This is the IPO on Mount St. just over a year ago, on the 21st of April, 2023, which I filmed on Day 3 of the NGO tent city. This “crisis” was planned and allowed. It was funded by the Irish taxpayer. The Irish government makes payments of over 6 billion Euro or nearly 10% of the national capital budget annually to the 36000+ unelected and unmandated NGOs that act as a shadow government and exert an enormous lobbying influence. I posted 100s of videos and interviews since 2022 on these issues. I was called “far right” for asking the questions and posing the queries to the government. I was labeled such for saying precisely what Minister Helen McEntee and the 33rd Dáil now say in their response to the crises they have created.

    Ireland, which had all the possibilities of thriving for the first time in its history by being governed by its own People for the welfare of its People, has instead been paupered and betrayed by the ambitions of reckless political parties and the democratic dynasties of Ahearn, Ahern, Andrews, Barry, Bruton, Calleary, Chambers, Coveney, Flanagan, Foley, Healy-Rae, Lenihan, McEntee, Naughten, Quinn, and Reynolds, and a shadow government in the form of the NGO Complex.

    Economically and socially, Ireland is a catastrophe with an economy that is based on a thin veil of tax corruption in collusion with 1000+ multi-national organizations, a manufactured migration crisis, and the continued centralization of more power to the government, the EU and other supranational organizations; Ireland has again become a provincial backwater in an Empire except now the Irish are also told that Ireland is not theirs to call their own. To do so is racist. To do so is extreme. To do so is “anti-Irish.”

    Instead, Ireland has seen a pattern where several political families dominate politics. They have always prioritized their own power and holding onto their seats in the Dáil over the welfare of the People of Ireland. Their corruption, incompetence, and criminal activities have created a cycle of crises that deepen Irish national stress and division.

    Despite extensive reporting on these illegal activities linked to the 33rd Dáil and those that came before, most Irish People seem happy to overlook these issues as long as they feel unaffected.

    Successive governments have consistently taxed the poorest heavily while overlooking white-collar crimes. The consequences, as usual, are felt most by the vulnerable groups in Irish society. The Irish homeless, transportation crises, the poor infrastructure in huge areas of rural Ireland, repeated inequitable treatment before the law, lack of access to adequate healthcare, insufficient rental home availability, little opportunity to own their own homes for the young, poor education for children driven by ideology rather than learning, lack of opportunity after school, and a horrific lack of investment in young Irish entrepreneurs.

    Masses of Irish talent have been wasted or have had to leave Ireland to seek opportunity even though Ireland should have ample to offer them.

    Ireland and the Irish deserve better, and they shall get it. Eirinn go Brach 🇮🇪

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