13 Comments
author

It was Maha Shivaratri yesterday too. Which is a festival affirming the sacred union between men and women in the aspects of Shiva and Parvati, and their children are Ganesh: the remover of seemingly impossible obstcles, and Kartikeya: the god of rightous war to defend family and home.

Could not have been a more fitting IndoEuropean date for defeating the attack on motherhood within the IndoEuropean Celtic world.

Yesterday was an sacred date for Hindus affirming family and motherhood and the Vedic gods bitchslapped Varadkar who himself was born a Hindu and who lives to profane his own (and our) gods.

Expand full comment
Mar 9Liked by Thomas Sheridan

And imagine there is no direct translation for 'No' or even 'Yes' in the Irish Language...actions speak louder than words for the Irish 🇮🇪

Expand full comment
Mar 9Liked by Thomas Sheridan

Toddlers while learning to speak and establishing their personhood go around saying NO! quite a lot. It is a fundamental word. I have always seen NO! as the most affirmative word.

Thomas, I am glad your hospital visit worked out well for you. We need you around, man.

Expand full comment

Love it!

Expand full comment
Mar 9Liked by Thomas Sheridan

Pleased you had good news at the hospital. ❤️

No is courage in action.

Bloody saucepan bangers didn't say no, virtue signalling the rest of us on our street stupid idiots.

Expand full comment
Mar 10Liked by Thomas Sheridan

All day when it became apparent all I wanted to do was hear Christian Morris' voice and verdict. He didn't disappoint last night.

John Waters analysis is eagerly awaited. 10 years after they came for his livelihood the fight back is on to save the soul of the country he loves!

Expand full comment
Mar 9Liked by Thomas Sheridan

Great stuff!

Expand full comment
Mar 10Liked by Thomas Sheridan

i can't stop laughing lol lol lol . the F'd Around and Found Out !!!

Expand full comment

Thomas I'm glad you had good news down the hospital. The description you gave of the hospital is virtually every hospital in Ireland. And it has been this way for at least 20 years as there are too many Irish sick people, people taking up beds with no where to go to. So accommodation crisis takes a chunk out of hospital capacity/beds. I try to stay completely away from hospital because I don't particularly like being around sick people. If I am there and waiting (i.e. with my son in December suspect appendicitis ) I will always get stuck beside a person who will tell me their illness life history. We all get sick for one reason or another be it an accident or an inherited disease but it is a private matter. Why complain, even in a hospital. The staff are usually overrun, long queues. The secret is to get in and out as fast as you can.There are some people who have made a career out of hospital appointments and illnesses. My sister who was genuinely sick was stuck with such an aul one beside her in a shared hospital room. Anyway, your prognosis was good, your complaint possibly from a fall, you may have mentioned is on the mend. Good stuff

Expand full comment

I'm happy for this victory for the Irish people. We have a lot of Irish descendants here in Connecticut spread out all over the place. In the capitol, Hartford, there used to be a great Saint Paddies Day parade but that was ruined by the democrats who made it an African-Jamaican festival along with an Irish American event. The day would turn into a mess of fighting, stealing, rioting and chimp-outs so myself and many others refuse to participate in it.

Expand full comment