WIZARDS OF WISDOM
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We are Sovereign Love is the only Truth
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It is so important that WE ALL ACT NOW to protect children!

Please get behind this people's campaign.

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Every parent in Ireland should know what is in these books. ๐Ÿ‘‡

https://irisheducationalliance.com/library-campaign-2023/
Forwarded from Satirical Soldier
Your ancestors have likely murdered infidels, raped young girls, enslaved villages, burned non-believers, etc...
And you have the fucking balls to lecture the Irish about the GAA?
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Environmentally friendly and ethical cobalt mining in the Congo for your electric virtue signalling cars.

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Protestors outside Dublin Airport today against the State's mass immigration and open border policy.
Forwarded from Danny
Forwarded from C C
Forwarded from :rory-brian:
Constitutional Review in Ireland
The Irish Constitution (Bunreacht na hร‰ireann) divides state power into three parts,[3] with each part assigned to a particular organ of the state โ€“ executive power to the government,[4] legislative power to the parliament (the Oireachtas),[5] and judicial power to the courts.[6] Yet since the enactment of the Constitution in 1937, the separation of powers has been in practice not tripartite, but bipartite.[7] The reason for this is that the government is dominant over the legislature, by reason of the political party โ€˜whipโ€™ system. Typically, when a general election occurs, either one party wins an outright majority of seats in the parliament or it builds a coalition which has such a majority. Then, members of the government parties are in practice obliged to vote with the party, lest their membership be terminated. In this way, the government can pass legislation through the parliament virtually without constraint (save, of course, for political constraints on what they might do), and so the executive and legislative branches are in practice fused as one.[8]
Under the Constitution, the Courts are empowered to directly review the exercise of executive power,[9] and administrative power through the procedure of judicial review.[10] Furthermore, and perhaps most significantly, Irish courts have the power to review the constitutionality of legislation. Article 34 of the Constitution provides that justice shall be administered in courts established by law. In Ireland, there is no specialist constitutional court, but instead the Superior Courts โ€“ the High Court, the Court of Appeal, and the Supreme Court โ€“ are empowered to decide on constitutional matters. Their power to review legislation arises first as a result of Article 15.4 which states that the parliament shall not enact any law that is repugnant to the Constitution, and that any such law would be, but to the extent of its repugnancy, invalid. By Article 34.4, the task of determining the validity or otherwise of laws with respect to the Constitution is assigned to the Superior Courts.
Forwarded from Pox Populi
Alleged evidence of NGOs planning an invasion of Africans into Ireland under the pretext of saving persecuted gays.