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Say my name

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My pirate name is:
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Red Anne Bonney    </div>
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Passion is a big part of your life, which makes sense for a pirate. You can be a little bit unpredictable, but a pirate’s life is far from full of certainties, so that fits in pretty well.    Arr!
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wow tarot

This just complete caught my eye.
It is by johncoulthart http://www.johncoulthart.com/pantechnicon/tarot.html and there are Cafe press products.
http://www.cafepress.com/modernarcana
I really like the large wall poster, oh oh or better yet the calendar, oh and greetings cards and a note book.
I also like the use of semaphore, reminds me of when I was a lot younger and in girl guides and reading Swallows and Amazons forever.
I would be unsure how such a deck would work for divination purposes, it would be intresting; but then again when needs must we can read the wind.

Oh my Grove

http://www.rte.ie/tv/truelives/

“This Week

‘The Grove: More than a Feeling’ looks back at the 30 years of a northside Dublin institution – The Grove disco – which ran from 1967 to 1997.
Tuesday night RTE one 10:15pm

From its inception in Belgrove Football Club, through the fire which razed it to the ground and on to the ‘New Grove’ in St. Paul’s, Raheny; this disco was central to the lives of local teenagers for three decades.

‘The Grove: More than a feeling’ explores – through the retrospective accounts of the former teenagers who went there – the changes that took place over three decades, fuelled by a soundtrack of the music that shaped those memories.

The Grove was more than a disco; it was a rite of passage – a place that marked a point of maturity in the life of a teenager of the area; where many had their first kiss, found their first love or perhaps experienced their first heartbreak.

Told through the eyes of ‘Grovers’ from different generations, from those who attended the original Grove in Belgrove in the 60’s to those who frequented St. Paul’s in the 90’s. Some well known faces such as RTÉ 2 FM’s Marty Whelan, News presenter Eileen Dunne and comedian Brendan Bourke recall their personal experiences and describe why the Grove was so special to them. We also hear from a couple who met first met at the Grove and went on to marry and from other Grovers who candidly recall their memories of the famous disco, from the drinking beforehand to what happened when couples went to ‘the compound’ outside. But one man is acknowledged by all the Grovers as the unifying force- DJ, Cecil Nolan. Described as ‘our John Peel’, Cecil is revered and respected by all who went there for three decades.

While others were dancing to Abba or Bros, Cecil was introducing Northside teenagers to the likes of Leonard Cohen, Deep Purple and The Cure. This environment provided a place where teenagers could freely express themselves, whether it was as Cureheads, Goths, Mods or Rockers and has had a lasting influence on those who went there.

In this programme Cecil also recalls his memories of ‘The Grove’ from the vantage point of the DJ box and why his love of music drove him to preside over the disco for thrity years.”.

Oh this should make for intresting watching and a trip down memory lane.

Opps!

The Sunday Times September 03, 2006

Civil servant harassed for taking medicine to rock gig

Mark Tighe

A SENIOR civil servant and his fiancée have complained about MCD, the concert promoter, to the Equality Tribunal after the company’s security staff allegedly accused them of being drug dealers.Shane McCarrick, an executive officer in the Department of Agriculture, suffers from Crohn’s disease, a condition that requires him to take steroid tablets at three-hour intervals. His fiancée has type one diabetes and requires regular injections of insulin and carbohydrates in the form of fruit drinks.

 

The couple say that at the entrance to an REM concert in Balbriggan in June 2005, MCD security staff emptied McCarrick’s bag of drinks and medication on the ground and said the couple would be arrested for drug dealing.

“They said I was a dealer because my bag was full of prescription drugs,” said McCarrick. “They accused my fiancée of planning to inject drugs with her insulin needle. I’ve never before been harassed and embarrassed in front of other people like this.”

McCarrick said the security staff ignored the couple’s civil service identification cards and doctors’ letters that explained their need for medication. They were also unhappy at security staff removing the caps from their drinks — something done at concerts to prevent bottles being used as missiles. The couple were questioned for 30 minutes by security staff. MCD later arranged for them to attend a Coldplay concert by way of compensation for the inconvenience.

But McCarrick said security staff at the Coldplay concert in Marlay Park also asked them to wait in a medical tent to meet with an event controller.

“We didn’t know why she wanted to meet us, but we waited for over an hour before her assistant turned up,” said McCarrick. “She then asked us to detail what happened at the REM concert, but couldn’t hear us because we were so close to the stage. We ended up missing a large part of the show.”

MCD offered the couple six pairs of tickets to any show of their choosing after McCarrick threatened to bring a case for compensation to the small claims court. The civil servant no longer wants compensation but an admission that MCD mistreated him.

He decided to bring his case to the Equality Tribunal after being refused permission to talk about it on boards.ie, an internet forum. The website has banned all discussion of MCD events after the company sued it for hosting an alleged defamatory comment about security at the Oxegen festival in July.

Sophie Ridley, MCD’s event controller, said security staff stopped the couple because their “tablets and other substances” were not clearly identifiable. MCD was surprised the case had been put in the hands of lawyers, Ridley said, as the company believed the matter had been handled satisfactorily and “all proper procedures had been followed”.

Anna Clarke of the Diabetes Federation of Ireland says there is widespread discrimination against diabetics and people with serious medical conditions. “Security taking bottle caps from a diabetic person is simply discrimination,” she said. “It comes from a lack of awareness as to what diabetes is and that some diabetics need to carry carbohydrates at all times.

“A note from a doctor should always be enough to explain this.”

Missing someone

To dream the impossible dream
To fight the unbeatable foe
To bear with unbearable sorrow
And to run where the brave dare not go
To right the unrightable wrong
And to love pure and chaste from afar
To try when your arms are too weary
To reach the unreachable star

This is my quest
To follow that star
No matter how hopeless
No matter how far
To fight for the right
Without question or pause

To be willing to march,
march into hell
For that heavenly cause
And I know If I’ll only be true
To this glorious quest
That my heart
Will lie peaceful and calm
When I’m laid to my rest
And the world will be better for this

That one man, scorned
and covered with scars,
Still strove with his last ounce of courage
To reach the unreachable,
the unreachable,
The unreachable star

And I’ll always dream
The impossible dream
Yes, and I’ll reach
The unreachable star
_________________________________________________________________________________________________

This particular song remind me of someone who while they are quite distant to me they are still very dear to my heart and I miss them.
The sound of thier voice, thier laugh, thier footsteps as they used thier key to come in my door, thier shrug and easy smile.
My kids miss them too.
But they are off living thier life and pursuing thier dream and really as long as they are happy and true to themsleves then so what if others think they are tilting at windmills.
But the best you can want for the people that you love is that they are happy and I wish this for them with all my heart.

So what did happen at Oxegen 2006?

So what did happen at Oxegen 2006?

 
 

http://www.tribune.ie/article.tvt?_ticke

t=NB5YMKLAFS48ODQFIR0CDRSEAOWO96RGUU4HIOTAIPTGAQOCFGSGX2DPUNNAD0TE9LLCPHYFURTSNZMAAP6TDKLAEUVHTRRHVVU9ANWP43Y9CHVT0TZOHONDLHG09LLDP8RGUYWEIOTH9NTKHKLAIQRGUXWQHONGFMTEGMKACOUFURUQS982K&_scope=Tribune/Tribune%20Review/Arts&id=49429&SUBCAT=Tribune/Tribune%20Review

Article in the Sunday Tibune 20/08/2006
WHEN rain pelted down on tens of thousands of fans at the Oxegen Festival in Punchestown, Co Kildare on Saturday 8 July, the promoter MCD was worried that for the first time in its brief history, the two-day show . . . the country’s most popular music event . . . would be a wash-out. The festival had sold out of its 80,000 available tickets months before. According to gardai on site, 53,000 cars arrived on Friday, with 70,000 camping music fans keen to get the best spots in the campsite. But as water gushed down, the marquee tents in which stages had been located became so sodden that some revellers began to pack up and go home. Almost miraculously on Saturday night, however, the winds eased and the clouds lifted. Overnight, the mud dried.The next day, the atmosphere was as optimistic as the sky was bright.

But almost as soon as the festival wrapped up, stories of what really happened outside the main music area began to circulate.

Tents had been burned, according to some eyewitnesses. Rampaging gangs of youths had caused chaos.

Some campers said they had feared for their safety while at the festival. The promoters deny claims of rioting and looting.

Confusion still exists about where and when alleged incidents of violence took place in the sprawling campsite, which was divided up into two sections . . . A and B . . . and then further divided into numbered sections. Some attendees maintain that the burning of tents began as soon as Saturday night.

Following interviews with numerous attendees who camped at Oxegen and witnessed violence and the destruction of property, it can be concluded that the worst incidents took place late on Sunday night and early on Monday morning. MCD initially maintained that just two tents were set alight, and the fires were quickly extinguished by security officials.

Eyewitness evidence, as well as videos from the campsite posted on the video library website YouTube by people at the festival, suggest a different version of events.

Shortly after the festival, MCD made a post on the main page of the Oxegen website. “Superintendent Tom Neville, of Naas gardai”, it said, “stated ‘the crowd have been very well behaved and our traffic management plan has resulted in free-flowing traffic to and from the site over the course of the weekend. The pre-event planning meetings played a major role in the success of the event.

There have been a number of seizures for illegal substances.'” This statement is remarkably similar to another made by MCD following the Hi: Fi music festival in Mullingar two weeks ago, which was attended by 20,000 people.

“Superintendent Padraic Rattigan, of Mullingar garda siochana, stated, ‘The crowd have been very well behaved and our traffic management plan has resulted in freeflowing traffic to and from the site over the course of the weekend.

The planning meetings played a major role in the success of the event. As expected with a crowd of this number, there have been a number of seizures for illegal substances and a small number of public order arrests to date.'” Speaking to the Sunday Tribune, Superintendent Neville was slightly less positive about the success of Oxegen. At least two investigations are ongoing following incidents at the festival, he said. One common assault is being investigated along with a serious sexual assault. The superintendent would not confirm whether the sexual assault occurred in the campsite area. Other crimes at Oxegen included 386 drug seizures . . . mostly for personal use.

Around 50 people were arrested on site.

Last Friday, MCD released a statement entitled “The Facts”, with the lofty heading, “Can we eliminate all anti-social behaviour? Well, that is a greater social question” . . . an attempt at preempting a flurry of Oxegen news stories. In the statement, the company acknowledged that it would assist the gardai with the investigation into a sexual assault. It also revised its figure on the number of tents burned from two to 23.

Denis Desmond, managing director of MCD Productions, was quoted in the statement as saying, “With all major events, there are always a number of lessons to be learned. Anti-social behaviour cannot and will not be tolerated at any MCD event. We will continue to provide a high standard of care for our customers. And our security team along with the Garda will provide all the appropriate protections and those individuals found to have caused any unnecessary distress for other customers will be dealt with appropriately.”

The main criticisms of the campsite relate to a lack of visible security. MCD refused to respond to questions put by the Sunday Tribune regarding its security.

However, this newspaper understands that up to five security firms were employed by MCD to police the event, which was eventually attended by between 70,000 to 80,000 people. MCD told the Sunday Tribune that the gardai in charge of policing Oxegen received a list of each member of security staff and were able to conduct background checks on them. This assertion was refuted by a garda press officer: “We have no legal obligation to do that, ” she said, adding such a practice would be infringing on the rights of citizens.

Ronan Flynn from Cork stayed in campsite A (12) for the weekend. He claims that “many people arrived without tickets and walked in”, a claim reiterated by others the Sunday Tribune interviewed. By Sunday night, Flynn realised he was situated in an area where some of the worst violence was taking place, “In campsite A, between midnight on Sunday and 6am on Monday there were an average of six to eight fires burning at any given time. . . I was camped right at the edge of one of the main tent-burning groups, watched them throw cans, knock fences and pull down the security tower, having bottled the staff until they deserted it, then tied ropes to it and tipped it over. . . On Monday morning, the security finally started making a proper presence in our campsite, but only in kicking everyone in our campsite area out at 6am. We had been packed up since 5am and our neighbours had already left; none of us felt safe.”

From similar accounts, it appears security initially made attempts to extinguish fires in the area, but gave up late on Sunday night, only to return between 5am and 6am on Monday morning to eject people from their tents.

Privately, MCD denies that people walked into the festival unchecked by security, but those who attended the event say otherwise. Peter Reilly from Dublin told the Sunday Tribune he still has the ticket he bought for the festival for the simple reason that security didn’t ask for it.

“I nor my friend I was going with were asked for tickets, or searched. In fact, I didn’t even notice any security guards. We just walked straight through without question. I still have my ticket untouched in the envelope I brought it to Oxegen in. After the gig finished up on Saturday night I went home, but I know a few people who walked straight into the campsite without being asked for wristbands or tickets or anything, who then stayed for the Sunday too, with only a one-day ticket.

This puts some perspective on the actual campsite trouble in my opinion. If literally anyone who wanted to get in could just stroll through and into the campsite, then you have to wonder how on earth they were expecting the event to be trouble-free.”

Five days after the festival, the message board on Oxegen’s official website . . . the forum of a heated discussion of events in the campsite . . . was shut down. MCD maintains that the message board was due to shut down at that time, and reopen when tickets go on sale for 2007’s festival this November, but the move was interpreted by users as an attempt at censorship.

Outraged, many transferred their arguments to other message boards, namely Ireland’s largest, Boards. ie. A post on its message board, which referred to an article written about the festival in the Irish Independent, prompted MCD to send a letter from its solicitors Arthur Cox, to Boards. ie seeking its removal. Boards. ie chief Dr John Breslin told the Sunday Tribune: “At the time, feelings were quite high and we felt it would be safer to remove any discussion relating to MCD.”

The first solicitor’s letter he received notified him of the correspondence MCD was having with the Irish Independent regarding criticisms of Oxegen. The second demanded an apology. It’s an apology Breslin has yet to give. Breslin said he was confused as to why MCD decided to send a letter from its solicitor, rather than simply contact the website directly to remove the offensive post, something, he says, he would have happily done. When contacted a second time, Breslin said he “couldn’t say anything” about the current legal situation, although a post on the Boards. ie website again warned users not to discuss MCD: “As of Friday, 11 August 2006, MCD Productions has entered into legal proceedings against Boards. ie Ltd. At this time we cannot make, or allow, comment on an ongoing legal action against Boards. ie.”

When Boards. ie posted the initial notice on its site saying any discussion relating to MCD, any of its festivals or related bands would be removed, ire directed towards the company increased amongst music fans. Many believed it was simply censoring discussions and criticisms of the festival. “MCD has said it has no interest in censoring our discussion of anything it is involved in apart from discussions of the negative rumours regarding the Oxegen festival”, the notice said.

“Unfortunately, as the administrators of Boards. ie, we cannot guarantee that discussions involving MCD in any way will not prompt a user to post something regarding the negative rumours. As our moderators are not full-time, paid staff members, we cannot guarantee that we can catch such references immediately to delete them.

Subsequently, we feel it is more sensible to veto all discussion of MCD and related bands, events, venues, dates, festivals, concert dates, ticket sales, competitions and promotions, lest MCD be defamed during these discussions, ” the post read at the time.

Many people contacted and interviewed for this article refused to go on the record.

Amongst some in the media, there is a reluctance to criticise the organisation, as many believe that such action isn’t worth the hassle that inevitably follows. Given that MCD is by far the biggest music promoter in the country, one can understand such reluctance.

But such obedience is now changing. Music fans were outraged at how MCD handled the post-Oxegen backlash. Instead of acknowledging there were problems in the campsite, MCD initially went on the defensive, rubbishing claims of violence and damage to property and threatening those who repeated them with legal action. At least one national newspaper was sent solicitors’ letters from MCD’s legal representatives after it became clear that it would be reporting on allegations from those who camped at the festival. How welcoming MCD will be of online criticism when the official Oxegen message board reopens remains to be seen. Elsewhere online, ex-Oxegen messageboard members have moved to a rival festival’s message board . . .

Electric Picnic . . . while other forums have been set up.

“We must warn you that in the event that an article critical of the event is published, we will take whatever action is necessary to prevent damage to the Oxegen event or MCD Productions, ” was the response from Justin Green, publicity and marketing director for the company, and the man at the front line of MCD’s inhouse PR machine, when the Irish Independent reported on the Oxegen festival, although no legal proceedings have been brought to date. Music journalist Jim Carroll mentioned the trouble at and after Oxegen in his Irish Times column and called it “the story which refuses to go away”.

MCD refused to accept allegations made to the Sunday Tribune from people who were at the festival as truth. It asked for the contact details of those interviewed for this article to be forwarded to them. “MCD takes all complaints very seriously and fully investigates all such matters. Accordingly, we would kindly request that you forward contact details of the complainants, to enable us carry out such an investigation, ” it said.

Following a further request from MCD, the Sunday Tribune contacted all those interviewed and gave them the opportunity to contact MCD about their Oxegen experiences.

Campsite B was not without incidents of violence too, according to those who pitched there.

Brian Kavanagh from Co Meath stayed in campsite B and witnessed “tents being emptied of all the bags, and then thrown up into the air so the tent flies through the campsite. I also didn’t really see any security guards in our campsite for the duration of the festival.” Joe Heron, who stayed in campsite B11, said: “Security in the arena all seemed more professional and better clued in than in previous years. But security and garda presence in the campsite was negligible.”

The majority of those interviewed said the Oxegen campsite had been on a “downward spiral” over the past few years, and that this year was a manifestation of a more drunken, boisterous crowd that had been let away with much during past festivals. Most punters praised MCD for better toilet facilities, better food and other new elements that have been adopted from Pod Promotions’ Electric Picnic festival in Co Laois . . . namely a cinema and ‘silent disco’. Of course, part of the problem lies in personal responsibility.

You can’t blame MCD for people getting drunk and causing trouble, but concertgoers who spoke to the Sunday Tribune insisted that Denis Desmond’s promotion company has a duty to maintain the safety of those who wish to enjoy themselves without the threat of violence or injury. “Why were the gardai not brought in?” Ronan Flynn asked of the violence in campsite A12. “Oxegen is a good event, ” maintains Joe Heron who camped in B11, “but security is a key feature in any such large gathering. The gardai and MCD need to get this sorted. Otherwise it will either die off, or worse still, people will get really badly hurt.”

‘I have done the State some service, and they know it, no more of that.’

‘I have done the State some service, and they know it, no more of that.’
– Charlie Haughey quoting from ‘Othello’ in his resignation speech to the Dáil in 1992

Charles Haughey (Irish name Cathal Ó hEochaidh; 16 September 1925 – 13 June 2006)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Haughey
http://www.rte.ie/news/ob_cjhaughey.html

Right well thats that then. End of a era as it were.
There will be so many many questions never answered.
Will the tribunals even continue ?

The next while shall certainly be intresting will there be revelations ?
or will it be a case of speak not ill of the dead.

As a historical figure and as a plolitian and a statesman he will always loom large.
Hopefully his passing will make younger people look back and learn how things were and gain a grasp of history.
There are many many everyday thing that are commonplace and take for granted that he had sway over
from the ifsc to the warnings on cigarette packs to the free travel passes for pensioners.

Statesman and a rogue and in many ways reprehensible but I do think that we would have been worse with out him in the long view.
How history treats him will be intresting.

Soft you; a word or two before you go.
I have done the state some service, and they know’t.
No more of that. I pray you, in your letters,
When you shall these unlucky deeds relate,
Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate,
Nor set down aught in malice: then must you speak
Of one that loved not wisely but too well;”
Othello | Act 5, Scene 2 ”

Even with choosing this quote for one of his last while addressing the Dail he was a clever bastard.

Rock paper scissors.

Judge Rules Dispute to Be Settled By ‘Rock, Paper, Scissors’ Match

http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=2050910

June 7, 2006 — A federal judge ordered two attorneys to settle their dispute by using the children’s playground game “rock, paper, scissors.”

The ruling yesterday by Judge Gregory Presnell of the U.S. District Court in Orlando, Fla., stated that he was so dissatisfied
with the case’s “latest in a series of Gordian knots” that he is fashioning “a new form of alternative dispute resolution.”

Seems like a simple kid’s game doesn’t it?

But any sort of game has its strategies (wow sorry personal moment I spelt that right first time huzzah) and with

Rock paper scissors being played for the most part best out of 3 then you are into the complexities of what will work and reading you opponent. There are a hell of a lot more pieces in chess and more strategies and gambits but end of the day it is about getting inside your opponents head and how they think and watching their reactions and reading them.

The same can be said about poker, once you have mastered the game and the probabilities and possibilities then all the is left is the person opposite you. And in learning to read other people you learn a lot about yourself.

http://www.worldrps.com/advanced.html