120,000 protest recession in Ireland (love the slogan)

Started by MikeWB, February 22, 2009, 02:28:48 AM

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MikeWB


QuoteDUBLIN (AFP) – Up to 120,000 protesters brought Dublin city centre to a standstill on Saturday over government austerity measures aimed at stabilising the once high-flying economy now wracked by recession.
The demonstration came a day after the global economic crisis led to another political casualty elsewhere in Europe, with Latvia's prime minister quitting as his country grapples with deepening recession.
Organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) and featuring teachers, police, civil servants and others, the Irish protest was the "first step in a rolling campaign of action," ICTU general secretary David Begg said.
Police put the number of protesters at up to 120,000.
Marchers are particularly opposed to a pension levy on some 350,000 public servants which is designed to save about 1.4 billion euros (1.8 billion dollars) this year.
According to IMPACT, Ireland's biggest public sector trade union, the levy will cost low to middle-income earners between 1,500 euros and 2,800 euros a year.
Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen is bringing in an initial two-billion-euro package of cuts designed to stabilise the one-time Celtic Tiger economy, which entered recession in the first half of 2008.
Cowen has said the economy will shrink by up to 10 percent by 2010 and warned of total savings of 15 billion euros needed over five years in a bid to stabilise Irish finances.
In a statement to coincide with the demonstration, the government said it recognised that the measures it was taking "are difficult and, in some cases, painful" but they were also "necessary and fair."
"They are necessary because it is essential that we show a credible start on the correction of an emerging unsustainability in our public finances," it said.
"Failure to show that credible start means that we impact directly and severely on our international reputation among investors and, in particular, on our capacity to raise funds, and on the direct cost of servicing the borrowing which we are able to undertake."
The ICTU describes the government's measures as "lacking in fairness and focussing only on 'stabilising' the public finances at the expense of economic renewal and job protection."
The global economic crisis, which has hit several European countries hard, has led to political instability in several parts of the continent.
Iceland's government became the first political casualty of the downturn when it was forced to step down on January 26 following months of protests against politicians and central bankers.
A new interim government comprising the Social Democrats and the Left Green party has been in power since February 1, and new elections are expected to be held in April.
More recently, Latvia's Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis quit his position on Friday, amid widespread discontent over belt-tightening and politicians' alleged corruption and nepotism.
Latvia showed the fastest economic growth in the European Union in 2006 but its economy is expected to contract 12 percent this year, with unemployment soaring to 12.7 percent from the current 8.3 percent.
Fellow Baltic states Lithuania and Estonia face similar troubles.
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targa2

Wonderful.....tax the corporations another 10%......then they can raise the price of their product 10%.  I wonder who pays then ????

memory hole


sullivan

Quote from: "targa2"Wonderful.....tax the corporations another 10%......then they can raise the price of their product 10%.  I wonder who pays then ????
But aren't taxing the corporations, even though they pay the lowest corporation tax in Europe.  They are loading the burden onto the employed, as per usual.
"The real menace of our Republic is the invisible government which like a giant octopus sprawls its slimy legs over our cities, states and nation. At the head is a small group of banking houses generally referred to as \'international bankers.\' This little coterie... run our government for their own selfish ends. It operates under cover of a self-created screen, seizes our executive officers, legislative bodies, schools, courts, newspapers and every agency created for the public protection."
John F. Hylan (1868-1936) - Former Mayor of New York City

targa2

Yes it does.  That"s my point.   Passing the responsibility of " who pays the tax" is an old strawman ,divide and conquer strategy.  The people who work will always pay the tax because you can only tax the source. The source is ENERGY / OUTPUT, which manifests itself as labor.  When you tax the corporations ( greedy ) the pass it on to the consumer, the original source.

Take it from an old tax protestor,  the tax is NOT the issue.  It is a byproduct of the issue.

MikeWB

I listened to some radio show on my local radio and there was some expert on who said that Ireland will be the first Western country to fall after Iceland fell.

Doesn't look good :(
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Mac Seafraidh

The only problem is money seems to be of the most importance to them. These are not nationalists, just everyday lemmings who fail to see the main issue. If the Jewish Question is not tackled then the nation will cease to exist. They should also be complaining about the Jewish United Kingdom and get their land back. I am sick of these Social Commie Marxists with their distribute the love bullshit.

It is the Irish Nationalism of old or there's no way out.

My grandfather just lost his land in Ireland because some piece of shit relative sold it. He should of fought for it.