"The Taoiseach believes that we have a parliamentary system, but at the same time is ignoring his parliamentary party": Aontú leader Peadar Toibín slams Taoiseach Micheál Martin's reasoning for not holding a referendum on the Triple Lock.
NIAMH UÍ BHRIAIN: The new data shows it was abundantly clear for years to government that the majority of claims for asylum are not valid, yet the same politicians allowed the numbers to spiral six-fold and shouted down objectors as racist.
https://t.co/jDrR3ZshP9
Ireland is a black hole of official data. Intentionally so.
Not only is there no data available on migrant criminality and migrant share of social housing for example, but equally important -->
The government and media love to resort to "shur the health services would collapse without immigrants" as their core justification for mass immigration. But they steadfastly refuse to acknowledge the link between mass immigration and the need for more healthcare workers - more immigrants in, more immigrants needed to look after them. It's an immigration ponzi scheme as seen in their refusal to acknowledge the root cause of the 'housing crisis'.
So, a simple question for Health Minister @CarrollJennifer - what % of total hospital visits and waiting list applications are made up of immigrants?
It is important because if we have invited a young, vibrant worker immigrant cohort, one can reasonably expect their share of referrals to the health services to be low relative to the native Irish share which will include a greater share of those in the 65+ (retiree) demographic where reliance on health care sky-rockets.
If we have invited in healthcare tourists, non-workers and non-vital (health wise) individuals en-masse we can expect the immigrant share of healthcare usage to be close to that or surpass the Irish among the under 65s in which case not only are we importing masses of healthcare workers to feed an ever expanding population, but we're importing those immigrant workers to support immigrant healthcare abusers which is a fraud perpetuated on the Irish.
DATA is king.
Release all of the healthcare services data by nationality and age cohort so the Irish public can judge for themselves whether or not the Irish healthcare system would collapse without migrant workers - and if, by extension, they have been lied to about the core government and media justification of the mass immigration experiment.
Two small island economies blew up in 2008. Iceland and Ireland. Their names differ by one letter, and their handling of the crisis differed by everything that matters.
Iceland's three big banks, Kaupthing, Landsbanki, and Glitnir, had grown assets to roughly ten times the country's GDP by 2008. Pure credit-fueled madness. When the music stopped, the Icelandic government did the unthinkable: it let them fail. Bondholders ate the losses. The state refused to socialize private bank debt onto 320,000 citizens who never signed up for it. Capital controls went up, the króna collapsed, and the politicians actually prosecuted bankers. Twenty-six of them went to prison. Sigurður Einarsson and Hreiðar Már Sigurðsson, the men who ran Kaupthing, served real sentences.
Ireland took the opposite road. In September 2008, the Irish government issued a blanket guarantee covering the liabilities of its major banks, including Anglo Irish Bank, a property-lending casino that should have been allowed to die in peace. The taxpayer absorbed the bill. By the time the rescue ended, Ireland had poured around 64 billion euros into its banks, roughly 40 percent of GDP. The state took on private gambling debts, then went to the Troika in 2010 hat in hand for an 85 billion euro bailout, and accepted years of austerity to pay for losses it had no business owning.
Both economies recovered. Both eventually grew again. The difference is who paid and who learned. Iceland made creditors and reckless bankers bear the consequences of their own decisions, which is the entire point of capitalism: profit and loss, not profit and bailout. Ireland protected the people who made the bad bets and handed the invoice to schoolteachers and shopkeepers.
You will hear economists call Ireland's GDP rebound a triumph (much of that "growth" is multinational accounting fiction, Leprechaun economics, but that's another lesson). What they skip is the moral architecture. When you guarantee bank liabilities, you abolish the discipline that makes markets work. You tell every banker in the country that downside is optional.
Iceland jailed its bankers. Ireland reimbursed theirs.
"The very dull, white, pasty Ireland that I grew up in": Compilation of Irish politicians discussing "white privilege", how Ireland is "a racist society", and more:
Anything short of the death penalty is an injustice to the girls who were tortured by these people.
Those who turned a blind eye, the politicians, the social workers, and the police, should all face prison time.
The communities of foreigners who knew about it must be deported.
Not one liberal politician or journalist argued that the George Floyd "I can't breathe" clip shouldn't have been shared. They only want to stop you seeing the Belfast clip because it's massively, massively inconvenient to them - 'sensitivity for victims' has zilch to do with it.
Never forget in the wake of this horrific attack on innocent babies, the media and government and opposition and NGOs ALL tried to insist he was Irish. He wasn't. He isn't. But his words express how he feels about the Irish. His actions even more so. Look at what he did. After 26 years of a free ride in the nation he clearly despises.
Exact testimony from Patricia Byrne (today’s witness):
She heard the man (identified via CCTV as the accused) say it aggressively while crossing in front of someone on Mary Street.
She heard him repeat it to a group of 6–7 tourists (English/Welsh/Scottish), who were laughing, and she told them it wasn’t funny.
"Ms Byrne went into a shop and emerged a short time later to see the same man approach two women with buggies. She walked on a little further and he then moved out of her view, she said."
Also earlier that morning he followed another group of school children down onto O Connell Street.
RTE's new TV series BackStory takes the children of immigrants in Ireland back to their "ancestral homelands" to connect with their roots. But if heritage is so important to identity, why are Irish people who feel as strongly about theirs called racist?
https://t.co/JygujPl3pP
Britain had a moment of silence for George Floyd. Our politicians kneeled en masse to show their outrage at his killing. "I can't breathe" became a slogan.
George Floyd died on the other side of the world. He wasn't British.
Henry Nowak *was* British and his treatment by the police was shocking and negligent in the extreme. Yet there is no minute of silence. There is no coordinated public campaign. There is no kneeling at sporting events.
And we all know why.
During the summer of BLM, some people said "All Lives Matter". This was treated as the highest form of racism and anyone who said this was immediately cancelled. Why? Because the people in charge don't actually think all lives matter in the same way.
They have created a racial hierarchy of victimhood where a career criminal who died through mistreatment by police in a foreign country with 0 evidence of racism like George Floyd is automatically sanctified because of the colour of his skin.
And Henry Nowak, a British man, one of ours, is automatically dismissed and ignored because of the colour of his.
This is the ugly fruit of so-called "anti-racism", an obsession with race that has created a two-tier society which treats people differently because of the colour of their skin.
This needs to stop.
🇬🇧 Henry Nowak’s father speaks after his son's killer is jailed for 21 years
"When police arrived, Henry was lying on the floor, barely able to sit up and plainly in severe medical distress.
Henry told officers that he could not breathe nine times.
He told them he had been stabbed four times.
The response from one officer was, 'I don't think you have, mate.'
Henry was pulled across the gravel, his hands forced behind his back, and he was placed in handcuffs.
Instead of being treated as a dying victim, police formally arrested Henry for assault and read him his rights.
That was the last thing he heard."
This is honestly something out of Life of Brian.
Ireland has just played a completely optional match against QATAR, a slave state that, in addition to its litany of human rights abuses, continues to bankroll Hamas and host its top leaders in luxury in Doha. These leaders are the architects of the October 7th massacre and are therefore directly responsible for the destruction of Gaza that followed.
Yet there is not a word of controversy or commentary about the current match at all. Instead we have protestors screeching about ‘Zionist’ blood money from the stands about a match with Israel in four months (!), and official commentators below legitimising such abject hypocritical lunacy on our state-funded national broadcaster.
I don’t even know where we, as a country, even go from here. There is such a profound disconnect between how this deranged, utterly sinister obsession is perceived nationally versus internationally, and that gap just continues to grow ever wider.
Foreign born population of each country :
Jan 2001 Jan 2025
🇦🇹 8.7% 22.5%
🇧🇪 8.4% 20.2%
🇩🇰 4.8% 14.4%
🇫🇷 5.5% 14.0%
🇩🇪 8.9% 20.5%
🇬🇷 6.9% 11.0%
🇮🇸 3.1% 21.8%
🇮🇪 4.0% 23.3%
🇱🇺 37.5% 51.5%
🇳🇱 4.1% 16.8%
🇳🇴 4.1% 18.7%
🇸🇮 2.1% 15.5%
🇪🇸 3.4% 19.3%
🇸🇪 5.3% 20.8%
🇬🇧 4.3% 20.0%
Now add children born to foreign parents and the situation looks even worse.
We are living through the demographic annihilation of the people of Europe.
A very sad announcement.
I have just been convicted a second time for 'hate speech' and it is only due to a technicality that I could not immediately be sent to jail —to the judge's frustration.
In an ironic turn of events it's actually thanks to my previous prison sentence (for memes in a private group chat) that I am now still free —in a physical sense, at least.
Call me naive but I didn't think they would take it this far, given that this precedent criminalises many of the arguments used by even the most moderate politicians critical of mass migration.
In February 2024 I gave a lecture at Catholic University Leuven wherein I linked mass migration to crime and a deterioration of our quality of life. Every single point I made was 100% the truth and based on scientific evidence.
Cynically, even the judge that convicted me admits as much by writing in his verdict: “Even if all of the statements made by Van Langenhove are based on scientific evidence and statistics, it makes no difference to the criminal intent. Van Langenhove is not charged with spreading false information. He is charged with presenting facts in a way that incites hatred against persons on the grounds of one or more of the protected criteria in the Anti-Racism Law.���
That's a lot of words just to say he wants to send me to prison for speaking the truth.
Even the regime media write: "It did not matter to the court that Van Langenhove was quoting scientific sources. The judge argued that Van Langenhove's main message was that a big part of the societal problems like insecurity, housing shortages and lowering educational standards are due to mass migration."
You may think the regime media are being sympathetic to me in the first sentence, but in reality they are warning people: even if you speak the truth, if you go against our narrative, we will crush you in every way possible.
Both the public prosecutor and the judge did not present a single real argument as to how or against whom I would have incited hatred. So even if I would accept their crazy, dystopic law, I still did not break it.
The only argument they present is that I created a "hostile atmosphere of us versus them” in regards to migrants. But even this silly argument (which is not even a punishable offence) is not true. To me, the deadly disease is self-hatred and one of its worst symptoms is replacement migration. My enemy is thus NOT the migrants themselves but those orchestrating the mass migration.
Sadly, in Belgium, evidence is not needed and ‘vibes’ are enough to put someone in jail.
Given the fact that I have another court case coming up in September and that I have a dozen active criminal investigations for hate speech, time is running out for me. I have already paid more than €420,000 in legal fees and there is no ending in sight. I have been in an intense battle of attrition for eight years and must now regroup to make sure I can still win.
If you want to help me, you can do so via the links below. If you can help in other ways, please contact me via DM.
If you live in a country that still has free speech, never let them touch it, however noble they make the motives sound, because this is where it leads to.