Comments welcome

Just to thank readers for recent comments. They are always welcome and read with interest, whether for or against. Again, thanks

9 thoughts on “Comments welcome”

  1. Lost out due to bad advice?
    Why don’t you Sue your Solicitor/Auctioneer/Accountant?
    Contact: ProJustis, P.O. Box: 752, South City Office, Cork.
    Email: – projustis@gmail.com Strictest Confidentiality Assured

    We ran the above advertisment in the Connaught Tribune two weeks ago and we were very encouraged by the response. We are now going to broaden our advertising campaign in the next few weeks to include other counties in Ireland.

    ProJustis is a small Independent Private Alliance committed to providing Cost Effective Access to Justice in cases where Professional Negligence/Misconduct is alleged and where ProJustis is of the opinion that there is a clear loss to you due to bad advice from a professional such as a Solicitor/Accountant/ Auctioneer.
    Thankfully we have access to a dedicated panel of legal professionals who have no agenda whatsoever except to providing a prompt professional service.
    Anyone can contact me, Patrick Henderson, directly for an information pack on 087 911 2212 or simply by leaving a name and postal address at my email address projustis@gmail.com

    Thank you for this opportunity and kind regards,

    Patrick Henderson
    Projustis

  2. Anthony,

    The vast majority of your posts are excellent
    reads … I hope the Irish people appreciates
    someone standing up and fighting for their best
    interests. Whether one agres with some of your
    material or not, Civilized debate can only make
    our world better.

    One thing I would like to ask … the EU is
    going to recognize the Irish language as ‘official’
    on 01/01/07? Based on centuries of Irish history;
    What do you thinkg would happen if the EU did not
    ratify your ancestral language as anything but
    ‘official.’

  3. http://www.michaelmckevitt.com/

    “The Framing of Michael McKevitt ” By Marcella Sands, sister-in-law of Michael and sister of Bobby Sands.

    Foreword by Fr. Desmond Wilson
    Reasonable people will read this account of what is happening to Michael Mc Kevitt with a mixture of sadness and anger. People who value good legal systems and appreciate the courage of those who struggled to create them will read it with deep disappointment as well.

    The treatment and trial of Michael Mc Kevitt will outrage all of them. Some of us who attended the Green St. court any time during the hearing of his trial will always remember the grip of cold fear we felt at how similar this trial was to what we had read about years ago, the show trials of the dictatorships.

    Bringing in a witness who admitted he was motivated by money, opening the court to free passage of police and government agents, the complacence of judges and state lawyers faced the clear presumption that the safety of the state is more important than justice for the individual. We had heard it all before. In the past however, news media and church and universities and all kinds of people had condemned what was happening in those countries which they described as under dictatorship or communist rule. Now we were witnessing in our own people’s courts the misuse of a system which we believed was so superior, so basically just, so presided over by people of such integrity that it would always be found better to set the guilty free than to convict even one innocent. This trial has been one of the most frightening and revealing of the past forty years in Ireland’s courts north and south.

    The case of Michael Mc Kevitt must go to the European courts and when it does our fellow Europeans may well be shocked. We who are already shocked need not feel helpless. Michael Mc Kevitt and his family need our help and that help should be given for the sake of justice for all of us. In no circumstances must we allow political needs to dictate how our courts will work. And if there is one prisoner unfairly treated then every one of us should feel honoured to make justice rather than political opinion prevail. If any prisoner needs help we are bound and privileged to give it.

    Please read this document. Please do what you can to make clear that the safety of the state can never be served by the suffering of even one of its citizens.

    Desmond Wilson.

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  5. We need headlines that say – “Realistic Plan to save 200,000 jobs.

    However there are people who can help answer these questions, who can put the boilerplate for Ireland Inc’s survival in place!

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