Late Stage Ireland
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Ivana Bacik was on Newstalk this morning promoting her birth-right citizenship bill. As far as I know, this bill is different from the one TD Mick Barry is pushing. They have two on the boil. They don't expect either bill to pass with an FG/FF government, but as Mick Barry explained, this is more about getting the idea traction for a future government to approve.

It's important you hear the narrative they are constructing so you know how to counter it. There is nobody countering it in the media so that task falls to you. As you know, the government documents people's reaction to events and proposals on social media. I will counter her talking points in the next post.

On bitchute:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/DbKDN2EXbAvZ/
Ivana starts off by telling newstalk:

"What we are looking to do is to ensure that children born in Ireland have a pathway to citizenship here. One of the effects of the referendum in 2004 was to create a small number of children who are born in Ireland who have known no other home in Ireland but because their parents are not Irish nationals, they are no longer able to get Irish citizenship."

This is a fudge. There are plenty of children born to non-Irish nationals who are entitled to Irish citizenship. The law is already too lenient as it is.

Here's the current law on the books: If a child in Ireland is born to a parent who has been legally resident here for three years up until the date of their birth, then that child is entitled to be an Irish citizen.

For example: If a Chinese person uses a student visa to move here and after three years they give birth to a child, that child is entitled to Irish citizenship. Also, that child will have a "right to a family life" and consequently, their parents will be ultimately be entitled to Irish citizenship too. Anyone living legally in Ireland for five years can apply for Irish citizenship.

What Ivana doesn't mention is she is talking about illegals. She mentions the case of "Eric" Zhi Ying Xue. His mother was an illegal who committed passport fraud and was set to be deported but they were both ultimately allowed to stay after the NGO-media complex promoted their case. Ivana says groups like the MRCI and the Immigrant council says there are only a small number of children in a similar situation to Eric.

In fact, the MRCI suggest there is as an estimated 17,000 to 20,000 illegals living in Ireland, including between 2,000-3,000 who are children. Where did they get their figures from? Why is nobody asking who is employing all these illegals and why isn't the gardaí investigating them?

I would say they're low-balling this figure and here's my evidence: The prior Minister for Justice Charlie Flanagan stated that in the five years up to 2018, 20,000 illegal minors with deportation orders were granted Irish citizenship while only 134 were deported. Like "Eric" Zhi Ying Xue's mother, I would guess their parents had committed a criminal offence.

A 2018 Irish Independent report revealed that the government ran an undeclared scheme which allowed illegals who had been in Ireland for five years or more to stay as long as they had no criminal record.

So you can see we already have de facto birth-right citizenship. Less than 1% of illegal minors in Ireland are deported. Their parents get to stay too.

Bacik says the evidence is at best sketchy and completely anecdotal that birth-right citizenship was abused. This is also completely false.

In 1999, only 2% of babies in Ireland were born to non-nationals. By 2003, the figure was almost 20%. Declan Keane, head doctor at Dublin's National Maternity Hospital told RTÉ that 70% of the women were coming from sub-Saharan Africa and the majority of those from Nigeria. He said a number of women were travelling while actually in labour. The problem was being experienced at all three of Dublin's maternity hospitals.

That anecdotal evidence checks out with the census data from 2016 as we can see that 3.3% of ten to fourteen-year-olds were listed as black. This peak can be correlated to the period between 1998 and 2004 when birth-right citizenship was a constitutional right.

So although we basically already have birth-right citizenship, what Bacik's bill would do is once more make Ireland the most attractive destination in Europe for illegals and asylum abuse.

On bitchute:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/DbKDN2EXbAvZ/
The destruction caused by a battering ram to evict tenants from Mathias Magrath's home in Moyasta, Co.Clare.
(1888 by Robert French)

https://twitter.com/RobCross247/status/1327318526332432390
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''At Vaseline, we know that systemic racism and healthcare inequities negatively impact Black and Brown communities. Skincare is no exception. So we’ve made it our mission to champion change needed to eradicate racism because we believe all people should have equal access to care.
See how Vaseline is working towards equity in skincare at Vaseline.com.''

Vaseline has joined the list of major corporations in the immense propaganda machine.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jErETm3aVyE
https://archive.vn/fAsD4
Forwarded from Hundred-Handers
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Those last 10 seconds though...
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RTÉ report (before they were cucked) about how maternity hospitals in Ireland were struggling to cope with the amount of migrants coming here to give birth back before 2004 / the 27th amendment that Labour/Greens etc want to repeal.
Forwarded from Deleted Account
60 per cent of all female asylum-seekers were pregnant when they made their applications back before the 27th was put in.

Irish Times March 31, 2004
''For some, however, direct provision is of great benefit. A different viewpoint came from another Mosney resident, Obinna Nwankwo, an Economics graduate from Nigeria. As a single man with no dependants, he feels that the system is of the most benefit to the couples and women with children.

“These people are using this opportunity to expand their families by having as many children as they can while in the process,” he says. “They know that necessities like pushchairs and baby formula will be provided free of charge so it costs them little to get pregnant while they’re in direct provision.”

From a Nigerian living in direct provision. Nigerians using Direct Provision to expand their families. Remember that pregnant women in Direct Provision become entitled to full social welfare at 32 weeks. Now Labour wants them to become citizens.

Read more here: Magill, Living in Direct Provision, 10 June 2011
Citizenship tourists 'hit maternity services'

Consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist Paul Byrne wrote to Micheál Martin in 2002 to alert him to the worsening situation caused by so-called citizenship tourists and their impact on services at the Rotunda Hospital in Dublin.

Stressing that his sole motivation was a concern for the health and well being of patients, Mr Byrne said last night that the situation has not changed in the past two years.

"The idea of my letter was to alert them to what is going on. It was a relentless increase and it is still going up. The situation that causes us the problems are the people who are flying in during the latter stages of pregnancy. These are not Filipino nurses. They are not Brazilian meat factory workers or others working in this country," he said last night.

Mr Byrne's letter from September 2002, obtained by the Irish Examiner under the Freedom of Information Act, was prompted by an incident at the time where a professional South African woman, who was pregnant with quads, arrived just 36 hours before going into premature labour.

In his letter he also said it was common knowledge that Nigerian women arriving in the latter stages of pregnancy were paying £5,000 to an agency to come here.

The increase in African patients was causing Irish patients to go to other hospitals, as they did not want to be in a minority, but were afraid to speak about it for fear of being labelled racist
.

Speaking to the Irish Examiner last night, Mr Byrne said that while the number of non-national births was now evenly spread across the three maternity hospitals in Dublin, doctors were dealing with extremely difficult cases, sometimes involving HIV, TB, malaria, sickle cell disease and serious complications.

"When all this started, the textbooks of obstetrics didn't deal with problems from African countries. We have had very complex cases," he said.

The number of non-national births at the hospital has more than doubled since 2000 and as it continues to rise, Mr Byrne says a large number of cases can be ascribed to citizenship tourism.

"Anybody who says it is not happening just doesn't know what it is happening," he said.

Read more here: Irish Examiner, 28th May 2004
wonder what's in it for Seán Ó Fearghaíl. Is it just gombeenism and brown envelopes or is there more to it...

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/ceann-comhairle-accused-of-meddling-on-chinas-behalf-8gt2m8mt3
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"This is probably a good reason for you to never get a driving license to be honest. Let's face it, this is the way it's all going to go. It's not going to take a long time. It will be illegal to drive and have fun in your car."

But relax, Elon Musk's hyperloop will enable you to get anywhere in Ireland in less than ten minutes in five to ten years time.

Here's science-man and comedian-man with the details of our future island.

Broadcast: Future Island | RTÉ | 11 Nov 2020

On bitchute:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/lKoAtViLdtnN/