Dublin Day 2

Dublin Castle:


This Georgian era statue of Lady Justice is unusual in that it is not blindfolded – signifying impartiality – but looks at Dublin Castle. This, in addition to the fact that justice favoured the elite, gave rise to the following:

Lady Justice, notice her station:
Face to the castle and arse to the nation.

Those who have followed the ANiC v.s. ACoC court litigation, will note that this sums up those proceedings, too.

At the Guinness brewery. This was just her first pint; things went rapidly downhill from there.

As the advertisement says, Guinness is Good for You: it must be, Arthur Guinness and his wife had 21 children.  Of course, today she would have had two children and 19 abortions.

Molly Malone who, we were told, was celibate by day, but used to sell a bit by night:

A street artist:

St. Patrick’s Cathedral:

We had dinner in a restaurant that had once been a church. John Wesley preached his first Irish sermon there in 1747, Jonathan Swift used to attend it, Handel used the organ for practice and, as you can see from this plaque, the Rev. John Magill’s remains were deposited in the Vault Beneath. I doubt if even this Divine of Polite Learning and Sound Judgement foresaw that, within a few hundred years, aided and abetted by mainline denominations,  Western Christianity would decline to the point that his church would become a restaurant and his final resting place in the vault – toilets.

I have little doubt that St. John’s Shaughnessy will, after the elapse of a decent interval, suffer a similar fate. Perhaps the new owners will offer Michael Ingham the position of head waiter.

Dublin

There is a huge spike in the centre of the city:

At some point the British tried to make the Irish paint all their doors black. The result was this:

 

 

Ireland is on the verge of bankruptcy. Never mind, someone has the answer, although I have an uneasy feeling it was tried before and found wanting:

One of the main streets:

 

Book of Kells. No photography was allowed – which explains why this isn’t a very good image. There was no surreptitious way to erect a tripod.

 

The magnificent Trinity College Library which was used to represent Hogwarts library in the Harry Potter films.

 

 

Ireland: Recession might save the life of unborn babies

That should have been the headline, but it isn’t: the actual headline is “Recession Might Limit Irish Women’s Access To Safe Abortion”.

All of which goes to show what a self-destructive, decadent, corrupted state Western Civilisation now finds itself in.

Economic hardship might be leading more Irish women to seek abortions and obtain the procedure illegally because they cannot afford to travel to Britain, where abortion is legal, Reuters reports. Ireland, a mainly Catholic nation, permits abortion only when a woman’s life is in jeopardy. The policy is one of the strictest in Europe, and women who violate the law can face life in prison.