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	<title>Life&#039;s simple, why change it? &#187; budget</title>
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		<title>So long 2010</title>
		<link>http://www.jbwan.com/2010/12/31/so-long-2010/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jbwan.com/2010/12/31/so-long-2010/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 31 Dec 2010 11:24:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jbwan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[We find ourselves yet again at the annual cusp, the last breaths of 2010 will soon be drawn and the dawn of 2011 will break. As is customary at such times, one is invited (perhaps compelled) to reflect on what the year has taught us or at the very least, what is has presented to &#8230;
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><!-- p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 13.0px Arial} -->We find ourselves yet again at the annual cusp, the last breaths of 2010 will soon be drawn and the dawn of 2011 will break. As is customary at such times, one is invited (perhaps compelled) to reflect on what the year has taught us or at the very least, what is has presented to us. I for one will be very happy to see the end of 2010. It has been a very tough, sometimes shocking and overall, a disappointing year. I regret to admit that I grew a little more cynical of people as a result of 2010 but such is life I guess. Anyway, more of a time for points and not prose, let&#8217;s get to the standout stories for me.</p>
<p>1) <a href="http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tomchivers/100044914/gillian-mckeith-should-have-a-phd-in-how-not-to-use-twitter/">You are what you tweet &#8211; the Gillian McKeith debacle</a>. Yes midway through the year, we were treated to a rather scrumptious story from the twittersphere. A spat had developed between nutritionist <a href="http://twitter.com/gillianmckeith">Gillian McKeith</a> and <em><a href="http://www.badscience.net/">Bad Science</a></em> guy <a href="http://twitter.com/bengoldacre">Ben Goldacre</a>. In what can only be referred to as an alleged sequence of misdemeanours, tweets were sent that accused Ben Goldacre of telling lies. Then suddenly the twittersphere went nuts, the topic was trending and retweets were rife. Once the story hit the big time, the tweets from the Gillian McKeith entitled account disappeared (i.e. were deleted) and the world&#8217;s worst cover up was attempted including the statement that the account was not Gillian&#8217;s despite several official tweets and logos, and prior printed publications suggesting otherwise. Ladies and gentlemen &#8211; how not to use Twitter!</p>
<p>2) Dublin Metro despite all needs. Yes, I&#8217;ve been banging on about this for years now but it&#8217;s still as valid an argument as ever in my opinion. I was delighted earlier in the year, to see that Kevin Myers has joined my band wagon of sense by slamming the metro in <a href="http://www.independent.ie/opinion/columnists/kevin-myers/kevin-myers-the-metro-is-an-insane-idea--and-a-disaster-for-dublin-2310177.html">one of his columns</a>. I have great time for Kevin&#8217;s articles, his lucid and direct arguments, even if sometimes I don&#8217;t agree fully &#8211; it was a relief to know that I was not alone in my thoughts on what I consider to be one of the biggest travesties in the state. This year, Ireland is swinging from the door frame of wreck and ruin. The country has been swept with budget cuts, banks have been all but nationalised, the IMF even turned up for a friendly chat, we were dealt an austerity budget, and in the end we were forced to take a bailout loan that the country will probably never have the capacity to pay back in full. Yes, Ireland will be in the back pocket of the IMF and more worryingly, the EU, for a very long time to come. It&#8217;s never a good idea to be the littlest member of the family whose causing trouble for your bigger brothers and I believe it won&#8217;t be long before we see hard evidence of that. Anyway, I digress. Despite all of these economically horrific events the one thing that has not been cut is the Dublin Metro project. Roads around the country have been slashed, hospitals will probably be increasingly centralised (i.e. further limit access to), and other nationwide capital expenditure for local councils is being slashed too. However, Dublin still wants its metro and a two finger salute to all those who speak sense to the contrary. The whole thing has become so absurd at this stage that despite there being no money to construct the metro, the project still isn&#8217;t being taken off the table. Sheer stubbornness, ignorance and callous disregard for their fellow man. One really does have to wonder whose legacy this metro is. No project as ridiculous as this, in these austere times, would ever survive if it wasn&#8217;t to serve as a tombstone epithet for some politician.</p>
<p>3) Student protests and Garda violence. This was the moment that really worried me this year &#8211; the moment that democracy all but died. What was largely a peaceful, in some parts sit down, protest by the students of Ireland, turned to a brutal and characterless assault of anyone that dared not be moved. Students moving through the streets, bleeding, Gardaí caught on camera kicking and beating students with truncheons. There could be no cover up for these events, in this time. Yet again Twitter and other social networks started to buzz with photos and videos of the events as they unfolded. We still await the outcome of what will no doubt be a suffocated inquiry.</p>
<p>4) Attack on Prince Charle&#8217;s car. Student protests in England surrounding education fees and such, boiled over into troubles and riots. During said troubles, Prince Charles and Camilla were being driven to the London Palladium for a night of unashamed entertainment. So, what would one do? I know Jeeves, let&#8217;s drive our most opulent vehicle through the riots. That will calm the students and show them that all is fair and equal. Boom, bang, crash! What more can one say&#8230;</p>
<p>5) Wikileaks. Well the year wouldn&#8217;t be worth mentioning if we didn&#8217;t mention Wikileaks and the debacle surrounding it. For anyone living under a rock for the past year, Wikileaks is essentially true freedom of information sped up and nothing more. However, when civil servants and petty government officials who feel they can be less than diplomatic in their words and actions have information tied to them, released to the public without the option of redacting it, then there&#8217;s a problem. Wikileaks isn&#8217;t making up anything, it&#8217;s simply setting free information that has been gathered by elected and employed public officials, on behalf of their countries. In other words, public information that citizens elected their governments to manage and gather in the best interest of the country. However, as we can see from some of the leaks, not all that information is in best interests, indeed it would appear that a right bunch of immature, undiplomatic and untrustworthy individuals are running this globe. Founder of Wikileaks, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Assange">Julian Assange</a> is strangely finding himself at the centre of a scandal and arrest with subsequent trial at the same time the US are screaming for his head &#8211; hmm, me ponders. Amazon cancelled the hosting used by Wikileaks, <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2010/12/08/paypal-wikileaks/">PayPal froze access to the accounts</a> used for donations to Wikileaks and apparently also froze the accounts of people who donated money to Wikileaks because the US State Department told them it was illegal. Just what kind of people do we have running this world; Where repressed news reports and public information is a reason to assassinate somebody&#8217;s character and act in an undemocratic way?</p>
<p>6) Horse Outside. Well, well, &#8220;Horse Outside&#8221;. The duo known as the Rubber Bandits, known for their antics on RTE&#8217;s Republic of Telly, released what can only be described as the track of the year. A controversial, possibly offensive to most societal groups, riotous composition and video to accompany it. I think it&#8217;s best to approach the new year with a smile on our faces and a happy state of mind. So, with that philosophy I salute 2010&#8242;s passing with one more play of &#8220;Horse Outside&#8221;.</p>
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		<title>Don&#8217;t panic! (unless you want to)</title>
		<link>http://www.jbwan.com/2010/12/07/dont-panic-unless-you-want-to/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jbwan.com/2010/12/07/dont-panic-unless-you-want-to/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Dec 2010 22:00:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jbwan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[So, #budget11 has been released from its cage and set free amongst the unsuspecting public. Terror hit the streets of Dublin as news of this cash gobbling monster spread. People flocked to ATMs in an attempt to claw back any money they could from the bricks and motar that retained their savings. Bank of Ireland &#8230;
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So, <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/search/%23budget11">#budget11</a> has been released from its cage and set free amongst the unsuspecting public. Terror hit the streets of Dublin as news of this cash gobbling monster spread. People flocked to ATMs in an attempt to claw back any money they could from the bricks and motar that retained their savings. Bank of Ireland customers experienced problems withdrawing cash due to an <a href="http://businessetc.thejournal.ie/bank-of-irelands-online-banking-and-atm-systems-down-2010-12/">&#8220;unforeseen technical issue&#8221;</a>. The reported queues at ATMs would have embarrassed the best stocked Russian supermarkets of the 1940&#8242;s even if they had a &#8220;meet the <a href="http://christopherwink.com/2008/06/29/baktika-the-kind-of-stuff-you-find-in-a-russian-supermarket/">Baltika beer</a> model day&#8221;. Aprés <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/search/%23budget11">#budget11</a> I can&#8217;t but wonder how much of that frantically withdrawn cash was destined for the fuel pumps before midnight with 4¢ on a litre of petrol and 2¢ on a litre of diesel set to come into effect.</p>
<p>Some of the main focal points of the budget include a cap on public service salaries at €250,000 (as I noted yesterday), cuts to social welfare payments, cuts to capital spending, a notable increase in the PRSI contribution for the self-employed, removal of the stamp duty relief (now 1% on all sales under €1 million, and 2% on sales above €1 million), and a widening of the tax bands so that more people are &#8220;contributing&#8221; to the tax take of the state.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s look at some of the things that weren&#8217;t done. To start the cap of €250K on public service salaries is ridiculous, this figure is way too high as I explained in yesterday&#8217;s opinion. It&#8217;s not that there are enough people earning this to make a significant contribution back to the coffers but rather it plays on the expected average wage and thus increases costs right across the board, untenably so. Ministers and An Taoiseach received a cut. Again a frankly ridiculous token gesture that still sees An Taoiseach earning more than the UK Prime Minister &#8211; take a hit, share the pain and then people will accept your proposals. Give them free cheese while you party hard with the leaders of the big countries and you&#8217;ll lose them forever &#8211; lead by example An Taoiseach. In capital spending we hear that many road projects will be stopped due to cutbacks but still the white elephant that is the Dublin Metro is allowed to proceed as if nothing was wrong. What exactly is the fascination with this project that it has to be kept on the table, even in the most austere times when the potential few who might use it will probably end up emigrating so that it can be built? Means testing social welfare, children&#8217;s allowance and pensions was not entertained. Such a simple idea that should gel well with a cabinet who seemingly believes that those who can afford to pay, must and I ask why not those who can afford to go without, be allowed to go without? Rather than cuts in children&#8217;s allowance, etc for everyone why not means test it for equitable treatment of the truly deserving? Same goes for pensions, I can&#8217;t imagine that ex-Ministers will really be requiring the level of pension payments of which they are in receipt of? Pensions are supposed to be about maintaining a good standard of life after the work is done, not about acquiring even more wealth and expanding savings.</p>
<p>Some basic things that I would have changed anyhow, for what it&#8217;s worth. The reality however is that amid all this talk of cuts and harsh measures, we really are just farting around in a huge cup of tea with no chance of achieving anything other than a comical enactment of a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brownian_motion">Brownian Motion</a> demonstration. The wonderful bailout still hangs over our heads like a net of Damoclean rocks awaiting orders to fall. Senior bond holders (to you and me, this means people who took out a risky investment plan but paid enough in so that nobody would tell them they lost money in a downturn) still go untouched at our expense, even against the recommendations of the IMF. Yes, the IMF (the experts in sorting out financial disaster) were overruled by the boys in the EU who controlled the sweet box full of treehouse monies &#8211; thankfully our fate lies in their learned and experienced hands! Yes, the bailout we will not escape. It&#8217;s a mathematical certainty of which, only the most unscrupulous liars would have no trouble in denying.</p>
<p>How will the man in the street feel tomorrow morning? Probably a little more annoyed than he feels today, probably a few Euro worse off per week, probably not any different in terms of surviving than he was 12 months previous nor any worse off in those basic terms than he will be in 12 months to come. The country does need a heavy FDI injection to get some money circulating again while we endure the illusion that someday it will all be over and we can go back to 4*4&#8242;s in every driveway, bringing the 2.3 children to school and borrowing to acquire a holiday home which would be situated at most, 250 miles from your doorstep but ultimately people just need a reason to drive themselves forward again.</p>
<p>Apathy will attack the heart of the society for some time to come but we need to keep doing something, not for financial gain nor debt removal but for the continuance of the human race and to make life bearable. Very few will end up in 3rd world conditions, it&#8217;s attitude and spirit that keeps our heads above water while our meager finances more than cover the real cost of living. Only when man stares into the abyss and all that. I hold out hope that society will bond again, that neighbourly relations and community projects will thrive again and people will turn away from the &#8220;it&#8217;s my entitlement&#8221; attitude that has stifled so much in recent times. I have begun to see small pockets of this spirit grow in the last few months and I dearly hope it will foster the multitude into a new way of being &#8211; the old way of being. There&#8217;s no need to panic, unless of course you really want to. Maybe the <a href="http://thedailyedge.thejournal.ie/asian-ladybird-threatens-to-bully-irish-ladybirds-into-extinction-2010-12/">threat to the Irish ladybird</a> at the hands of the Asian ladybird is enough to push you over the edge?</p>
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		<title>It&#8217;s cold outside, inside, it will always be cold!</title>
		<link>http://www.jbwan.com/2010/12/06/its-cold-outside-inside-it-will-always-be-cold/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Dec 2010 16:28:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jbwan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[We stand in the eve of what is predicted to be the worst (most austere) budget in Irish history. Based on information leaked so far, the prediction for an average single income household, earning about €35,000 per annum will see a reduction of roughly €600 per annum in take home pay (for single people on &#8230;
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We stand in the eve of what is predicted to be the worst (most austere) budget in Irish history. Based on information leaked so far, the prediction for an average single income household, earning about €35,000 per annum will see a reduction of roughly €600 per annum in take home pay (for single people on the same margin the different is roughly €900 per annum). Those figures are simply based on the leaks so far and don&#8217;t account for anything that is set to come tomorrow. Yes, the budget of doom is set to land, roll, and extinguish all hope on this Emerald Isle.</p>
<p>Much is being uttered regarding a cap on civil service salaries &#8211; most recent indications suggest €250,000 will be the limit applied. I do subscribe to the philosophy that there is no greater pain and suffering at any level is individual, beyond comparison. As such I always stay clear of making a logical argument into a battle of two sides where each defeats the other and the problem lives to fight another day &#8211; the kind of politics that has been played in this country for way too long. Without applying the classical &#8220;but&#8221;, I do still feel that as a corrective measure, this rumoured limit is still grossly excessive. Public service is just that, it is people who seek a career that aims to improve the standard of life for everyone and to partake in the running of the country &#8211; it&#8217;s a vocation of such. Sadly in the last 10 years the public service has been seen as a gravy train by many (sometimes rightly, sometimes wrongly). There are many lower paid public servants that rightly voice their concerns about cuts but there are equally as many, excessively high-paid public servants, with guaranteed pensions of 50% of their final paycheck who scurry for subterfuge when genuinely angry people come knocking. This is where the gravy train view of the public service gains most credence and it needs to stop. It needs to be tackled by sensible caps on top level scales, the kind of salary that will only attract somebody who wants to make a difference and serve their country not chancers looking for big money first and duty second. The guaranteed pension at 50% of final salary for a full service term also needs to be scrapped or alternatively made less exclusive and opened up to the public to choose as a viable pension offering compared to the leading institutions &#8211; either way a flat 50% is not a viable payout.</p>
<p>One of my biggest worries is the legacy of the Greens and the carbon tax inclusions in this budget. Carbon tax was pushed so much as an environmentally conscious mechanism to reduce emissions. However, last week, in the criticism of the 4-year plan by other political forces such as the EU, the truth became blindingly obvious (not as if we didn&#8217;t already know). One criticism of the plan by the EU (to save a crippled economy and bring more cash into the public finances) was that they would have liked to see greater carbon taxes. So, there it is folks, the bitter proof &#8211; there is no interest in using carbon tax at all, to dissuade pollution or emissions, it&#8217;s plain and simple, a tax generator to screw the common man in everything he does. Even in a crippled economy. I dread to see what else will appear under this guise in years to come.</p>
<p>News broke this morning regarding the honour bestowed upon Brian Lenihan, as worst finance minister in the EU. To be honest, I never had much time for Brian, always thought that his ideas and interactions with the public were the actions of a desperate man. However, I don&#8217;t think it fair that he has been branded as such in this poll. He inherited a poisoned chalice, a bird&#8217;s nest of public finance mismanagement, and a black hole of financial corruption (at least a black hole in terms of public knowledge, some government officials may well have been aware of what lied upon if not beyond the event horizon).</p>
<p>It&#8217;s still cold outside; about the only thing that hasn&#8217;t entered a state of flux in the last week. I&#8217;m working in a public service building whose temperature was well below the HSA guideline minimum (due to heating failure) but nobody left on such grounds. Not a bad result for a country that is supposed to be a militant, unionised farce who drops shovels at the first breach of conditions. Despite what some people want to believe (let&#8217;s call them secondary problem creators, primary problem failures) this is not &#8220;Carry On at Your Convenience&#8221; &#8211; if you don&#8217;t get the reference then try to watch that movie with its own brand of bawdy, British comedy at some stage that it will probably be aired this festive season. If only people invested the same effort into problem solving as they did into pitting groups against each other; We&#8217;d not be in this predicament now, that&#8217;s for sure &#8211; the eye would never have been off the ball.</p>
<p>So, we sit and wait for the published budget to be aired tomorrow afternoon. We await our financial fate with unprecedented, nervous anticipation. For many years budgets have come and gone. I certainly never paid much heed to the prophecies of doom in previous times. I don&#8217;t think we have ever really had a harsh budget in recent history. However, tomorrow&#8217;s tale has me a little concerned for the future of society. I foresee a long Winter of civil unrest, should certain things come into being. Yes, it will be cold for a long time to come.</p>
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		<title>Scrap the Dublin Metro Project!</title>
		<link>http://www.jbwan.com/2008/12/03/scrap-the-dublin-metro-project/</link>
		<comments>http://www.jbwan.com/2008/12/03/scrap-the-dublin-metro-project/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Dec 2008 14:19:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jbwan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Life in General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[billion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[budget]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dublin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[government]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[irish]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[metro]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[recession]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shortfall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stupid]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tax]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vanity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.jbwan.com/?p=873</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Join the Facebook group. Despite Ireland being in recession and despite an emergency, early budget to try to deal with the crisis, and despite a projected shortfall in taxes of €7.5 billion the government of Ireland still sees fit to proceed with a €4 billion plan to develop a small metro system in Dublin. This &#8230;
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a title="Scrap the Dublin Metro Project" href="http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=38227972770">Join the Facebook group.</a></p>
<p>Despite Ireland being in recession and despite an emergency, early budget to try to deal with the crisis, and despite a projected shortfall in taxes of €7.5 billion the government of Ireland still sees fit to proceed with a €4 billion plan to develop a small metro system in Dublin. This proposed budget, which will no doubt be inflated as time goes on given government failures with previous capital projects, is equal to over half of the tax shortfall and would put the country in a far better position financially if it was not spent developing a metro line only in Dublin. Many respected business people have already said that building a metro in Dublin will not be a sensible decision nor return any true net worth to the tax payers who are paying for it. In addition, a similar metro project, but more advanced, was completed in Madrid in 2003 at a mere €1.6 billion (<a onmousedown="UntrustedLink.bootstrap($(this), &quot;5a9e7573d7751f1c81044cb0bfd1ba3e&quot;, event)" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.urbantransport-technology.com/projects/madrid/" target="_blank"><span>http://www.urbantransport-technolog</span>y.com/projects/madrid/</a>), less than half of the proposed Irish budget. This is a gross misuse of Irish taxpayer&#8217;s money and it should be stopped. It&#8217;s no more than a vanity project for the government and is far too costly in these times of economic recession and tax shortfalls. Join the cause, let the feeling be known!</p>
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