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offsite link North Korea Increases Aid to Russia, Mos... Tue Nov 19, 2024 12:29 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link Trump Assembles a War Cabinet Sat Nov 16, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link Slavgrinder Ramps Up Into Overdrive Tue Nov 12, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link ?Existential? Culling to Continue on Com... Mon Nov 11, 2024 10:28 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link US to Deploy Military Contractors to Ukr... Sun Nov 10, 2024 02:37 | Field Empty

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

offsite link Trump hosts former head of Syrian Al-Qaeda Al-Jolani to the White House Tue Nov 11, 2025 22:01 | imc

offsite link Rip The Chicken Tree - 1800s - 2025 Tue Nov 04, 2025 03:40 | Mark

offsite link Study of 1.7 Million Children: Heart Damage Only Found in Covid-Vaxxed Kids Sat Nov 01, 2025 00:44 | imc

offsite link The Golden Haro Fri Oct 31, 2025 12:39 | Paul Ryan

offsite link Top Scientists Confirm Covid Shots Cause Heart Attacks in Children Sun Oct 05, 2025 21:31 | imc

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Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link Reeves Ditches Income Tax Rise ? and Streeting Celebrates Fri Nov 14, 2025 12:28 | Will Jones
Rachel Reeves has?dramatically ditched?Budget?plans to hike income tax, leading Wes Streeting to?effectively claim victory as he publicly declared that he had not supported the rise.
The post Reeves Ditches Income Tax Rise ? and Streeting Celebrates appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Ben & Jerry?s Needs to Butt Out of UK Democracy Fri Nov 14, 2025 10:25 | Charlotte Gill
Ultra-woke ice cream maker Ben & Jerry's celebrated this week as Parliament responded to its latest campaign ? which was far from its first. It's time for Ben & Jerry's to butt out of UK democracy, says Charlotte Gill.
The post Ben & Jerry’s Needs to Butt Out of UK Democracy appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link The Sceptic: Kathryn Porter on the Lies of the Green Zealots Fri Nov 14, 2025 07:00 | Richard Eldred
In the Sceptic this week, Kathryn Porter on just how much Net Zero is costing us, why Ed Miliband's claims about renewables are so laughable and how the Green Crusade is putting us at risk of blackouts this winter.
The post The Sceptic: Kathryn Porter on the Lies of the Green Zealots appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link News Round-Up Fri Nov 14, 2025 01:44 | Will Jones
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
The post News Round-Up appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Heat Pump Grants to Be Cut in Budget Thu Nov 13, 2025 19:00 | Will Jones
Funding for heat pump grants is set to be cut by billions of pounds at the Budget in a fresh blow to Ed Miliband's green agenda as the Government tries to lower bills amid sky-high energy costs.
The post Heat Pump Grants to Be Cut in Budget appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

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Voltaire Network
Voltaire, international edition

offsite link Will intergovernmental institutions withstand the end of the "American Empire"?,... Sat Apr 05, 2025 07:15 | en

offsite link Voltaire, International Newsletter N?127 Sat Apr 05, 2025 06:38 | en

offsite link Disintegration of Western democracy begins in France Sat Apr 05, 2025 06:00 | en

offsite link Voltaire, International Newsletter N?126 Fri Mar 28, 2025 11:39 | en

offsite link The International Conference on Combating Anti-Semitism by Amichai Chikli and Na... Fri Mar 28, 2025 11:31 | en

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Book Review: A STAR CALLED HENRY, Roddy Doyle

category dublin | rights, freedoms and repression | opinion/analysis author Friday May 18, 2007 21:10author by R - Non-mar4ket socialistauthor email richardmontague at btinternet dot comauthor address Apartment 2, 4 Landsdowne Road, Belfast BT15 4DAauthor phone 028 90371070 Report this post to the editors

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Review of first volume of Roddy Doyle trilogy. Political Fiction dealing with Dublin in the early part of the Twentieth century and depicting in the Doyle style the events leading to the Easter Rising and the subsequent 'Tan' war.

AN INCREDIBLE STAR

A Star called Henry by Roddy Doyle. VINTAGE paperback. £6.99 pp 344. This is the first volume in a trilogy called The Last Roundup.

All the blurbs rated it; a sobering introduction: ‘Exhilarating’, ‘Masterpiece’, ‘a breathtaking act of apostasy’. Phew! With such credentials from eminent sources, this reviewer approached the first of the book’s four parts with some trepidation.

The novel’s principal character, Henry Smart, is born into the torturous misery of Dublin’s slumdom in 1902. Doyle paints a tangible word picture of the sheer awfulness of life for the poor in Ireland’s capital city as it emerges into twentieth century capitalism. It is a well-delineated background for the characters and events which are the basis of Doyle’s plot.

However his treatment of those characters and events strain credulity. Henry’s Da, from whom he inherited his name - and presumably his skill as an escapologist! - is a contract killer, a mass murderer who’s favoured weapon is his wooden leg. The younger Henry, at fourteen years old is in the General Post Office (GPO) lighting the insurrectionary touch-paper that will blossom into a nasty guerrilla war against British rule. The sex angle is provided by Henry taking time out to shag a rebel girl - and future mass killer - in the basement.

Doyle accurately, if somewhat enigmatically makes the discovery that socialists made at that time: that the squalid victory of Irish nationalism bequeathed to the working class only a change in the hand that held the whip. The pangs of hunger, the ignominy of poverty, could now be legitimately expressed in the Irish language but if a book or play identified the source of Ireland’s miseries - in Irish or English - or exposed the malignant Catholic agencies designated to ‘educate’ Ireland’s children, what passed for democracy in the new Ireland promptly had it banned.

Doyle, in the person of Henry Smart, has pretend conversations in the GPO during the Easter Week Rising with the erstwhile socialist James Connolly, newly become Commandant Connolly in the Irish Citizen Army (ICA). He (Connolly) stands pure in Doyle’s prose. The Irish dramatist, Sean O’Casey, who as secretary to the ICA was closer to Connolly, took a contrary view: he saw Connolly as renouncing the cause of the international proletariat for what was effectively the armed wing of an aspiring native capitalism.

For those who enjoy the raucous writing of Roddy Doyle there will be enjoyment in this book but unlike novels like Plunkett’s Strumpet City, it will bring little enlightenment. There were, of course, the laudatory blurbs, there in unanimous eminence, but this reviewer failed utterly to see the King’s Suit.

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