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The face of evil April 29, 2006

Posted by wicklow in General Chatter.
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Victim

This is a part of a page from todays Irish Indo. The man on the left is from Lithuania. He came to Ireland in 2003 in the hope of earning enough money as a landscape gardener to allow his family to come here. He is also a trained pilot.

The man on the right is a 19 year old Irish national, Kevin Dunne,  who repeatedly kicked the head of Mr. Sukys at the Royal Canal in Dublin in September 2005. Mr. Sukys was left severely brain damaged after the attack by Dunne. He cannot walk or speak unaided and his face has had to be reconstructed. The attach was unprovoked and unrestrasrained in sadistic violence.

Dunne was sentenced originally to seven years for the attack but this was increased to 10 years.

Dunne will probably get out in a few years and like a leopard, it is doubtful his spots will change. The violence will probably continue. He is just the tip of the iceberg. For every one in jail there are probably another 10 on the streets. Prison or the threat of prison doesn’t scare these people.

Some people will try to claim that people with a propensity for violence have experienced trauma or violence themselves. Maybe there is some element of truth in this but ultimately I believe some people are just “bad” and no matter what hand they were dealt in life, that badness will always dominate their lives and personalities.

Mr. Sukys came across this evil 19 year old who hated him because he wasn’t Irish. Scratch the surface and there are a lot more thugs with similar attitudes to foreign nationals in Ireland. They just don’t have the “bad” gene but it’s there in their comments and sniffy attitudes.

We should all think long and hard about what the two faces above say about Ireland.  

Why photographs mean so much…. April 20, 2006

Posted by wicklow in Uncategorized.
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I took a photograph of a baby for a couple in Dublin about a month ago. The baby was 3 weeks old at the time. I commented to the couple that he was beautiful. And he was. To the parents, each baby is beautiful. To me, the photographer, there are a few that shine and really are special. This baby was definitely one of them.

Relatives of the babies parents came to me today looking to get some keyrings. “No problem”, I said. I called the photograph up and then asked what message they would like for the back of the keyring. Normally, it’s “I love you mam/dad/grandma”. When I was told “In loving of memory of…” – I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.

The baby died the day after I took the photograph and the two photographs I had were the only good photographs that had been taken of the boy. The baby died of a cot death.

I had a hard time to keep my composure in front of the relatives. It was just so tragic.

There was little I could say to the family. Words were inadequate. Although I don’t know them, I feel I knew the child and captured his essence that day. Little did I know how important that photograph was.

There is a lesson in this. No matter what your job or what you do, it is critical to give it your all. I can’t claim to always be switched on and engaged 100% but after today, I’m going to make it my goal to reach 100% and exceed it at all times.

Belated Happy Easter April 17, 2006

Posted by wicklow in General Chatter.
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Had a nice few days off over the Easter. It’s great to re-charge the batteries. Finished off a book I started earlier in the week called “Good to Great” by Jim Collins. I highly recommend it if you’re interested in understanding how a business can go from merely being an “ok” company to being one that outperforms all its competitors over a long period and become great.

I was amazed that none of the companies I thought would be the models for a great company were mentioned at all. The truly great companies aren’t as well known but reading about them was a real eye opener.

Went to the Vigil service on Easter Saturday night. Have to confess that it’s been a long while since I’ve been to Mass. Up to about 3 or 4 years ago I went weekly. In my teenage years I would even go to Mass every day during lent. I can’t really put my finger on why I lapsed. I’m not going to say that the Church scandals over the years have been the cause, nor is it some fundamental shift in my belief system. I think I just got lazy.

Weeks became months and months became once or twice a year. Somewhere in all of that, I forgot what the buzz was like after a Mass.  That light hearted feeling. The energy. The Joy. I got that buzz again on Saturday night.

I was genuinely shocked at how few people were there in comparison to what I recall a few short years ago. Which is a pity as the new Parish Priest is a great speaker and gave one of the best sermons I ever heard.

Anyway, I’ve resolved now to make weekly Mass again as I realise how I’ve missed it.

Shopping centre names and marketing people April 11, 2006

Posted by wicklow in General Chatter.
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A new shopping centre opened last week in Newbridge. It’s called Whitewater. There’s a shopping centre called Bluewater near London. Arklow is getting a shopping centre called Bridgewater.

There is some psychology behind this on the part of the developers marketing team. Something with “water” in the name automatically triggers the brain into thinking good things. Water (along with the Sun) is the bringer of life. We cannot live without it. Water is used in baptism. Water has a calming effect. Think about a sun holiday, and you think of a beautiful beach with clear blue water. It all adds up to making us receptive to the marketing message.

The Whitewater centre people have lost the plot in their radio ad though. It sounds to me like they are trying to make it sound like an epic journey a la Lord of the Rings. Listen out for it. Makes me cringe every time I hear it.

Speaking of shopping centres. The Dundrum Town Centre had a shop close last week due to trading difficulties. I predict there will be many more casualties in the Dundrum centre with maybe even one of the big anchor tenants pulling out. Rents must be too high and the all important ‘footfall’ figures obviously aren’t what the centre management predicted.

Kick.ie in danger of being swamped April 2, 2006

Posted by wicklow in General Chatter.
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I don’t know if you have heard of Kick.ie but it’s a great site that allows you to seek out a news item of interest and post it. Users to the site can then essentially vote on what news items are worthy of making it to the home page. It is real user power in action.

I post news items from the Wicklow.com news site (http://www.wicklow.com/news) that I think will appeal or be of some interest to an Irish audience. The site is, afterall, an Irish community site.

I’m afraid the value of it is being undermined somewhat by (what I consider to be), spammy posts by one user in particular. The sheer volume of the posts indicate something beyond wanting to genuinely contribute to a community driven, Irish interest site. I’m not saying all the stories have to be Irish, but all these posts by one user are clogging up the system and make it hard to see posts from other users.

I know the site is a democracy and I don’t think there is anything to stop someone doing it, but I think it is sad that what could be a really great site in Ireland is being overloaded by spam.

 

Sunday World ad reflects reality in Ireland April 1, 2006

Posted by wicklow in General Chatter.
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The Sunday World have an advert running on the radio at the moment. It’s to promote the glossy supplement in the newspaper. The music playing in the background is a church organ playing something that sounds spiritual (I can’t work out what the piece is). The voice over person tells us all about what is in the weeks edition. It’s who’s jumping into bed with who, fashion features, gossip and so on.

So what, I hear you say. Well the interesting thing about this ad is the final line of the ad. It says “at least some things are sacred on a Sunday”. This is considered to be the “strapline” – the slogan that people remember. It is supposed to strengthen the message of the advertisement. What it is actually saying is “Well, nobody goes to mass any more. There’s no spirituality in Ireland. The Sunday World’s magazine is the only sacred thing about Sunday”.

I don’t want to come across as some kind of defender of the faith, but this sort of advertising simply adds to the media lie that religion is dead in Ireland. This simply isn’t true. There is no denying that churches aren’t as full as they used to be. In Ireland this is put down to many reasons. Church scandals, child abuse, lack of relevance of the gospel to modern life and so on. My opinion is that the drop off in religious practice corresponds with the increase in wealth in the country and the increase in materialism. Others have written at length about this but I really do believe it is true.

The Sunday World ad just contributes to a “tipping point” effect. If a message that religion is dead is perpetuated all over the media, people start to believe it. The tipping point hasn’t been reached yet, but more ads like the Sunday World are hastening the moment when that point is reached.