Month: March 2023

Multipolarity and France’s Collapsing African Empire

Françafrique: Empire Denied To the untrained eye, a recent wave of coups in tinpot African states has precious little relevance for European politics. However, the ousting of France from swathes of West Africa by Russian-backed juntas portends one of the...

/ 15/03/2023

Rats in the SU: An Examination of NCAD’s Regular Rodents

A new development in NCAD’s ongoing struggle with campus hygiene has emerged in recent weeks, as Luje and Saorla from the SU have released a series of angry videos over NCAD’s pink room’s latest rat problem.  The pink room is...

/ 14/03/2023

Mary Kenny and Ireland’s Blossoming Cancel Culture

The news broke earlier this month that Mary Kenny was successfully no-platformed by trans activists angered at her being booked to speak at the University of Limerick. Kenny was due to give a talk on the topic “The Media and...

/ 13/03/2023
people gathering on street

Irish Government Proposes Transgender Education in Primary Schools

Government ministers, including the Tanaiste and Taoiseach,  have voiced their intent to introduce a transgender education programme into primary schools. The predatory nature of such an ‘educational’ programme is lost amongst government leaders, who in the far-left ideological bubble of...

/ 11/03/2023

Has Migration Pushed Sinn Féin to the Centre?  

Traditionally Sinn Féin have been able to rely on a solid core of the working-class vote. For example, leading up to the Sinn Féin surge in the 2016 election, support was rising for the party among the working class and...

/ 07/03/2023

The Coming Youngfella Summer: Dublin’s Delinquent Renaissance

Virgin Media correspondent Sarah O’Connor has filmed the greatest piece of journalism in Irish history. A century of post-Independence Irish political development, and over a millenia of Irish heritage has culminated in the intricacies of modern Dublin’s ethnographic landscape, as...

/ 06/03/2023

The Fall of the House of Desmond and the Plantation of Munster

In the late 16th century private dispute between two Old English families, the Butlers and the FitzGeralds, erupted into two rebellions against English rule that left the population of Munster devastated by plague and famine, with thousands of English families...

/ 05/03/2023

The Renaissance and Political Realism

“In them for the first time we detect the modern political spirit of Europe” – Jacob Burckhardt, ‘The Renaissance in Italy’ Via the Renaissance, allow me to concisely consider the birth-throngs of modernity: the ur-aesthetic-political-conceptual conceits and peculiarities its victims...

/ 04/03/2023