyprus, over and over. And the decision based on the veto by America to pull out the UNIFIL soldiers from the Lebanon in a year's time is truly, truly shocking. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:29 And we've had the head of the Forsy Kusintha telling us, if that happens, we're going to have another Gaza in Lebanon. Yeah. Do we have a say in that? The government are going along with it. Yeah. The UN was set up after the Second World War, as you know, and it was set up so that slaughter wouldn't happen again or the concentration camps and the slaughter. and we wouldn't do this again and various other international conventions
Starting point is 01:04:02 the genocide convention and so on were all set up and obviously the veto is problematic but where I don't trust the narrative from different governments in my time it's only recently that they've been forced to highlight
Starting point is 01:04:20 that America has used the veto many many times Russia has used it but they only highlighted Russia. Yes. Never highlighted. So if you set up a narrative to justify getting rid of the triple lock because of the use of the veto, then there's a duty on you to look at the use of the veto over all of the years,
Starting point is 01:04:42 which countries have used it how often. And from the research I have done, and I just don't have it on front of me, despite the veto, the UN has worked in many, many different situations. But obviously then we zone in on where the veto has been used to the detriment. And the most recent example of that is America, where they've used it to make sure that there's no peacekeeping force would demand it from the UN in Lebanon in a year's time. Which is frightening because to me, again, conspiracy hat, but it lets me, I'm always frightened of this greater Israel thing. I'm always frightened of this idea that Israel just intends to. expand and that includes Lebanon and it includes parts of Syria
Starting point is 01:05:29 to create this massive country called Greater Israel. Well, you know, no later than this week on the 16th of September, we had a report from the Human Rights Council on its 60th session. And my God, it's just, there's 71 pages in it, and I'm in the process of reading it. But I'll just go back to the conclusions of that. And this is what we've allowed happen. The Commission's analysis in this report,
Starting point is 01:05:55 and it goes on about genocide and the obligations under the genocide convention to the responsibility of the state of Israel both for the failure to prevent genocide, for committing genocide
Starting point is 01:06:12 against the Palestinians, and for the failure to punish genocide. And it concludes, it sets, I've set that out badly, but that's the first paragraph, but it's very, very, it's crystal clear. The commission concludes on reasonable grounds that the Israeli authorities and Israeli security forces have committed and are continuing
Starting point is 01:06:32 to commit the following actus reus of genocide against the Palestinian people. And they talk about incitement to genocide and they specifically name the commission concludes that Israeli President Herzog, the Prime Minister Netanyahu, the then-defense minister Gallant, have incited, have incited. Remember Rwanda and the French station, radio station, with incitement. And here we have have incited the commission
Starting point is 01:07:03 of genocide and that Israeli authorities have failed to take action against them or to punish them for this incitement. And it goes on and there are recommendations. There are recommendations. Is that the UN report? Is that the UN? That's the UN report.
Starting point is 01:07:18 That's the one that came out yesterday. Just yesterday or the day before. I mean, that's like... I still find people who are very contrarian about the genocide. And now I just like to be, this is the UN now. There's no argument anymore. That's why I went to the trouble of just even so that listeners will know that I'm actually reading from the Human Rights Council and their report. And they've recommendations, I won't read them all out, but they have recommendations for the government of Israel.
Starting point is 01:07:47 They have recommendations for all member states that includes us. and then they have recommendations for the the final one was the role of the prosecutor the international prosecutor in terms of taking action. So here, and we still have a reluctance to actually call out what's happening. Yeah, that's the thing. The UN, this is the pillars of international order,
Starting point is 01:08:18 like as you said, was set up after World War II. like what are the what's the Irish government scared of I mean is it US investment like what are they frightened of it really goes back really to the importance of our policy of neutrality being used in a very active way and calling out truth to power whether that's Russia or whether that's America
Starting point is 01:08:43 and that's what I would see as part of the role of a neutral country to call out true to power, to call out what's happening. So here we have America, with the help of the EU and van der Leyen, very much on side, backing up genocide by an Israeli government in Palestine. And for a long time in the Dole, following the invasion by Hamas in 2020, in October, the narrative in the doll was the condemnation of Hamas
Starting point is 01:09:20 which I absolutely condemned but history didn't start on that day of course yeah and so when the government condemned Hamas as I did then they went on about the right of Israel to self-defense and nobody could deprive any country
Starting point is 01:09:36 including the Ukraine of its right to self-defense it's the most basic right that a country has however the self-defense offense narrative has continued and continued and is no longer an argument at all from a very early stage, but it has continued and a reluctance to call out genocide. One thing I'd like to bring up there, again, it takes it a little bit back to privatization,
Starting point is 01:10:05 right? But something, so let's just take Shannon Airport. Okay, so Shannon Airport for years, going on to, since the invasion of Iraq to 2003, Shannon Airport has been used to refuel military aircraft, U.S. military aircraft, right? I know that from a business perspective, that is huge for Shannon Airport. Like, I remember being in Shannon Airport during the recession, okay?
Starting point is 01:10:33 And the place was empty because, like, it was either people emigrating or no one was going on holidays. I'm talking 2012, 2013. There just wasn't the money there. and I would go to Shannon Airport and there was no tourists but what there was was cleaners employed
Starting point is 01:10:53 and their job was to sweep sand up from the duty free area because so many US soldiers had come in that night with sand on their fatigues and my dad my dad worked for Aer Lingus he was employed in Shannon Airport for nearly 30 years
Starting point is 01:11:10 and this is when Aer Lingus was a government company company, it wasn't privatized. And my dad was a government employee. And he had, he was a civil servant effect because he was employed by Aer Lingus and had a job his whole life, pensioned the whole shebang. But now we're in a position where
Starting point is 01:11:26 because we say just something as simple as Shannon Airport relies so heavily on the private business of the US Army, now it puts the government in difficulty to be able to call out something like the US Army. Do you get what I'm saying? and this, again, is another problem I have with neoliberalism.
Starting point is 01:11:47 Like something else that's emerging, I'm sure you're aware of this, but, like, let's just take data centers. We know that data centers are terrible for the environment, but I think the journal did a report there about a month ago. Quite a lot of county councils in Ireland are actually receiving a huge amount of money from data centers that are operating in their territory. I think from rent, I'm not quite sure but the danger of this now
Starting point is 01:12:16 is if so many local councils are depending upon data centres for their budget effectively then they don't have true independence to get what I'm saying they have to giant multinationals like Amazon or Google who have the data centers. Am I making sense?
Starting point is 01:12:36 You are, but there's quite a lot in it. Do you know what I might just do? I might just give you the third recommendation that I hadn't on front of me. The third recommendation from that Human Rights Council was that the prosecutor of the International Criminal
Starting point is 01:12:51 Court, so that was the exact third, that they continue, they have an ongoing investigation and that they now include the crime of genocide for amendment to the existing arrest warrants and so on. You've got to arrest Nathan Yehow
Starting point is 01:13:06 if he comes to your country. Yeah, but they're adding to the causes for that. And that was just the prosecutor of the international criminal court. Coming back to your the area you're talking about Shannon Airport and obviously I have never agreed with, I think we're complicit in
Starting point is 01:13:22 wars even though we're a neutral country and we're allowing the American army through Shannon and people far more knowledgeable than me and at great cost to themselves have stood out repeatedly because the government have said we don't have any evidence and so
Starting point is 01:13:38 civilians on the ground have attempted to get that evidence? What evidence specifically? Evidence that the Americans are carrying arms, that the planes are coming in with arms. Well, what I can tell you, I know for sure, because I live in Limerick City, like I've been out on Wednesday nights and
Starting point is 01:13:54 have met American soldiers who find ways of... No, I know, I'm only talking about the duplicity of the government to say they have no evidence, but they can't have evidence if they don't inspect the planes. And so it has been left to people on the ground at great cost of themselves. I think of Ed Horgan, who has just done Trojan work on the ground
Starting point is 01:14:15 and all the other people around him that stand down there and that monitor the planes and share that information. I mean, I have turned up to support them, but I absolutely pay tribute to them and what they have done. And again, I emphasize a great cost to themselves. But there are other ways around Shannon Aper to make a drive. Only earlier yesterday, I think, Cahill, Crow, Fienafal TD from Claire
Starting point is 01:14:41 stood up in relation to Shannon Airport and what needs to be done with government investment and take some of the pressure off Dublin Airport and use airports like Shannon Airport. So there are many ways that we can boost Shannon Airport and not have a dependent on American soldiers and armaments
Starting point is 01:14:59 going through the airport. So I think it's very important that we look at that. And I'm from Galway in the West of Ireland and it's very important. we've all used Shannon Airport and it's so much more manageable than Dublin and so near and it is underutilised
Starting point is 01:15:16 so we need a strong government policy on Shannon Airport as a civilian airport I want to get your take on the climate collapse and biodiversity collapse and Ireland's role with that I
Starting point is 01:15:32 it is an existential threat it is the existential threat to our planet and we declared a climate climate change emergency back in 19 and a biodiversity emergency. I think we're the second
Starting point is 01:15:50 country to do it and let me say that we did that just like with Palestine on the basis of concerned people standing outside Dahl Erdin, standing out in protests all over the country begging us and appealing
Starting point is 01:16:06 to us to do something down to the children from secondary schools and actually I remember the day that we declared that emergency the young children
Starting point is 01:16:16 were outside the dawn so it wasn't it's good that we've done that but like with COVID yeah like with housing and with climate change we need transformative change
Starting point is 01:16:31 and that word those words have been used repeatedly transformative change but I'm afraid from what I can see, it's business as usual. It's business as usual, yeah. So the business model,
Starting point is 01:16:45 we paid lip service for a number of years to transformative change. But the actual thing that I see is that it's business as usual. Again, my role as a podcaster, like I'm trying to tell people's stories and trying to communicate complex information. Disinformation around climate change
Starting point is 01:17:03 is a huge problem that's emerging now too. This belief that it's failed. it's made up. It's just a way to get more taxes. When you mentioned earlier that certain, like the government can sometimes have a colonized mind. What I always try to communicate to people is the decolonial act of being far biodiversity. I mean, what I adore about pre-colonial Irish society, if you go back to the Brehan laws, you can find something like the Brecht Baha, it was the bee judgments. We had these big law tracts about the importance of pollinators,
Starting point is 01:17:42 about how to protect them, that they shouldn't be harmed or hurt. We had so much of our early mythology and Brehann law was about understanding biodiversity, understanding we're part of a system. Even, I don't know if you know this fella, his name was John Scotus Eridjuna. Used to be on the old five-pound notes. Like, he, like, in. invented modern ecology. Like he was trying to explain what God was.
Starting point is 01:18:10 But by trying to explain what God was, he basically figured out what biodiversity is. Every single thing that is alive is connected in some way. That's right. He was the first person to do that. And that's like an Irish idea. So we have all this beautiful pre-colonial elements of our culture and history and literature, which is very much about biodiversity and the importance of it.
Starting point is 01:18:35 because that's the other thing too with colonization. Colonization isn't just about colonizing land and it's about extraction of wealth and a great way to extract wealth from land is to remove people's beliefs about the importance of that land and the animals in the rivers. Yeah. Again, you know,
Starting point is 01:18:57 it's a good start to a discussion, isn't it? It's something that we need to take further on different platforms. And if we use the Irish language And I've made this point And again, I'm no expert on the Irish language But I love it And I went back to learn it
Starting point is 01:19:13 Because I have such a respect for it And it is our first official language And I would never like to preach In relation to the Irish language I would like to be an example To people It's a wonderful journey It really is worth making the journey
Starting point is 01:19:28 To learn the Irish language And I was fortunate to go back And do a diploma and then a translation course but more and more as I read you find the nature bits as it yes exactly but even before I come to that you know we'll have a milestone later
Starting point is 01:19:45 a few weeks time where for the first time we're going to have an Irish Irish Diction how'd you mean explain that yeah so you know if you if you're looking up the meaning of an English word you look up Collins or a Thesaurus and they give you a meaning of the word so you look up the meaning of climate change
Starting point is 01:20:02 and they'll explain that to you in English. But we've never had an Irish-Irish-Irish dictionary. So our mind looks to what is the word in English. Ah. What is that Irish word in English? Or what is that English word in Irish? I've never even thought of that. No, no.
Starting point is 01:20:19 And none of us did actually. And so I was down in electric picnic. And I was talking to one of two people who were behind the project. And he was telling me the hope to launch it in a few weeks. time. And it's the first time that Ireland will have an Irish-Irish Dictionary. So that's a huge milestone. And that takes me around in a circle really to, you know, there's no division in Irish between nature and the human being. There's no false distinction. The human being and nature are one together. Whereas the English language is an absolute division and a nature
Starting point is 01:20:59 is there to be conquered or extracted from. And those concepts do not exist in the Irish language I'm subject to correction. They don't exist. And I've always said that Irish is part of the solution when it comes to nature. Not alone that we have
Starting point is 01:21:15 so much words for different aspects of nature and that but because it doesn't that have that artificial distinction. And lately I had the privilege of launching an art exhibition in Dublin by a man called Owen McLaughlin
Starting point is 01:21:31 superb exhibition and he had used birch as part of his exhibition the birch tree and I had to read up a little bit about because no more than the Irish language I'm no expert on art but I appreciate art and the value of it
Starting point is 01:21:47 and the absolute necessity that we support the arts for creativity for imagination and so on but looking around at his exhibition and doing a little research on it I looked at the birch tree and it's known as a pioneering tree and again it goes around in a circle
Starting point is 01:22:04 to the Celtic mythology which you mentioned already and I'll come back to it but birch is known as a pioneering tree so we have two types the tawny birch and the silver birch that people are very familiar with and it's known as a pioneer
Starting point is 01:22:17 for a number of reasons because after the last glacier the birch tree was the first to recolonize Ireland so we're back to that word colonisation but then in Celtic mythology it was known as the symbol of rebirth and rejuvenation. Rebirth, a new way of looking at things.
Starting point is 01:22:36 And it was just fascinating what I learned from having the privilege to launch his art exhibition. And then it brought me around and circling into the Irish language because apparently the birch trees are very, very, not popular, but very extensive at the foot of the Spurn Mountains. And right at the foot of the Spurn Mountains, we have a Gaelthacht, a brand new Gaelthuk. There was no Irish speaker there in 1992.
Starting point is 01:23:04 And now we have over 200 and something speakers of Irish. Oh, beautiful. You've got your little rebirth there. We have an all-Irish school. We have a thriving GA club for girls and boys. And the best thing, they bought 200 acres in trust for the community. So we had a whole rebirth here. And all of that came along really as a result of that,
Starting point is 01:23:27 artist work in Dublin that I had the privilege of launching. And back to the Irish language, back to nature. And Irish language being part of the solution in relation to climate change, that reconnection with labour, nature, and not penalising people, the poorer people in terms of taxes in climate. The big polluters never paid. And I've always been very uncomfortable with the principle the polluter pays, because it has never applied to the real polluters. Absolutely.
Starting point is 01:24:01 I don't look on people, ordinary people as polluters. Regarding the Irish language and like, for instance, like dairy, dairy means oak wood. So that tells us that there used to be a bunch of oak there. And just regarding the barch there and the rebirth, a strange one, something I'm always fascinated with is, and again, it ties in with both the Irish language and neoliberalism, but so Mayo
Starting point is 01:24:28 means plain of yew trees that's right but you use really interesting because a yew tree can live to be maybe 800 to a thousand years old like they're really really old
Starting point is 01:24:38 and there's not many you trees left in Mayo unfortunately it's significant that you see them mostly in cemeteries do you know why that is are you telling me why because on the
Starting point is 01:24:49 yew tree there's it's either a berry or the leaves themselves are actually poisonous and the cattle used to, they didn't want cattle, either cattle or wolves to be digging up graves.
Starting point is 01:25:02 So they used to put the U-Tree in the graveyard because the berries would make animals stay away from graves. Did you know that? I'd forgotten it, I had heard it, but I'd forgotten it. But the thing I find fascinating about U-Trees and Mayo is, so because the U-Tree used to live so long,
Starting point is 01:25:19 they reckon it's likely that it would have been considered longevity. It would have been looked. Because if you've got a U-Tree that's 800 years old. You've got stories that are generational about the tree that's been there
Starting point is 01:25:30 and your great, great, great, great, grandparents. And it's significant really on a different level that they're now seen in cemeteries, you know? Oh, absolutely.
Starting point is 01:25:38 With life and death in a short cycle. But the irony that I find and is, so Mayo plane of yew trees which we once worshipped for longevity, but all of the world's
Starting point is 01:25:50 Botox, which is the drug of longevity, happens to be made in Mayo by an American company a pharmaceutical company like literally every single bit of Botox
Starting point is 01:25:59 in the world is made in Mayo this longevity drug and that again it's just that the irony of that
Starting point is 01:26:08 is fantastic that's right but I think is there any final thing you want to say Catherine
Starting point is 01:26:15 well thank you very much got a milamagut that's up on jesh kancho thank you very much for the opportunity
Starting point is 01:26:22 and I really would say to your listeners, you have a choice to make, and I put that in as positive way as I can. I'm standing on my record. I have a work ethic that I take no credit for. I took it for my father and my siblings. And I have always driven to do what I think is right, haven't done my research, haven't read, and to stand up and be counted. And I think now more than ever in this election, we need to make decisions that will have serious whatever decision you make
Starting point is 01:26:57 will have serious consequences because of what I've said at the beginning of the interview we need a courageous voice a voice you can trust perhaps you mightn't agree with everything I say but you will know where I stand on issues and I will represent the country nationally and internationally to the best of my ability
Starting point is 01:27:21 in as dignified way and manner as I can based on my experience and the privilege of having worked in so many different roles as a mother, a member of a family of 14 and as Las Cancora where I think I showed that I could chair the doll
Starting point is 01:27:39 in a very fair and equal manner while listening to a wide variety of opinions because that's the essence of democracy to be able to listen to each other and I would like to think that I would be an inclusive president. I have tried as a candidate to be as inclusive as possible and obviously there are parties that I wouldn't agree with their policy
Starting point is 01:28:02 but there are other things they say that I do agree with and I would like to try and reflect all of that as president in the different roles that I will have to play. Thank you so much to Catherine Connolly there for coming on to the podcast and having a chat. at the Irish presidential election it's next month check it out
Starting point is 01:28:22 it's all over the nose you're not going to have difficulty finding out information I'm actually lagging it right now because I'm recording this yesterday I'm gigging Vickers Street tonight you won't be able to come
Starting point is 01:28:34 because by the time you hear this it'll be yesterday we're doing this time thing again this fucking linear time thing I've recorded this yesterday and right now in yesterday I have to leave my office to go to Dublin to do a gig
Starting point is 01:28:47 but by the time you hear this the gig will have happened already okay fucking hell right okay I'll catch you next week I'll catch you next week I don't know what with hopefully there'll be a hot take I'm very busy this week with gigs
Starting point is 01:29:02 I'm hoping I'll have the time to be able to reflect and explore curiosity and come back with a hot take fee in the meantime rub a dog wink at a swan scream at a scream at a
Starting point is 01:29:16 scream at it no don't scream it any he's going to say scream at a snail but that's not very nice is it actually I wonder
Starting point is 01:29:25 what snails get up to in winter there'd be a podcast in that think about it think about winter for a snail all right
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Starting point is 01:30:06 Learn more at Calgary Economic Development.com. powers the world's best podcasts. Here's the show that we recommend. On a new season of Heaven Bent, son of a prophet. My name is Jedediah Hartley. Like, my name is very specific. Like, he named me based off of a prophetic dream that he had.
Starting point is 01:30:36 Like, my very identity is, like, tied to my father, who my father is, who he was. He couldn't just be a liar Listen to season 8 of Heaven Bent Wherever you get your podcasts Acast helps creators launch, grow, and monetize their podcast Everywhere Acast.com
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