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Do Sinn Féin support the move to level 5 lockdown?
Sinn Féin TD Louise O'Reilly tells the Claire Byrne show that they don't just support it, they were calling for it!
Broadcast: RTÉ | 19 Oct 2020
Sinn Féin TD Louise O'Reilly tells the Claire Byrne show that they don't just support it, they were calling for it!
Broadcast: RTÉ | 19 Oct 2020
Media is too big
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They had to separate these two pieces of crimecall footage by about half an hour, presumably so people wouldn't notice patterns. It's exactly the same swindle.
We've imported a petty crime mafia network who are aided and protected by being awarded the status of a precious minority victim group.
On twitter:
https://mobile.twitter.com/orlaredchan/status/1318337992503758849
We've imported a petty crime mafia network who are aided and protected by being awarded the status of a precious minority victim group.
On twitter:
https://mobile.twitter.com/orlaredchan/status/1318337992503758849
Forwarded from Critiqued
“sexual assaults investigated in irish hospitals”
put that search term into google and just look at the never ending amount of stories that appear. They seem to start around 2002 and get more frequent as the years go by. DIVERSITY IS EVIL.
put that search term into google and just look at the never ending amount of stories that appear. They seem to start around 2002 and get more frequent as the years go by. DIVERSITY IS EVIL.
"expert"
None of these so-called experts will admit that 90% of the asylum seekers Ireland receives can't even think up a solid sob story yet are never deported.
All their initiatives are just designed to attract more spoofers, this particular one being hazardous to the well being of the sick and infirm.
https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-40067796.html
None of these so-called experts will admit that 90% of the asylum seekers Ireland receives can't even think up a solid sob story yet are never deported.
All their initiatives are just designed to attract more spoofers, this particular one being hazardous to the well being of the sick and infirm.
https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-40067796.html
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
Forwarded from An Fómhar
This is an archive of Frame Game Radio's work, most of what he did is here from what I can see. I want to do some more detailed coverage of some of Frame's most insightful videos/streams, but there's a lot to get through, so it's going to take time.
Amazing wealth of information here though, one of the most influential red pill voices I've come across. Really an inspirational guy. It's sad that he's no longer around, at least on the Internet, but this archive is worth it's weight in gold.
https://archive.org/details/framegames
Amazing wealth of information here though, one of the most influential red pill voices I've come across. Really an inspirational guy. It's sad that he's no longer around, at least on the Internet, but this archive is worth it's weight in gold.
https://archive.org/details/framegames
Internet Archive
Frame Games Radio audio & video : Frame Games Radio : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
Interviews and presentations by Frame Games RadioItems date from 2018 and 2019Several items are available as audio alongside video mastersThe creator’s name...
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Waterford Normies react to the new lockdown restrictions on RTÉ news.
Doing the jobs Irish people don't want to do.
Because Ireland rarely deports it's failed asylum swindlers, we continue to attract the world's trash.
https://www.thejournal.ie/brothels-court-case-5238835-Oct2020/
Because Ireland rarely deports it's failed asylum swindlers, we continue to attract the world's trash.
https://www.thejournal.ie/brothels-court-case-5238835-Oct2020/
I can help the gardaí out here with the search. They're currently making a beeline for the north where they'll take a boat to Britain. If you find them, they'll make an asylum claim and then abscond within a week.
https://www.irishmirror.ie/news/irish-news/gardai-kilkenny-searching-group-men-22874214
https://www.irishmirror.ie/news/irish-news/gardai-kilkenny-searching-group-men-22874214
Media is too big
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Gemma Vs Twitter is on!
https://share.par.pw/post/7635ed7b4a2347f999c346bdd57b978d
https://share.par.pw/post/7635ed7b4a2347f999c346bdd57b978d
"Black history needs to be taught in our schools" because some guy with a French name who lived in Ireland had slaves once." -Mick Barry, TD. People Before Profit.
https://twitter.com/JRD0000/status/1318636410799349761
https://twitter.com/JRD0000/status/1318636410799349761
Twitter
JRD
"Black history needs to be taught in our schools" because some guy with a French name who lived in Ireland had slaves once. Mick Barry, TD. People Before Profit. https://t.co/2GXUJUPA9Y
"NPHET is comprised primarily of people from the Dept of Health and the HSE. If you put those who have so spectacularly failed to manage a health service in charge of running the country, the results unfortunately are predictable" -TD Michael McNamara on the Tonight Show.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rtaa8kJDUlk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rtaa8kJDUlk
YouTube
The Tonight Show - Level 5
Speaking about the Level 5 restrictions on The Tonight Show.
Dr Catherine Day, chair of an advisory group that was set up to provide recommendations to the government on how it should deal with asylum seekers, has released their report.
Here are their recommendations:
➼ There should be a blanket amnesty for all current asylum seekers in the system if they have been in Ireland for longer than two years, pending security vetting, regardless of the merits of their case. The current backlog of asylum cases should be cleared by January 2021. They would be granted leave-to-remain for a period of five years with an option to renew.
➼ Access to the labour market should be increased.
➼ They want a three-stage system of State-run accommodation by mid-2023. Asylum seekers should first spend three months at a reception centre. Here they will be shown how to access services like health and social welfare. Asylum seekers should then be helped to move to their own individual homes paid for through something like the Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) for ordinary citizens. They should be placed in towns and cities and not in remote areas.
➼ Once an asylum seeker has been granted permission to remain in Ireland whether their asylum claim was accepted as valid (90% fail), an application for subsidiary protection was approved or they were granted leave- to-remain, then they should be provided with support for up to 18 months, no questions asked.
➼ The advisory group want a six-month deadline for the IPO to make a first instance decision on any asylum seeker's claim and a six-month deadline for the Appeals Tribunal to make a decision on any appeal. A limit on the number of appeals was not suggested. (Once appeals are exhausted asylum seekers typically apply for subsidiary protection but I believe they can do that concurrently now).
This is not the first time asylum seekers in the system were granted a blanket amnesty but a previous one was done without public knowledge.
In January, 2018, the Irish Independent ran a report containing evidence of an undeclared scheme being operated by the immigration authorities allowing failed asylum seekers without a criminal record and who had been in Ireland for five years or more, to stay. Legal professionals working on asylum cases referred to this scheme as the "scheme that doesn’t exist".
I'd imagine they chose the five year leave-to-remain figure because once a foreigner has lived legally in Ireland for five years, they can apply for Irish citizenship. It's three years if they have produced a child here.
Although the advisory group say they want to security vet the applicants for this amnesty, we have seen in the past that even asylum seekers who have criminal records have been allowed to stay, often after the NGO-media alliance kick up a fuss about their innocent children "who know no other home".
Worth noting that Dr. Catherine Day formerly worked in the cabinet of Peter Sutherland (he never went away ya-know!).
Sorcha Pollak is championing these recommendations in the Irish Times as forecast to "save millions" over the cost of providing Direct Provision in 2019.
"It’s understood the proposed model will cost €35.9 million less than what direct provision cost in 2019," she writes.
How this figure was arrived at was not demonstrated, considering each asylum seeker would be provided their own home and this will inevitably attract even more asylum swindlers who wish to chance their arm here.
As the Direct Provision system was at capacity in 2019, the State paid hotels and guesthouses over €460,000 a week (€24 million for the year total) to house asylum seekers in emergency accommodation. This was on top of the annual bill of about €50 million which is given to regular Direct Provision providers. She didn't mention this.
To conclude, it seems like the plan is to just grant amnesty to all the asylum swindlers every couple of years while providing them the lifestyle of a naturalised citizen in the meantime. They'll be a constant churn of them through reception centres but now slumlords will get their slice of the pie sooner.
Here are their recommendations:
➼ There should be a blanket amnesty for all current asylum seekers in the system if they have been in Ireland for longer than two years, pending security vetting, regardless of the merits of their case. The current backlog of asylum cases should be cleared by January 2021. They would be granted leave-to-remain for a period of five years with an option to renew.
➼ Access to the labour market should be increased.
➼ They want a three-stage system of State-run accommodation by mid-2023. Asylum seekers should first spend three months at a reception centre. Here they will be shown how to access services like health and social welfare. Asylum seekers should then be helped to move to their own individual homes paid for through something like the Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) for ordinary citizens. They should be placed in towns and cities and not in remote areas.
➼ Once an asylum seeker has been granted permission to remain in Ireland whether their asylum claim was accepted as valid (90% fail), an application for subsidiary protection was approved or they were granted leave- to-remain, then they should be provided with support for up to 18 months, no questions asked.
➼ The advisory group want a six-month deadline for the IPO to make a first instance decision on any asylum seeker's claim and a six-month deadline for the Appeals Tribunal to make a decision on any appeal. A limit on the number of appeals was not suggested. (Once appeals are exhausted asylum seekers typically apply for subsidiary protection but I believe they can do that concurrently now).
This is not the first time asylum seekers in the system were granted a blanket amnesty but a previous one was done without public knowledge.
In January, 2018, the Irish Independent ran a report containing evidence of an undeclared scheme being operated by the immigration authorities allowing failed asylum seekers without a criminal record and who had been in Ireland for five years or more, to stay. Legal professionals working on asylum cases referred to this scheme as the "scheme that doesn’t exist".
I'd imagine they chose the five year leave-to-remain figure because once a foreigner has lived legally in Ireland for five years, they can apply for Irish citizenship. It's three years if they have produced a child here.
Although the advisory group say they want to security vet the applicants for this amnesty, we have seen in the past that even asylum seekers who have criminal records have been allowed to stay, often after the NGO-media alliance kick up a fuss about their innocent children "who know no other home".
Worth noting that Dr. Catherine Day formerly worked in the cabinet of Peter Sutherland (he never went away ya-know!).
Sorcha Pollak is championing these recommendations in the Irish Times as forecast to "save millions" over the cost of providing Direct Provision in 2019.
"It’s understood the proposed model will cost €35.9 million less than what direct provision cost in 2019," she writes.
How this figure was arrived at was not demonstrated, considering each asylum seeker would be provided their own home and this will inevitably attract even more asylum swindlers who wish to chance their arm here.
As the Direct Provision system was at capacity in 2019, the State paid hotels and guesthouses over €460,000 a week (€24 million for the year total) to house asylum seekers in emergency accommodation. This was on top of the annual bill of about €50 million which is given to regular Direct Provision providers. She didn't mention this.
To conclude, it seems like the plan is to just grant amnesty to all the asylum swindlers every couple of years while providing them the lifestyle of a naturalised citizen in the meantime. They'll be a constant churn of them through reception centres but now slumlords will get their slice of the pie sooner.
TheJournal.ie
Direct Provision should end by 2023 with amnesty offered in 2021 for some - Day report
A report drawn up by former Secretary General of the European Commission Dr Catherine Day has made a number of sweeping recommendations.
Late Stage Ireland
Dr Catherine Day, chair of an advisory group that was set up to provide recommendations to the government on how it should deal with asylum seekers, has released their report. Here are their recommendations: ➼ There should be a blanket amnesty for all current…
Missed this point earlier. The media didn't mention it. It was buried in the report on page 82.
There are 3,585 asylum seekers in Direct Provision that the advisory group recommend giving a blanket amnesty to.
In order to persuade the asylum seekers to agree to the amnesty instead of following their claims through so that they are all cleared out in bulk, the advisory group wants them all to be able to avail of the family reunification programme. People who are granted leave-to-remain usually are not able to.
Now remember, Minister David Stanton previously told the Dáil that the average number of family members that each asylum seeker applied to bring in was 20 and the highest was 70. They reduced the scope of the reunification programme in 2015 to only include close relatives (spouses, children under 18 and parents) as a result, but all the parties except Fine Gael want to increase the scope again to include grandparents, cousins, nephews, nieces and siblings.
link to full report
There are 3,585 asylum seekers in Direct Provision that the advisory group recommend giving a blanket amnesty to.
In order to persuade the asylum seekers to agree to the amnesty instead of following their claims through so that they are all cleared out in bulk, the advisory group wants them all to be able to avail of the family reunification programme. People who are granted leave-to-remain usually are not able to.
Now remember, Minister David Stanton previously told the Dáil that the average number of family members that each asylum seeker applied to bring in was 20 and the highest was 70. They reduced the scope of the reunification programme in 2015 to only include close relatives (spouses, children under 18 and parents) as a result, but all the parties except Fine Gael want to increase the scope again to include grandparents, cousins, nephews, nieces and siblings.
link to full report
If you were a genuine expert group on asylum, you'd acknowledge that the biggest problem with the asylum system is that it is so frequently abused by criminals and people chancing their arm but who are seldom deported.
Your report would suggest setting up deportation channels with the countries where most of these asylum swindlers come from and seek to make Ireland's asylum system less attractive to them.
Instead we get this.
Your report would suggest setting up deportation channels with the countries where most of these asylum swindlers come from and seek to make Ireland's asylum system less attractive to them.
Instead we get this.