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September 21,
2010
Thoughts and feelings
relating to Equinox Day (September 21st
2010)
By William
Finnerty
"Irish Government To Auction
National Assets: Criminal Stupidity Or National
Sabotage?"
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After
seeing the above headline this morning on the
Sovereign Independent (Ireland) web site, and
allowing for the fact that today (i.e. September
21st) is the "Autumn Equinox Day" (in the
northern hemisphere), once I started reading the
main text my thoughts started to drift towards
vivid memories I have of watching the
ancient Equinox Detector located in Cairn
T, Loughcrew, Republic of
Ireland "in
action" (from inside Cairn T) during one of the
equinox days a few years ago.
Part of the
Sovereign Independent article reads as follows:
"The Irish Government is so hard up for
cash that it is considering auctioning off
national assets like state lands, buildings,
state agencies, and other valuables that belong
to the Irish people. The Government says that
the money is needed to support economic growth
and employment."
The full Sovereign
Independent article -- which includes what might
be described as an almost infinitely better
alternative (to selling off national assets) for
our financial recovery purposes -- can be viewed
at http://www.sovereignindependent.com/?p=8324
Though it is not mentioned in the
Sovereign Independent article, it is my
understanding that the "national assets" in
question (which could "lawfully" be auctioned
off) MIGHT include heritage sites such as Cairn
T.
An excellent animated display, which
shows how the circa 5,000 year old Equinox
Detector in Cairn T works (to this day!!), can
be viewed at http://homepages.iol.ie/~tobrien/general.htm
Amazingly, and although I am not
100% sure about this, the Republic of Ireland's
National
Monuments (Amendment)
Act
2004 (or similar) possibly includes
provisions for the Heritage Minister to
"lawfully" sell off such sites.
It is
certainly the case that there is legislation in
place in the Republic of Ireland to "lawfully"
bulldoze similarly important ancient heritage
sites into oblivion: for the purpose of
facilitating
PPP
projects (for example), and as has actually
happened to the one at Baronstown at 4am on July 4th
2007.
Even more amazing is the fact that
although constitutional law expert Dr Gerard Hogan has stated in public that he
believed our
National Monuments (Amendment)
Act
2004 was unconstitutional, it seems he made
no attempt to challenge its constitutionality in
court: even though he was very heavily involved
(some years ago and well before the Baronstown
site was destroyed) in a 600,000 Euros court
case which appears to have ended up being a
complete waste of tax payers money, and which
left the matter of the constitutionality of our
National
Monuments (Amendment) Act 2004
entirely "up in the air", and -- far more
importantly perhaps -- available for government
use at ANY time again in the future (as things
stand at the present time).
For those who
might not know, a whole range of globally
important cultural and social issues and
subjects, which include
Brehon Law, the Great Banqueting Hall on the
Hill of Tara, Roman Law, King Ollamh Fodhla, the
ancient origins of the people of Ireland, and so
on, were all involved in the highly
controversial (and many including myself believe
unlawful) destruction of the ancient Baronstown
site on July 4th 2007.
Also this morning
I noticed (in a different article) that, despite
the possibility of the Republic of Ireland
having to sell off some (or all perhaps?) of its
national assets, our Minister for Foreign Affairs
Micheál Martin and US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton are today
launching a new initiative in New York aimed at
reducing hunger in the world.
Part of the
RTE (National Broadcaster, Republic of Ireland)
report reads: "Ireland has joined in a
partnership with the US to highlight and push
forward a plan to deal with hunger and, in
particular, the first 1,000 days in a child's
life."
While I (like a great many other
people all around the world I suspect) would
wholeheartedly support this extremely worthwhile
project (as I see things), I believe many more
children would eventually be helped if the
Republic of Ireland and the United States of
America were to follow the suggestions for
economic recovery outlined in the Sovereign
Independent article referred to above: which
crucially involves severing the socially
destructive, highly dangerous, and endlessly
troublesome over-dependence both nations now
have on the global banking
cartel for their
money
supplies.
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The above text has been copied from
the following Open
News www
address:
http://www.opednews.com/Diary/Thoughts-and-feelings-rela-by-William-Finnerty-100921-802.html
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For
future reference purposes a copy of this
e-mail will later today be placed at the
following Internet location: http://www.humanrightsireland.com/LeslieMorgan/21September2010/Email
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Human Rights
Ireland: http://www.humanrightsireland.com
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