T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1073.1 | An addendum .... | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Mon Jun 15 1992 07:18 | 12 |
|
Just to comment on my own note, the major concern is that the
8th Amendment (called the "pro-life amendment") locks the
Catholic Ethos into ALL hospitals rules.
As the judges who interpret the amendment are all Catholic and
subscribe to its teachings, this has fast become a reality.
Notice how the counselling centres in Ireland were closed down.
The only dissenting voice came from a woman, Miss Justice
Mella Carroll of the High Court.
Toby
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1073.2 | | CLADA::DODONNELL | Denis | Mon Jun 15 1992 10:26 | 6 |
|
These "pro-life" twits make me sick. When are they going to take their
morality out of my face? Why do they feel the need to have everybody
live by their own standards of morality. I haven't fully read into
the Maastricht Treaty issues but the fact that the "pro-life" lobby
are voting against it, is good enough reason for me to vote yes.
|
1073.3 | Keep religion private | BONKIN::BOYLE | Clich�s - Avoid them like the plague | Mon Jun 15 1992 20:33 | 9 |
| Thanks Toby. It's yet another example of the unhealthy relationship
between the catholic church and the government. I have always
maintained that the church has far too much power in Ireland, this
story is further proof.
Personally I would like to see the church banned. They are more
sinister and dangerous than the Moonies.
Tony.
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1073.4 | Masterminds of the Right | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Tue Jun 16 1992 05:21 | 56 |
|
"Masterminds of the Right" should be required reading for all
who are interested in this topic. Be warned - it is unashamedly
partisan, but I have not heard it refuted yet.
It tells how a group of middle-aged, Catholic, conservative
men set out to prevent liberal changes in the Republic's
constitution and laws relating to reproduction - and
succeeded. These men were all members of Catholic lay
organisations like the Knights of Columbanus or Opus
Dei, but operated through a collection of groups like
SPUC, PLAC, Family Solidarity .... etc.
These men were not rednecks - they are engineers, doctors
lawyers, professors ..... highly educated and influential.
Along the way they have had the support of some women, but
predominantly this group is male. Sadly, all too often
token women are pushed to the fore as spokespersons.
Emily O'Reilly gives a frightening picture of these men's
vision of Ireland:
No access to artificial birth control counselling
No supply of condoms, IUDs, some contraceptive pills,
diaphragms, or spermacides
"Natural" birth control only
Censorship of books, films and videos
No access to health books promoting conraception
No funding for Rape Crisis Centres (they promote
a "contraceptive mentality")
No women's Health Clinics (same reason)
No abortion for Rape Victims
No sex education in schools
No divorce
Active prosecution of homosexuals
Abortion is of course to be absolutely prohibited - but
if you can afford the fare, just hop over to Liverpool or
London.
Read this list and you can see that a frightening large part
of the agenda has been carried out, or has almost been
carried out. For example, Dublin's Rape Crisis Centre came
within days of shutting down last year for lack of government
funding. The government has postponed several times legislation on
legalising homosexual acts in private (as we are bound to do
be European law), laws to liberalise availability to condoms,
a White Paper on Divorce ..... the list goes on....
The irony is that the government hopes within weeks to sit
down with Protestant Unionists and discuss a New Ireland
..... meanwhile there exists blatant proof that "Home
Rule means Rome Rule".
Toby
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1073.5 | Economics is probably the prime motivator. | MACNAS::JDOOLEY | Do not take anything for granted | Tue Jun 16 1992 06:34 | 25 |
| It is plain that these people want a return to the bad old days of
large working class families and the poverty and exploitation it
entails. If one is to imagine the free availability of contraceptives
in Ireland, along with the necessary information to use them, one can
see that the pool of available cheap labour will eventually dry up as
families become smaller and the working class have less children.
Smaller families implies that each family can spare more money for
education and advancement and, so , their offspring will come into
competition for the higher professional jobs.
This terrifies the professional and upper classes.
While the far right reaction to family planning may, on the surface,
appear to be motivated by religious beliefs, I have the distinct
impression that it has more to do with economics than religion and with
maintaining a pool of cheap, ready, willing ,uneducated and docile labour
for the upper classes.
Of course the biggest victims in all this would be the women who would
end up looking after all the extra children that restrictions on
contraceptives would inevitably create. Of course, the rich ( mostly
male ) will only think of all that lovely cheap labour in 20 years
time, ripe for the picking.....
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1073.6 | The Patriarchy | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Tue Jun 16 1992 07:37 | 16 |
|
John, while we are on the same side, I do not agree that economics
are at the basis of the action of this group. I think they are
agents of a male patriarchal vision of the world which demands
that women's fertility be rigidly controlled. It is women's access
to contraception and abortion that had led to freedom of choice
for women in how they run their lives. If this access is
controlled, then women can be controlled also.
The Catholic Church is the most vocal agent of this patriarchy,
and these men's stance can be shown to be congruent with Catholic
doctrine. They also provide a stalking horse for the Catholic bishops,
who can sound plausible and agreeable while letting Opus Dei and Co.
do the dirty work.
Toby
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1073.7 | | CLADA::DODONNELL | Denis | Tue Jun 16 1992 07:45 | 4 |
|
Well I dont know if I believe there is any other motive other than to
create a catholic state for a catholic people. Perhaps there are economic
reasons. But whatever the motives, it certainly is frightening.
|
1073.8 | | NEWOA::OREILLY | | Tue Jun 16 1992 09:04 | 8 |
|
Tony,
You wouldn't happen to know what part of the country Emily O'Reilly
lives?
Rgds
Neil
|
1073.9 | | BONKIN::BOYLE | Clich�s - Avoid them like the plague | Tue Jun 16 1992 21:07 | 38 |
| re. .8
>Tony,
>
>You wouldn't happen to know what part of the country Emily O'Reilly
>lives?
Sorry mate but I never heard of her until I read about this book last
Sunday. The article didn't mention her address.
There was an article in the Australian newspapers last week about a
'Secret Organisation' which has worked deviously against abortion,
divorce and contraception in Ireland. It mentions John O'Reilly (no
relation) who has been outed by this book 'Masterminds of the Right'.
The article takes up almost a page and quotes a few examples from the
book. Mr. O' Reilly is connected with that sinister organisation, "The
Knights of St. Columbus". I've heard of these before but don't know too
much. Can anyone post some more information?
The article has prompted the usual questions from my Australian
workmates :
"WHAT ! Not allowed a divorce in Ireland ?"
"WHAT ! No abortions or even information about abortions allowed"
"WHAT ! You can't even buy condoms off a supermarket shelf?"
If these things are freely available to men and women in the rest of
the world why aren't they available in Ireland ? It doesn't make sense.
Tony.
P.S. Are soft-porn mags like Playboy/Penthouse freely available in
newsagents in Ireland yet or have the govt./church decided that Irish
people shouldn't read these either.
|
1073.10 | It the hole in the sky that does it | SIOG::FARRELL | | Wed Jun 17 1992 07:13 | 23 |
| Tony,
Having lived in Oz for 4 years, I know how the sun can get at you but
putting soft porn after such serious matters as
abortion/divorce/contraception may help explain why these zealous right
wing religous groups can still scare "the plain people of Ireland" :-)
I presume you heard the case of the 14 year old girl who was prevented
from travelling to the UK for an abortion. She had been raped and was
going to the UK with her parents. Do we have a note on this. I have
been out of this file for a while.
I can only hope that common sense takes hold of enough people and we
can start to sort out these groups. It appears that this refusal of
treatment for cancer where the woman is pregnant may be more common than we
think.
Also, anyone over Galway way hear about this priest inviting some
doctor on to the pulpit to encourage a NO vote for Maastricht ?
- Joe
P.S. if we do vote no on Thurs, send me the open jobs posting ;-)
|
1073.11 | "x" case and other matters ... | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Wed Jun 17 1992 09:58 | 20 |
|
Re".6
I "mis-spoke" in this note, because this group is pushing
for women to be subject to their UNcontrolled fertility,
not the other way round. As long as women cannot control
their own fertility, they can be kept subject to men.
As an update, the long awaited X case seems to coming towards
court - guards went to interview the supposed abuser last
week, but found he was away travelling. Rumour has it the
genetic evidence is not favourable to him ....
On Sunday"s paper, it was reported that the pro-lifers are
doing their utmost to smear X: the story they are spreading
on the doorsteps is that she was ahving an affair with an
Iraqi. Apparently, the fact that she was under 16, and any
sexual affair would be statutory rape - that is not relevant!
Toby
|
1073.12 | read any good books lately ?? | BONKIN::BOYLE | Clich�s - Avoid them like the plague | Thu Jun 18 1992 01:55 | 26 |
| re.<<< Note 1073.10 by SIOG::FARRELL >>>
> Having lived in Oz for 4 years, I know how the sun can get at you but
> putting soft porn after such serious matters as
> abortion/divorce/contraception may help explain why these zealous right
> wing religous groups can still scare "the plain people of Ireland" :-)
It was a half serious question Joe. I wonder why these rags/mags are
not available. They are readily available to the rest of the western
world so why not in Ireland (not that any of us would actually read
them (just look at the pictures..)).
Can anyone answer the question ?
By the way, are you the same Joe Farrell who worked for Digital in OZ.
On the east coast first and then in Perth. I was asked if I knew you
when I first started here and I was then expected to live up to your
drinking prowess simply because I was Irish. Needless to say I didn't
let the country down.
Your name is still held in high esteem among the drinking-class
Australian digits.
Tony.
|
1073.13 | Does he mean magazines? | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Jun 18 1992 05:31 | 15 |
|
Re: Soft Porn and Abortion
I really don't understand the question. Is this referring to
magazines like "Cosmopolitan" which carries ads for abortion
clinics? Most of these magazines now have Irish editions
in which these ads are removed.
Recently I looked through "In Dublin" magazine, and was quite
surprised to find a page of ads for massage parlours, escort
agencies and sex "chat lines" (located in Ireland). I can't
see how these ads can be carried yet an ad for a clinic/
counselling service is banned. Where's the logic in that?
Toby
|
1073.14 | The Catholic Church and the Irish State | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Jun 18 1992 05:51 | 54 |
|
The position of the Catholic Church in Ireland is not an easy
one, but will have to be faced if we are serious about a
"United Ireland".
In the Republic, over 80% of people regard themselves as Catholic,
and of those over 90% are regular massgoers. The ROI is probably
the most culturally uniform country in the world - there exists
no significant religious, linguistic or culturally minority.
This has undoubtedly contributed to the stability of the
State - it is one of the few European countries (apart from
Scandanavia, Benelux and the U.K.) not to have had a fascist
or communist takeover since 1921.
The fact that the Catholic Church has supported the State
since 1921 has been a major factor. In return the Church has
had enormous concessions from the State - even before the
1921 Treaty, William T. Cosgrave had proposed that all
legislation be submitted to a panel of Bishops to ensure
it did not conflict with Chruch doctrine. The Church
controlled morals, education, and medical facilities -
indeed for generations it provided schools and hospitals
when a parsimonious state could not.
De Valera was not much of an advance on Cosgrave, though
he successfully resisted pressure to establish a clerical
state. However, the preamble to the Irish Constitution
unmistakably marks it out as a Catholic document. Article
44 gave the Church a "special position", though this was
later removed.
While the Church has abandoned the appearances of power
there is not doubt that today its influence is more
shadowy and elusive, and therefore much harder to combat.
The activities of the "Masterminds of the Right" is a
case in point.
I don't think the Catholic Church is all bad - its courageous
stand against the IRA and British Army violence in Northern
Ireland is greatly to its credit. Many priests, nuns and
bishops have stopped trying to police the bedrooms of
Ireland, and are concentrating on help for the poor and
powerless. The church has problems - vocations are dropping
year on year, and (more importantly) the intellectual quality
of recruits is less than in former times. Gone are the
days when the only advancement for the son of a poor family
was through the Church.
However, there is still a strong element in the Church that will
not lightly abandon the power it held in the past. And it is
this element which must be resisted. Its power cannot be
underestimated - just read the base note.
Toby
|
1073.15 | Greetings from up over | SIOG::FARRELL | | Thu Jun 18 1992 06:47 | 28 |
| Tony,
One and the same. I'll send you a mail and catch up with OZ goings on.
By the way, the symbol :-) was to show you I was not serious in my
reply. Anyway, Why dont we have such mags ?
Catholic morals again, I suppose. Such weighty matters pale into
insignificance with trying to figure out how England thought they could
do well in the European Championships in the first place.
Just in case the results are in anywhere else,
Sweden 2, England 1
Denmark 2, France.
Sweden an Denmark to through although Sweden will have 2 very good
players suspended.
The old joke (for which I will voluntarily take a yellow card) goes.
Whats the first thing that will be said to Graham Taylor after the
match (this you tell just before the kick off, you understand)
Smoking or non-smoking, Sir.
- Joe
|
1073.16 | The same Reprobate | DBOSW2::BRENNAN_M | Festina Lente | Thu Jun 18 1992 06:50 | 12 |
|
Tony,
I fear you are correct. It is the same reprobate. We must have been out of our
minde here in the Dublin office to let him in here.
And it wasnt because we didnt know him. He was after all well known to the
drinking classes before he went ot Oz. We really shot ourselves in the foot
there. However to keep him occupied we have since hired another Joe. They are
referred to as the terrible twins
MBr
|
1073.17 | Careful, he's awake today | SIOG::FARRELL | | Thu Jun 18 1992 06:55 | 8 |
| Good J*,
MBr is awake today. I fear for the safety of the office. He is becoming
delirious lately. He keeps trying to learn the Greek alphabet by
reciting it but he cant get past the first letter.
At least we wont make the mistake of letting MBr down to the antipodes.
What a sight that would be.
|
1073.18 | Greater intellectual quality, rather than less | MACNAS::PCURLEY | | Thu Jun 18 1992 13:18 | 26 |
| re .14
>>The church has problems - vocations are dropping year on year,
>>and (more importantly) the intellectual quality of recruits is less
>>than in former times.
Toby,
I can't believe you mean what you say. I have some friends (one I would
consider a good friend) who are priests. They would, I believe,
represent the average intellect of people currently joining, or those who
had joined the prieshood in the past ten years. They most certainly do not
have inferior intellects to their predecessors. Rather the opposite. Some
have more advanced and more liberal views than many outspoken critics of the
Church and it's current policies.
>>Gone are the days when the only advancement for the son of a poor family
>>was through the Church.
Sad though the above is, it was true. But doesn't this contradict your top
statement. And I don't for one minute wish to offend anyone who can relate
to the problem experienced by our less well families.
The people who are entering the prieshood now do so because that's what they
want to do. It is not seen as a means of "getting on", but rather one where
those people beleve they can make a difference.
Rgds...Paddy.
|
1073.19 | Take a red card for the crappy joke | BONKIN::BOYLE | Clich�s - Avoid them like the plague | Fri Jun 19 1992 07:58 | 19 |
| re. <<< Note 1073.15 by SIOG::FARRELL >>>
> -< Greetings from up over >-
???? Up & over who ?
> Catholic morals again, I suppose. Such weighty matters pale into
> insignificance with trying to figure out how England thought they could
> do well in the European Championships in the first place.
How could they ? There's not a decent catholic amongst them. Besides,
they were probably too tired out from reading those magazines we spoke
about earlier to play football.
:-)
Tony (relaxing on a Friday note with a large VB - remember them Joe?)
|
1073.20 | Female Sterilisation/ Condoms Bill | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Jul 02 1992 04:48 | 30 |
|
Two Irish "non-denominational" hospitals have announced changes to
their ethics rules dealing with female sterilization. Now, cases
will not be referred to the Ethics committee, but will be vetted
by the Hospital chief to ensure decisions about sterilisation are
within the ethical guidelines.
This is a step, but it still takes away from the woman the power
over her own body that is guaranteed by the constitution. It
should be HER decision only, in consultation with her doctor.
It can only be a short time before this is challenged in the
courts under the right to privacy.
The government has also published its Family Planning Bill.
Though condoms are to be more freely available, vending
machines sale will still be banned. Can you picture it?
Late night in a disco bar. Last drinks are called.
"Two pints of Guinness, two packets of crisps and a packet of
Featherlites". Give us a break, Mr Minister! Maybe we'll
have a code: If you say "Give me a six-pack" and wink,
you'll get a packet of Durex.
After reading Garth McComb in 1071.2, how can we in the
South continue to talk about "pluralism" and pass archaic
legislation like this? But it was probably the most that
the Mnister for Health could get out his party. Yet this is
the 3rd Family Planning Bill we have had in 13 years!
I guess it won't be the last.
Toby
|
1073.21 | Always Be Prepared | BONKIN::BOYLE | | Thu Jul 02 1992 07:55 | 31 |
| re.-1
>the 3rd Family Planning Bill we have had in 13 years!
It's a joke, governments legislating peoples' sex lives.
The basic problem in this issue is the title of the bill, "The
*family* planning Bill". Availability of condoms has got nothing at all
to do with planning families. It is based around the problem of married
catholic couples wanting to have sex without becoming pregnant,
something objected to by the church. The government (and therefore the
bill) does not seem to take into account the example raised by Toby of
the bloke out at a disco/pub, meets a nice girl and they want to have
sex to round off a nice evening :-) Nothing unusual there, <lie_on>
I've done it myself, thousands of times <lie_off>. There isn't much
scope there for family 'planning'. They want to have sex together so
they need to get some protection and it's 2am and there's no condom
machine in the disco/pub.
What's the government's solution ? (yea, yea, yea, I know. You should
always carry a few in your wallet). Go to the 24hr Chemist ??
So what happens to the couple ? She gets pregnant, he gets the
clap and they all live unhappily apart....
N.B. There is no moral to this story, I just wanted to get it off my
chest :-)))))))
|
1073.22 | Yet more | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Jul 09 1992 06:57 | 14 |
|
Tony,
We can absolutely agree on something at last!
To add fury to frustration, there is no change in the 1979 act
which recognises ONLY the "natural birth control method" as
suitable for grants from the state for research
or training!
The fact that this method is the only one recognised by the
Catholic Church is probably a coincidence, I don't think!
Toby
|