Ireland’s government are objectively the least popular and possibly the least positive in the nation’s history.
Emigration is now reaching epidemic levels, with young people fleeing the country to escape to Australia, Canada and elsewhere. 2/3 people between 25 and 29 are now living with their parents as the government makes housing, marriage and the cost of living increasingly difficult.
This week, the Dail returned to angry protests as the government’s anarchistic migration policy continues to cause havoc across the country.
In the midst of these protests, Irish politicians have reacted by saying that so called Exclusion Zones (also known as anti Prayer Zones) could be used to also include people who may wish to express disagreement with government policy.
In a completely incendiary escalation of their efforts to ban Free Speech, to establish ‘Exclusion Zones’ around hospitals and churches (yes, churches) Helen McEntee has now suggested that those who disagree with the government could face terrorism charges.
Bilderberg member Paschal Donohoe has now sensationally suggested making it illegal for anyone to express disagreement with the government in most areas of Dublin City Centre, with them not only facing jail, but potential designation as terrorists.
The Irish Times and others report today that McEntee is considering asking the Gardai to treat the ‘far right’ (by which the establishment includes Catholics and Prolife groups) as terrorists and to punish them using the Offences Against the State Act 1939.
Donohoe had said that the
Seanad leader Jerry Buttimer said that the entire vicinity of Kildare Street and Molesworth Street, which coincidentally includes the Grand Freemason Lodge of Ireland, should be an anti citizen zone, with politicians having priority within the area and any expression of disagreement with their actions treated as a criminal act.
Yes, you can give people a mandate or not. So what I will say to the review is that the area around Merrion Square, Long Street, that area, the area on Kildare Street, Molesworth Street, there should be a sterile area where members of the Oireachtas and staff can move freely in and out
All of these individuals have suggested that the measure for either criminality or terrorism should be anyone who is perceived as interfering with ‘the carrying on of the Government of the State’ .
To this end, those praying against abortion either in proximity to a hospital that provides abortions or on church grounds that are included in ‘exclusion zones’ (there are a number of them) could be reasonably charged with terrorism under Fine Gael’s direction.
If someone were to pray a Rosary outside the Dail, it is reasonable to assume that this could also occur.
With local and EU elections looming next year, perhaps Catholics should remind politicians at their doors that it is in fact churches that need exclusion zones from political parties.
Last year, the ruling Green Party SURROUNDED a church in Kerry after Fr. Sean Sheehy preached a homily that the state objected to.
Similarly, Sinn Fein staged a protest against a church in Ballymun after they took down a Pride Flag that they had hung up.
One thing is certain, the Irish government is fast becoming the most authoritarian in Western Europe, it it is not so already.