<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
		>
<channel>
	<title>Comments on: Ireland must enhance its own industries as US firms pull out</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out</link>
	<description>The website of economist, author and broadcaster, David McWilliams</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 08:17:46 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.2</generator>
	<item>
		<title>By: Thaigah</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-35023</link>
		<dc:creator>Thaigah</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Feb 2008 11:59:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-35023</guid>
		<description>Dear Ethan

I take it you&#039;ve been reading &quot;The World Without Us&quot; by Alan Weisman. Dontcha just love it?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Ethan</p>
<p>I take it you&#8217;ve been reading &#8220;The World Without Us&#8221; by Alan Weisman. Dontcha just love it?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: John Q. Public</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34964</link>
		<dc:creator>John Q. Public</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2008 12:47:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34964</guid>
		<description>Ah John are you a begrudger? Maybe you don&#039;t like to see people succeed. I agree that we need to lower the population of the planet though. Some of us are going off the rails here and not sticking to what David is saying in his article. There is nothing wrong with wanting a house or buying stuff John after all it creates economic activity/employment. The point is let&#039;s make our own stuff, think for ourselves and stop having babies we can&#039;t afford.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ah John are you a begrudger? Maybe you don&#8217;t like to see people succeed. I agree that we need to lower the population of the planet though. Some of us are going off the rails here and not sticking to what David is saying in his article. There is nothing wrong with wanting a house or buying stuff John after all it creates economic activity/employment. The point is let&#8217;s make our own stuff, think for ourselves and stop having babies we can&#8217;t afford.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34962</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2008 12:39:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34962</guid>
		<description>Your point is exactly what? Spinstasista.
Is this a statement or just bad grammar and incorrect punctuation?
Maybe you should watch less American television.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Your point is exactly what? Spinstasista.<br />
Is this a statement or just bad grammar and incorrect punctuation?<br />
Maybe you should watch less American television.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: SpinstaSista</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34958</link>
		<dc:creator>SpinstaSista</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2008 11:47:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34958</guid>
		<description>John:

Your point is exactly what?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John:</p>
<p>Your point is exactly what?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: b</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34951</link>
		<dc:creator>b</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 2008 12:47:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34951</guid>
		<description>Philip,

We tried pull.  It makes no difference.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Philip,</p>
<p>We tried pull.  It makes no difference.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34950</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 2008 12:32:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34950</guid>
		<description>David, I know its of but its very good. Thanks to Spiked Liberties
Dear Ethan, 

Is there something wrong with me…? Every time I read an article or hear a news report about the coming recession, a little part of me jumps for joy. Indeed I find myself thinking, ‘Come, recession, come…’ The rational side of my brain knows it will mean people losing their jobs and possibly their homes… but the other side thinks: well, at least it might break our addiction to economic growth! Ethan, is it ethical to pray for a recession??? 

Maggie Mayfield 
Edinburgh, Scotland 

Dear Maggie, 

If there is something wrong with you, then there is definitely something wrong with me. Not only have I prayed for a recession (to Gaia, of course, not ‘God’ - yet another arrogant invention of man-unkind who thinks he is so special that a higher being with a beard must have created him! Ha ha ha!) - I have also danced for a recession. Yes, inspired by the beautiful Native American and Maori practice of Rain Dancing, I have created the Recession Dance. Where native tribes stamped and grunted to try to coax rain to come and save their crops, I have taken to chanting and humming to try to coax Recession to come and save our planet. 

Sheba thinks it’s mad. But as I said to her, Maggie: ‘Is the Dalai Lama mad? Is Uri Geller mad? No they aren’t, and they know very well the power of thought over real-world events.’ I’m very pleased to see that my Recession Dance is already bearing fruit: an eco-email alert I received from Reuters this week says that fears of a recession are ‘gnawing’ at the average American’s mindset, making him feel insecure and possibly even ‘in the shit’. Yes! 

Maggie, the best thing that could happen to the planet this year is a recession: a big, beautiful, stock-crashing, Wall St-burning, consumer-baiting, home-evicting, bank-busting recession. Actually, even better than that would be the emergence of a preferably painless but speedily contagious disease that might finally reduce the human population to sustainable levels - two billion at the most, according to my mates in Jonathon Porritt’s Optimum Population Trust (or was it the Church of Euthanasia? One of them said the human population must be more than halved if the planet is to survive… can’t remember which.) 

But as we wait for a planet-friendly plague that might, in the words of Earth First!, ‘bring the human population back to sanity’ and ‘end industrialism… just as the Plague contributed to the demise of feudalism’, we will have to make do with economic shocks to our system, with the economic equivalent of the sniffles before the final big disease - the burning of the planet in a fireball created by the greed of Tesco shoppers, cheap flyers and other lunatics - takes care of ‘us’ once and for all. 

Maggie, the more painful the recession is, the better. Don’t worry about people losing their jobs, silly! People who work in banks or shops will be most affected and they deserve everything they get. Banks are parasites on the arse of Gaia, pumping wads of cash into corporations that plunder her resources or build houses (including mock Tudor monstrosities!) on her surface. As for shop assistants or shop managers… I’m sorry, but why should we feel sympathy for people who make a living out of sustaining the cancer of consumerism by helping greedy people pick out the latest brand of cookie, car or coat-stand without giving a moment’s thought to the billions and billions of trees, plants and natural metals and liquids - Gaia’s guts and tears - that will have been sacrificed for their petty pleasures? Worrying about these people losing their jobs is like saying in 1945: ‘Oh no, the war’s over! What are all those poor little concentration camp guards going to do now…?’ 

The fact is we need something to stop us raping the planet, and the recession might just be the chemical castration for the job. We have become so addicted to ‘stuff’ that anything which reins in consumerism is a good thing. Did you see the New Year sales, Maggie?!! All those Burberry-clad product-addicts stamping on each other’s heads and stabbing each other with knives - literally! - as they hunted down the latest kettle or crop top. The consumer society has turned us into savages. Well, not us obviously, but certainly them: people who think that just because they earn £30,000 a year (they actually think that is a good wage, bless them!), they must spend it all on garish décor and monstrous mod cons for their post-council houses or Barratt eyesores. 

On the topic of houses… How can you fret that some people might lose their homes??!! Have you seen these people’s homes? Losing them will be the best thing that ever happened to them! With their garish crazy paving and claddagh brick work; their pointless ornaments in the shapes of dogs and penguins (SPECIESISM), their plates and mugs with pictures of Princess Diana or the Queen Mum on them (when we all know that Prince Charles is the ONLY decent royal, especially since he spoke at a climate conference by hologram this week! Go Charlie, King of the Greens!); their constantly blaring TVs, radios, computers, DVD players, toasters and tea-makers… these houses are more like (VERY badly decorated) prisons than real homes. If the recession leads to evictions and people have to live more humbly - well, hurrah. 

Some psychologists say consumerism makes us mentally ill. Actually, being human is itself a form of mental illness: our brains are programmed to pump various chemicals around our bodies that make us want to fight and destroy and buy, buy, buy. I am confident that evolutionary biologists will shortly discover a gene that triggers the shopping urge; indeed, a scientist friend of mine (don’t worry, he’s a good scientist - his degree is in Climatalogy, Ecosystems and Industrial Terrorism from the University of South-West London) is currently trying to raise funds for his study to discover a Tesco Gene, which he is convinced occurs in malnourished, under-cultured sections of the human race, nurturing in them a pseudo-natural urge to exchange small amounts of money for breadcrumbed chicken legs, strawberry-flavoured milk, copies of heat magazine and other bits of tat from Tesco. 

This is what we’re up against, Maggie: beings that are actually programmed to destroy, to become poisonous bacteria in Gaia’s bloodstream; let us hope and pray (and dance) that a recession will be the antibody Gaia so desperately needs to deal with her human itch. 

Of course, a recession will not cure people of their innate, inbuilt human insanity - but it might help to restrain their shopping savagery and insatiable lust for stuff, and make them a bit more docile. Think of the opportunities for people like us, Maggie, if man-unkind finally, after 30 years of yuppie-dom and the emergence of mass travel - EVEN for Social Class V and VI - becomes a bit more timid and fearful! At last there will be an opportunity for the ethical outlook to take hold! De-cluttered of the demented desire for more and more useless rubbish, the human mind might finally open up to rational arguments for austerity, mass eco-euthanasia and the replacement of ALL light bulbs with CFLs. Only then will we start moving towards a more sensible world, towards the eventual glorious voluntary (perhaps semi-voluntary) evacuation of the planet by the plague that is mankind. 

Maggie, join with me in my Recession Dance and let us speed in the economic crisis for mankind/happy, happy days for the planet. Email me for the dancing details.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>David, I know its of but its very good. Thanks to Spiked Liberties<br />
Dear Ethan, </p>
<p>Is there something wrong with me…? Every time I read an article or hear a news report about the coming recession, a little part of me jumps for joy. Indeed I find myself thinking, ‘Come, recession, come…’ The rational side of my brain knows it will mean people losing their jobs and possibly their homes… but the other side thinks: well, at least it might break our addiction to economic growth! Ethan, is it ethical to pray for a recession??? </p>
<p>Maggie Mayfield<br />
Edinburgh, Scotland </p>
<p>Dear Maggie, </p>
<p>If there is something wrong with you, then there is definitely something wrong with me. Not only have I prayed for a recession (to Gaia, of course, not ‘God’ &#8211; yet another arrogant invention of man-unkind who thinks he is so special that a higher being with a beard must have created him! Ha ha ha!) &#8211; I have also danced for a recession. Yes, inspired by the beautiful Native American and Maori practice of Rain Dancing, I have created the Recession Dance. Where native tribes stamped and grunted to try to coax rain to come and save their crops, I have taken to chanting and humming to try to coax Recession to come and save our planet. </p>
<p>Sheba thinks it’s mad. But as I said to her, Maggie: ‘Is the Dalai Lama mad? Is Uri Geller mad? No they aren’t, and they know very well the power of thought over real-world events.’ I’m very pleased to see that my Recession Dance is already bearing fruit: an eco-email alert I received from Reuters this week says that fears of a recession are ‘gnawing’ at the average American’s mindset, making him feel insecure and possibly even ‘in the shit’. Yes! </p>
<p>Maggie, the best thing that could happen to the planet this year is a recession: a big, beautiful, stock-crashing, Wall St-burning, consumer-baiting, home-evicting, bank-busting recession. Actually, even better than that would be the emergence of a preferably painless but speedily contagious disease that might finally reduce the human population to sustainable levels &#8211; two billion at the most, according to my mates in Jonathon Porritt’s Optimum Population Trust (or was it the Church of Euthanasia? One of them said the human population must be more than halved if the planet is to survive… can’t remember which.) </p>
<p>But as we wait for a planet-friendly plague that might, in the words of Earth First!, ‘bring the human population back to sanity’ and ‘end industrialism… just as the Plague contributed to the demise of feudalism’, we will have to make do with economic shocks to our system, with the economic equivalent of the sniffles before the final big disease &#8211; the burning of the planet in a fireball created by the greed of Tesco shoppers, cheap flyers and other lunatics &#8211; takes care of ‘us’ once and for all. </p>
<p>Maggie, the more painful the recession is, the better. Don’t worry about people losing their jobs, silly! People who work in banks or shops will be most affected and they deserve everything they get. Banks are parasites on the arse of Gaia, pumping wads of cash into corporations that plunder her resources or build houses (including mock Tudor monstrosities!) on her surface. As for shop assistants or shop managers… I’m sorry, but why should we feel sympathy for people who make a living out of sustaining the cancer of consumerism by helping greedy people pick out the latest brand of cookie, car or coat-stand without giving a moment’s thought to the billions and billions of trees, plants and natural metals and liquids &#8211; Gaia’s guts and tears &#8211; that will have been sacrificed for their petty pleasures? Worrying about these people losing their jobs is like saying in 1945: ‘Oh no, the war’s over! What are all those poor little concentration camp guards going to do now…?’ </p>
<p>The fact is we need something to stop us raping the planet, and the recession might just be the chemical castration for the job. We have become so addicted to ‘stuff’ that anything which reins in consumerism is a good thing. Did you see the New Year sales, Maggie?!! All those Burberry-clad product-addicts stamping on each other’s heads and stabbing each other with knives &#8211; literally! &#8211; as they hunted down the latest kettle or crop top. The consumer society has turned us into savages. Well, not us obviously, but certainly them: people who think that just because they earn £30,000 a year (they actually think that is a good wage, bless them!), they must spend it all on garish décor and monstrous mod cons for their post-council houses or Barratt eyesores. </p>
<p>On the topic of houses… How can you fret that some people might lose their homes??!! Have you seen these people’s homes? Losing them will be the best thing that ever happened to them! With their garish crazy paving and claddagh brick work; their pointless ornaments in the shapes of dogs and penguins (SPECIESISM), their plates and mugs with pictures of Princess Diana or the Queen Mum on them (when we all know that Prince Charles is the ONLY decent royal, especially since he spoke at a climate conference by hologram this week! Go Charlie, King of the Greens!); their constantly blaring TVs, radios, computers, DVD players, toasters and tea-makers… these houses are more like (VERY badly decorated) prisons than real homes. If the recession leads to evictions and people have to live more humbly &#8211; well, hurrah. </p>
<p>Some psychologists say consumerism makes us mentally ill. Actually, being human is itself a form of mental illness: our brains are programmed to pump various chemicals around our bodies that make us want to fight and destroy and buy, buy, buy. I am confident that evolutionary biologists will shortly discover a gene that triggers the shopping urge; indeed, a scientist friend of mine (don’t worry, he’s a good scientist &#8211; his degree is in Climatalogy, Ecosystems and Industrial Terrorism from the University of South-West London) is currently trying to raise funds for his study to discover a Tesco Gene, which he is convinced occurs in malnourished, under-cultured sections of the human race, nurturing in them a pseudo-natural urge to exchange small amounts of money for breadcrumbed chicken legs, strawberry-flavoured milk, copies of heat magazine and other bits of tat from Tesco. </p>
<p>This is what we’re up against, Maggie: beings that are actually programmed to destroy, to become poisonous bacteria in Gaia’s bloodstream; let us hope and pray (and dance) that a recession will be the antibody Gaia so desperately needs to deal with her human itch. </p>
<p>Of course, a recession will not cure people of their innate, inbuilt human insanity &#8211; but it might help to restrain their shopping savagery and insatiable lust for stuff, and make them a bit more docile. Think of the opportunities for people like us, Maggie, if man-unkind finally, after 30 years of yuppie-dom and the emergence of mass travel &#8211; EVEN for Social Class V and VI &#8211; becomes a bit more timid and fearful! At last there will be an opportunity for the ethical outlook to take hold! De-cluttered of the demented desire for more and more useless rubbish, the human mind might finally open up to rational arguments for austerity, mass eco-euthanasia and the replacement of ALL light bulbs with CFLs. Only then will we start moving towards a more sensible world, towards the eventual glorious voluntary (perhaps semi-voluntary) evacuation of the planet by the plague that is mankind. </p>
<p>Maggie, join with me in my Recession Dance and let us speed in the economic crisis for mankind/happy, happy days for the planet. Email me for the dancing details.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: David</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34945</link>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 2008 00:01:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34945</guid>
		<description>I wonder how long Botox will be on the market.

Last year the FDA had reports of 16 fatalities linked to injections of Botox.

full story:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,2251797,00.html</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I wonder how long Botox will be on the market.</p>
<p>Last year the FDA had reports of 16 fatalities linked to injections of Botox.</p>
<p>full story:<br />
<a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,2251797,00.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,2251797,00.html</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Philip</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34941</link>
		<dc:creator>Philip</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Feb 2008 18:46:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34941</guid>
		<description>B, tis clear you do not have pull. This is how this place works.  Necessary for all small business plans. 1 pull = 5KEuro.  Once you have pull, you can open a nuclear processing plant - grant aided practically - under the guise of a cancer clinic..and when you get up and running, ye can fire all them ungreatful employees  and outsource to Costa whatever with no legal backlash.  Great country.  Stop whinging and get on with it.

Joking aside (?) the complete lack of respect this country&#039;s civil service and politicians have for the &quot;general public&quot; is hard to understand.  People have learned to tow the line here and be subserviant while looking incorrigible - we are sad clowns.  Resistance and being upset about it is useless.

I tire of this nonsense on Innovation.  It is complete rubbish.  R&amp;D needs serious infrastructure to really get going.  It&#039;s very systematic and requires HUGE cmmittment.  We do a lot of good stuff on a small scale. Never enough to run a full country.  And if you do get revved up, you operate somewhere else - i.e. China etc.  Germany&#039;s R&amp;D and US R&amp;D etc are based on a sense of who they are NOT on making moolah.  R&amp;D &amp; innovation is probably as much about national pride as making a few bucks.

What you have to realise is that there will be no change here  - ever- until people realise they can make a difference.  I put my faith in the immigrants and the new blood who have none of the baggage we have now.  They are already getting in there.  They have a sense of self and faith in their goal to make life better - becasue they know it can be a lot lot worse.  They have a sense of history and tradition.  Irish need to re-develop a memory of how bad things can get and see where they are now and what they&#039;ve achieved.  David&#039;s diaspora idea is a sense of that- but there&#039;s a lot more I think.

We need to understand that we are good enough, if not better than most.  We need to loose that charming feckless irish image and replace it with something a little more bite and self assuredness.  That&#039;ll only happen when we start voting on issues rather than personalities and insisting on accountability. (on Lisbon, I like the issue focus - I worry about accountability)  Until this happens we&#039;ll be washed around by the ebb and flow of economic tides.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>B, tis clear you do not have pull. This is how this place works.  Necessary for all small business plans. 1 pull = 5KEuro.  Once you have pull, you can open a nuclear processing plant &#8211; grant aided practically &#8211; under the guise of a cancer clinic..and when you get up and running, ye can fire all them ungreatful employees  and outsource to Costa whatever with no legal backlash.  Great country.  Stop whinging and get on with it.</p>
<p>Joking aside (?) the complete lack of respect this country&#8217;s civil service and politicians have for the &#8220;general public&#8221; is hard to understand.  People have learned to tow the line here and be subserviant while looking incorrigible &#8211; we are sad clowns.  Resistance and being upset about it is useless.</p>
<p>I tire of this nonsense on Innovation.  It is complete rubbish.  R&amp;D needs serious infrastructure to really get going.  It&#8217;s very systematic and requires HUGE cmmittment.  We do a lot of good stuff on a small scale. Never enough to run a full country.  And if you do get revved up, you operate somewhere else &#8211; i.e. China etc.  Germany&#8217;s R&amp;D and US R&amp;D etc are based on a sense of who they are NOT on making moolah.  R&amp;D &amp; innovation is probably as much about national pride as making a few bucks.</p>
<p>What you have to realise is that there will be no change here  &#8211; ever- until people realise they can make a difference.  I put my faith in the immigrants and the new blood who have none of the baggage we have now.  They are already getting in there.  They have a sense of self and faith in their goal to make life better &#8211; becasue they know it can be a lot lot worse.  They have a sense of history and tradition.  Irish need to re-develop a memory of how bad things can get and see where they are now and what they&#8217;ve achieved.  David&#8217;s diaspora idea is a sense of that- but there&#8217;s a lot more I think.</p>
<p>We need to understand that we are good enough, if not better than most.  We need to loose that charming feckless irish image and replace it with something a little more bite and self assuredness.  That&#8217;ll only happen when we start voting on issues rather than personalities and insisting on accountability. (on Lisbon, I like the issue focus &#8211; I worry about accountability)  Until this happens we&#8217;ll be washed around by the ebb and flow of economic tides.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Rob</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34940</link>
		<dc:creator>Rob</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Feb 2008 18:21:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34940</guid>
		<description>I would have to say that it does amaze me that people with very little acumen/knowledge end up in charge of massive departments. We the people, elect this shower. What does surprise me is that people don&#039;t vote for this change and given the economic downturn that is on the way people might be afraid to vote for change next time around. If there appears to be a problem with a particular issue, for example broadband, the solution seems to be commission a report and then bin it. What are the solutions? Maybe an economic downturn will actually force us to confront some of these problems?? Ryanair doesn&#039;t have all the answers but they certainly have shown up Aer Lingus and perhaps saved Aer Lingus by forcing it to modernise.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I would have to say that it does amaze me that people with very little acumen/knowledge end up in charge of massive departments. We the people, elect this shower. What does surprise me is that people don&#8217;t vote for this change and given the economic downturn that is on the way people might be afraid to vote for change next time around. If there appears to be a problem with a particular issue, for example broadband, the solution seems to be commission a report and then bin it. What are the solutions? Maybe an economic downturn will actually force us to confront some of these problems?? Ryanair doesn&#8217;t have all the answers but they certainly have shown up Aer Lingus and perhaps saved Aer Lingus by forcing it to modernise.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: b</title>
		<link>http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out/comment-page-1#comment-34939</link>
		<dc:creator>b</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Feb 2008 13:44:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/02/03/ireland-must-enhance-its-own-industries-as-us-firms-pull-out#comment-34939</guid>
		<description>And we have tried all the broadband options.

Eircom told us to move closer to the exchange.  Idiots.  The Department of non Communications were useless too.  This in spite of it being brought to their attention many many times.

We have a problem of the State wanting to conttrol everything and by keeping us small and weakened they can control the small market.

Companies like Ryanair and their fleet now being 5 times Aer Lingus show up the Government as a shower of gobshites who couldn&#039;t run a bath.  They ban everything they can get their grubby little paws on.  We are a disgrace for electing these losers time and time again.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>And we have tried all the broadband options.</p>
<p>Eircom told us to move closer to the exchange.  Idiots.  The Department of non Communications were useless too.  This in spite of it being brought to their attention many many times.</p>
<p>We have a problem of the State wanting to conttrol everything and by keeping us small and weakened they can control the small market.</p>
<p>Companies like Ryanair and their fleet now being 5 times Aer Lingus show up the Government as a shower of gobshites who couldn&#8217;t run a bath.  They ban everything they can get their grubby little paws on.  We are a disgrace for electing these losers time and time again.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
</channel>
</rss>

