I am writing this on the 26thof June; an auspicious date in Irish history. It was on the 26th of June in 1963 that John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States of America touched down in Dublin Airport to begin his four day visit to Ireland. It was also on the 26th of June (1996) that journalist Veronica Guerin was murdered on the Naas Road. A less well known event occurred on the 26th of June 1920 when my maternal grandfather, George Power was involved in the kidnap of a British General who was fishing on the banks of the River Blackwater just outside Fermoy in North Cork.
All of these events are playing on my mind as I attempt to formulate my thoughts on the revelations contained in the Anglo Tapes which were made public by the Irish Independent last week. Let me begin by saying that I am angry…. again.
Over the last five years there have been many times I have been angry. I have watched from my corner of suburbia, without the benefit of a university degree or even much understanding of economics, as this country was brought to her knees and I was angry. I watched as the previous Government stumbled along through their last days as if punch drunk from the events that seemed to be overwhelming them and I was angry.
Each so called ‘austerity budget’ since has renewed my anger as I witness some of the most vulnerable in our society being stripped of allowances to which they are entitled and which they need in order to live. I have been angry at how women seem to have borne an unfair portion of this austerity through cuts to carer’s allowance, child benefit, lone parent allowance, tax on maternity benefit etc.
Almost five years of anger and this week I am angry all over again. I have spoken to my neighbours, my friends and colleagues and without exception all are furious. All found listening to the cavalier conversations of some very well paid senior bankers in Anglo Irish Bank as they discussed pulling a master stroke on our Government to be truly nauseating.
The truth is that they pulled a master stroke on US, the people of this country. What kind of schools, I wonder, produce this type of caricature of a man – overly macho, arrogant, insensitives who seem to be so removed (or perhaps insulated) from the effects of their irresponsible banking practices. Their supercilious, self important guffawing turned my stomach.
As I wrestled to make sense of how Ireland has come to this point in her history I thought of my grandfather, George Power and the ordinary men and women who almost a century ago managed to secure freedom from what was then probably the most powerful empire on earth. I think of their bravery, of the risks they took in the years leading up to 1922.
I think of the women who ran messages, who operated as undercover agents within the British administration securing vital information for Collins, I think of the people of towns such as Fermoy who were subjected to looting and rioting by British Troops in retaliation for IRA activity. I think of the families who risked their lives by providing safe houses for men on the run and of how they hid and smuggled arms to keep the push for freedom going forward.
Last week has also brought the visit of JFK to Ireland in 1963 back into focus with the 50thanniversary celebrations last weekend in New Ross. President Kennedy made a wonderful speech when he addressed the joint houses of the Oireachtas. In it he referenced George Bernard Shaw when he said
“It is that quality of the Irish, the remarkable combination of hope, confidence and imagination that is needed more than ever today. The problems of the world cannot possibly be solved by sceptics or cynics whose horizons are limited by the obvious realities. We need men who can dream of things that never were and ask, why not?”
“It is that quality of the Irish, the remarkable combination of hope, confidence and imagination that is needed more than ever today. The problems of the world cannot possibly be solved by sceptics or cynics whose horizons are limited by the obvious realities. We need men who can dream of things that never were and ask, why not?”
These words are only 50 years old but where the hell is that combination of hope, confidence and imagination now? Where are these men and women who can dream of things that never were and ask, why not? The men and women who were to the forefront of Ireland’s fight for independence were certainly capable of dreaming of things that never were and must have seemed impossible. They were surely very antithesis to the lily livered bankers we are hearing on the Anglo tapes.
So how has Ireland gone from a being a nation of courage, imagination and action to a passive place where a cohort of greedy immoral bankers can break us and suffer very little consequences for doing so? And more importantly why has the anger I sense in the community not translated into action?
Just 17 years ago this country got very angry at the murder in broad daylight of journalist Veronica Guerin. We got angry and we let the heat of that anger be felt by Government. Within days action had been taken to seize assets of the criminals and the breaking of criminal gangs began in earnest. Arrests were made and the search for Veronica’s killers was relentless.
Veronica Guerin, President Kennedy and George Power and his comrades all knew that (to quote Kennedy again) “problems… cannot be solved by sceptics or cynics of those whose horizons are limited by the obvious realities.”
It is beyond time for clear and imaginative leadership. I am very unconvinced that such is possible in the current government but the very least we, the people of Ireland, can do is to make our anger felt. We owe it to ourselves and more importantly to our children to insist that action is taken now to prosecute those who gambled our entire country. I am not sure of how this can best be achieved, no more than those who protested Ms Guerin’s murder dreamed of the Criminal Assets Bureau .. but that is what we elect and pay our TDs for. It is our job to ensure it happens.
As it has before, Barbara, your anger gives me a great deal of hope, as odd as that sounds. Your anger is not blind; on the contrary, it is well considered and clearly explained. I am grateful to know that there are people like you in Ireland, and I believe that by expressing your anger as you do, you are contributing to solving the problems you highlight. Thank you.
Good woman, Barbara. As you rightly say, it is the most vulnerable in our society that have suffered most as a result of the actions of these irresponsible so-called professional bankers.
Why are the media only asking now about the bank guarentee?
Why did it take tapes to be delivered to a crime journalist?
Why didn't the media go after the tapes themselves?
There is too much commentary in the newspapers not enough investigations.
Also the middle class need to get out & march & stop leaving it to the primarily working class who protested the household & property tax.
Irish media has gone like America constantly just refering to the middle class.
The middle class are only ones who though can truly make a difference but heaven forbid they march like those from the property tax. If they do though the Irish Times might wake up to the anger in Ireland.
The media plays a huge role in why so many of us feel hopeless.