george colly was a political opponant of cj, he wanted the job that cj got.Glenbhoy said:Jem, you're entitled to your opinion, but in all honesty to suggest that he did'nt take anything from the masses and that there's nothing wrong with having his personal life funded by his friends are not accurate statements. The questions you have to ask are "why did his friends fund his lifestyle" (George Colley seemed to know the answer to that), and "were there situations where he looked after the welfare of his friends' above the welfare of the people in taking decisions".
He may have started off well, and his best work was undoubtedly done in the 60's, but as they say, power corrupts, and it did a particularly fine job on this occasion.
jem said:I for one will be proud to sit and watch the Funeral and will be sending a mass card to his family.
jem, see my previous post on the 'great job' he was doing running the country. Why, I wonder did certain builders have such a great relationship with the 'boss', I wonder did they get any planning permissions to tear down great swathes of Georgian Dublin, rebuild with monstrosities equalled in their ugliness only by Ballymun flats, said monstrosities then being rented by various government departments on long term leases? I wonder?ben dunne stated that in his opinion he and others were willing to fund cj's lifestyle and allow cj to consentrate on running the country which he was doing exceptionally well.you seem to forget the celtic tiger, the ifsc etc etc all in the 80's.
The man is dead and hasn't even been buried yet and I just think that it's a nasty trait being displayed by a lot of Irish at the moment and everyone seems to be nit-picking at his bones already. Surely it's a debate which should be left for future days.
effectively lying through our teeth out of 'respect' for the dead and their families
Duplex said:Corruption gnaws away at the soul of a society and impoverishes its citizenry. You have to look no further than Argentina before and after Peron to understand the damage corruption can cause. As a nation we owe it to future generations to root out the treachery of corruption in high office, quickly and clinically.
He didn't run the country into the ground like some other political parties almost did when they were in government.
Yes, he did actually.He didn't run the country into the ground like some other political parties almost did when they were in government.
As was Argentina in the past century.We're now one of the richest countries in the world, so I don't see how we can be compared with Argentina.
Maybe back in the mid-60's, not thereafter.Whatever he did, he always believed he was doing it for the good of the country.
If anyone actually believes that, I despair. How can corruption not damage society? By definition it must, otherwise it would not be corruption.Unlike other corrupt societies he wasn't doing any harm to the economy. He was strengthening it.
Duplex said:Might I add that I believe that a conspiracy exists to keep Irish people ignorant of not only the facts but a suitable education with which to analyse these facts.
His friends were who exactly? Who funded him? What about tax evasion? Some people would possibly see that as 'taking from the public purse'.we should instead be turning the focus onto the likes of Ben Dunne and ask why were they making such huges profits at the expense of people at that time?
Yeah - Imagine having friends like that. I'd never hang around anyone who would let me do that to them.But why did he have to take "donations" form buddies to help them along and make them into multi millionaires.
But why did he have to take "donations" form buddies to help them along and make them into multi millionaires.
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