The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Daily Archives: June 3, 2022
Last one to leave Ireland, please switch off the lights – The Irish Times
Posted: June 3, 2022 at 12:38 pm
Back in the early 2000s, I joined the staff of the Cricklewood Homeless Concern in an overnight sleepout. The CHC, as it was then known, was a charity that had dedicated itself since 1983 to looking after, mostly, elderly and homeless Irish men.
These men had arrived in London, decades earlier, lured by the promise of work in postwar reconstruction. In their later life, many had fallen through the social and economic cracks after years of unofficial employment on the lump the system that paid construction workers in cash, off the books, and as a result, no pension provision or social welfare payments were ever made on their behalf.
Our sleepout was to protest against the Catholic Churchs plans to close the CHC hostel and use the church-owned site for more profitable purposes. We positioned ourselves, along with our cardboard mattresses and our sleeping bags, on a street close to Cardinal Murphy-OConnors residence, for maximum effect. There is a happy ending to that story: the many and varied protests and objections to the sale of the site were successful and a brand-new hostel was built, opening in 2004, which now operates under the name of Ashford Place.
Run by specialist staff as well as volunteers, the hostel offers not just housing support to those clients who need it, but also keeps a focus on social inclusion, health, well-being and community action. Ashford Place is still thriving today.
*
In 2008, some five years after the first edition of An Unconsidered People was published, I made a return visit to Kilburn and Cricklewood, to Ashford Place and to the Crown on Cricklewood Broadway.
The pub namechecked by the Dubliners in the song McAlpines Fusiliers had played a significant role in the hiring of Irish day-labourers throughout the 1950s and 1960s. It closed in 2000 and reopened in 2003 as a luxury hotel.
Once the place where Irish sub-contractors had gathered in their vans to select whatever number of construction workers they needed for that day, the Crown had now been transformed into a 145-room Moran Hotel, complete with upmarket bar and dining facilities.
Even in 2008, it was clear that the demographic of the entire area was changing radically. The previously Irish shop fronts and cafes now had names from Romania, Poland, Afghanistan and the Philippines. Halal meat was on offer; the fruit and vegetables in slanting displays along the pavements were considerably more exotic than carrots and turnips. The Irish had moved on: the next immigrant families had moved in, in search of better lives, just as those before them had done. For a time, the Crown had continued to be the collection point for casual labourers, carrying on the long-established Irish tradition. But this time, it was construction workers from Eastern Europe who endured, on a daily basis, the desperation and ritual humiliation of random selection by their subbies.
*
When I conducted the dozens of face-to-face interviews that formed the basis of An Unconsidered People, I did so because I wanted to capture the personal stories of as many people as possible, before the texture of their emigrant and immigrant lives in the 1950s was lost to us for good. I recorded their voices and listened to them over and over again: often finding as much insight in their hesitancies and their ellipses as I did in the words themselves. Roslyn Oades remarks that the quality of an individual voice [is] as unique as an individuals fingerprint.
The areas of Kilburn and Cricklewood where I based my research were known as another Irish county, such were the numbers of Irish who settled there in the fifties. There is a well-known mantra, quoted by almost everyone I met: from Euston Station to Kilburn is as far as you can walk while carrying a suitcase.
The Commission on Emigration observed that leaving Ireland during the 1950s became a part of the generally accepted pattern of life. Estimates differ, but between 400,000 and 500,000 people are known to have left this country during those 10 years, in search of a better, or even a different, kind of life. Ireland was the only country in Europe, apart from East Germany, whose population declined in the 1950s.
The people I interviewed about their experiences of that decade were all generous with their time. We met at the end of the 1990s and our meetings continued into the early years of the new century. We would meet in their homes, or in neutral venues, or in Irish clubs. I drank a lot of tea. I said little and listened a lot. I was conscious that I was asking people, who were very often elderly, to recall events and feelings of some 40 or 50 years earlier. I became acutely aware of the power of reminiscence, of what Sarah OBrien calls memories in flight: that moment when relating past experiences for the benefit of an attentive listener becomes highly charged. The narrator is not just remembering events, or narrating them in chronological order rather, s/he comes close to experiencing them all over again.
Individuals memories differ, of course, and so do the meanings they attach to them. The moment of departure from the homeplace for one unwilling emigrant is very different from the departure of another who is bent on seeking adventure, or escaping the poverty of 1950s rural Ireland, or breaking free of the rigid economic, social and sexual norms and expectations of a deprived and conservative community.
While delving into statistics and economics can give us a clear picture of the push and pull factors of emigration, of the numbers of people leaving and of their destinations and their reasons for going, those disciplines cannot touch, in the ways that oral history can, the emotional and psychological impact of high levels of emigration on the family, on the community, as well as on the individual emigrants themselves.
I have no reason to believe that the many and varied personal challenges of emigration for those who left Ireland in the subsequent decades and for those who remained behind were any less painful, particularly for the individuals who emigrated due to economic or other difficulties.
One thing that was different, though, was the level of education attained by those who left in more recent decades. In the 1950s, those who went to the large urban centres in Britain were predominantly from rural Ireland, and were mostly unskilled, often with formal education ending once primary school was completed. This was to change radically with the waves of emigration that took place during the 1980s and the mid-2000s.
In the following pages, I offer a brief overview of the economic conditions in Irish society that led to these more recent waves of emigration first in the 1980s, when some 200,000 people left this country, followed by the next wave in the mid-2000s. The exodus that came about as a result of the economic crash of 2008 saw some 213,000 people leave Ireland to look for opportunities abroad. The global crash, along with the collapse of our entire banking system, had a huge impact on this society. Its reverberations are still felt today.
*
Due to increasing levels of economic activity in the 1960s, that decade did not see mass emigration on the scale of that of the dismal fifties. However, throughout the following decade, 1970s Ireland presided over huge levels of state borrowing. The enormity of this debt, coupled with the added catastrophe of a second oil crisis, laid the seedbed for the severe economic downturn of the 1980s.
In excess of 200,000 (net) people left Ireland during that decade of recession. Research shows that the 1980s labour market in Ireland was one of the worst performing in Europe. The unemployment rate rose from 7 per cent in 1979 to 17 per cent in 1986, when two-thirds of the unemployed had been out of work for six months or more, almost half for over a year.
Along with the high levels of unemployment, mortgage rates became crippling during that 10-year period. Central Bank figures record that an interest rate of 16.25 per cent was charged on borrowings in 1981 and 1982. Rates stayed high throughout the decade, ending at 11.4 per cent in 1989. Ireland had become a very expensive place to live. Housing, food, childcare, healthcare: the cost of everything was increasing, shifting out of reach for so many with young families.
Each week, as I remember, there was yet another American wake for one friend or another. The term that had originated in the 1800s felt appropriate all over again as we watched the ever-increasing numbers of people leaving the country: a mass exodus of the predominantly young from villages and towns all over Ireland.
Britain still remained the destination of choice if we can call it choice along with Canada and the United States. Many of that generation of emigrants became undocumented workers in the US entering as tourists and staying long beyond their permitted visas. The Irish Immigration Reform Movement (IIRM) estimated that in the early 1980s, no fewer than 135,000 New Irish were working illegally in Boston, New York and Chicago.
Other sources quote even greater numbers of undocumented workers. In a Dil debate in 1987, the Fine Gael TD Jimmy Deenihan noted: At this time it is estimated that between 150,000 and 200,000 out-of-status Irish emigrants are in the US. They are also categorised under the terms of illegal, unauthorised or undocumented aliens.
In 1989, at the height of the exodus, 70,000 people left this country, giving rise to a popular bumper sticker of the time: Last one to leave Ireland, please switch off the lights.
*
I still remember a 1980 address to the nation by the then taoiseach, Charles Haughey, who warned us, even at the start of that most difficult decade, that we were living away (sic) beyond our means.
Watching that televised speech again today, the ironies just keep multiplying. Although we didnt realise it, not yet, this was the decade of Charvet shirts and the economic black hole. The Moriarty Tribunal, established 17 years later, in 1997, to inquire into payments to politicians and other related matters, revealed that while Taoiseach, Charles Haughey spent approximately 16,000 of taxpayers money on bespoke shirts from the French company Charvet. The shirts arrived in diplomatic bags. The Charvet website of the day claimed their shirts to be Of almost unbelievable elegance to the most demanding clientele in the world.
Charvet for some, hairshirts for others.
Not all of us were, in Charles Haugheys words, living away beyond our means. The vast majority of the population did not need to be told to tighten our belts. The 1980s saw the collapse of the construction industry; the downturn in manufacturing; little or no recruitment to the civil service. I was teaching in a disadvantaged area during those years and I remember the way my colleagues and I shared the reluctant view that we were educating our students only to swell the dole queues. The divisions caused by intergenerational unemployment and social exclusion became ever more visible throughout that turbulent decade.
The economic black hole that emerged in the countrys finances during the 1980s was caused in part by the scale of tax evasion in the Irish business community. An article from The Irish Times in May 2001 notes that 20 years earlier the remoteness of the Cayman Islands and its no questions asked policy towards would-be depositors made it an attractive location for Irish businessmen hiding hot money from the Revenue.
Against this grim background of economic recession, the Troubles in the North of Ireland were raging. This, too, was the decade of the hunger strikes; of Reaganomics and Thatcher; of the dark cloud of political unrest. No wonder people voted with their feet and left in their thousands.
*
Typically, emigrants of the 1980s were more highly educated, often graduates, or highly skilled. I remember the public awareness of what was perceived as a brain drain from Ireland during those years. The very high rates of emigration occurring among many of the professional and technical graduates is one of the most worrying aspects of the present situation.
However, the picture wasnt that simple. It would be a mistake to see Irish emigrants in the 1980s as consisting solely of high-skills graduates ... there were still a considerable number of old wave emigrants whose profile would not have differed greatly from that of earlier generations. And that profile was, as we have seen earlier, predominantly male, rural, and either semi-skilled or unskilled on departure.
1965: A Jamaican carpenter and a group of Irish labourers drinking in the Coach and Horses, a London pub. Photograph: Val Wilmer/Getty Images
The emigrants of the 1980s were also, for the most part, young. Figures for 1981-86 showed that 68 per cent of all emigrants were in the 15-34 bracket. They also left from all parts of the country, not just rural Ireland: the propensity to emigrate is now much more equal in the eastern and western, and the urban and rural counties, than was previously the case. And on this occasion, more males than females moved abroad ... because of the construction down- turn and the increasing integration of women into the Irish labour force.
*
In the absence of any face-to-face interviews of my own with those who emigrated in the 1980s, or with those of the post- crash generation emigration, I am deeply indebted to the Emigre study. This study, authored by Irial Glynn, Toms Kelly and Piaras MacEinr of UCC, includes many observations about emigration in the 1980s, but its main focus is the experience of those who left Ireland in the wake of the catastrophic economic crash of 2008.
In examining this new wave, the studys authors devised a complex and sophisticated methodology. In addition to compiling the responses from representative household surveys, the Emigre team divided the Republic of Ireland into six clusters, ranging from sparsely populated rural areas to densely populated urban areas, and everything in between. Affluent areas, areas of high unemployment, areas with a predominance of young parents representative samples from all these clusters were surveyed and interpreted.
Researchers also attended Working Abroad Expos in March 2013, documenting levels of education of respondents, their socio-economic profile, and whether they had children. They also asked people why they wanted to move abroad, adding several valuable layers of detail to the final report.
The Emigre report also has a welcome emphasis on the personal: those in the household survey were asked for their own thoughts on emigration; whether they knew anybody who had left the country in recent years; whether emigration had affected their own community; and whether they had had any experience of emigration themselves.
I found it particularly interesting that very few responses to the surveys were received online. Just under half came via post. Instead, the authors observe: Most of our responses derived from face-to-face interactions on the doorsteps of households.
*
Ireland has a long tradition of exporting its people. There were the 200,000 Ulster Presbyterians who made their way to America in 1718 in order to escape poverty, discrimination and rapidly rising rents. They had originally migrated from Scotland to the North of Ireland in search of a better life.
There was the mass emigration of the post-Famine years, when as Dr Catherine Shannon has noted at least 1.5 million emigrants left Ireland between 1846 and 1855, with the majority travelling to America. Then in the 20th century, we had the waves of emigration of the 1930s, 1950s and the 1980s. And now, in recent years, the economic crash has seen people leave these shores in large numbers once more. And while economic pressures have always had a significant role to play in the phenomenon that is Irish emigration, many also decided to escape their lives in Ireland in search of adventure in other countries.
Women, in particular, were often not solely economic migrants. Their pattern of emigration from Ireland diverged from that of most other European countries in the 1950s, for example they often emigrated alone, rather than with husbands or families. In the decade from 1926 to 1936, significantly more women than men, emigrated to Britain. During that decade, it was estimated that almost 46,000 Irish women, as compared with 30,000 men crossed the Irish Sea. Ireland is somewhat unusual internationally in that female emigration has always been a strong component of the overall numbers and has, at times, actually exceeded male emigration.
If we focus on female emigration to Britain, a longing for change was frequently the cause. I remember the many women who spoke to me during our interviews for An Unconsidered People about that need to escape, to be free, to have opportunities that would never be theirs at home, and to avoid the destiny of their mothers and grandmothers, trapped in the grinding poverty of rural Ireland. Many young women chose to train in the UK as nurses or primary school teachers, as it was easier to secure places there than in Ireland. And while job and career opportunities were one part of the equation, the casting off of suffocating social and religious expectations was most definitely another. Reproductive choice; sexual freedom; the ability to leave a bad marriage without com- munity recrimination: these, too, were extremely important aspects of womens new lives away from home.
All of those who left, men and women alike, have contributed to the worldwide Irish diaspora which is currently estimated to be about 70 million people. This number includes those who claim even distant Irish ancestry. According to a study carried out by the Department of Foreign Affairs in 2017: The vast majority of this 70 million figure are descendants of Irish emigrants, often through several generations starting with those who left Ireland around the time of the Famine.
The largest group in this figure is the 36 million people in America who self-identified as Irish-American or Scots-Irish. The balance of the 70 million figure would be made up of large Irish ancestry populations in Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
*
The era of the Celtic Tiger, however, seemed set to reverse that trend of large-scale emigration. During that economically heady 10-year period from 1997 to 2007, a transformation in the make-up of our own population was taking place. Membership of the EU meant that there was a significant increase in immigration into Ireland in that same decade.
Our Central Statistics Office tells me, for example, that there was a total of 420,000 non-Irish nationals living in Ireland in April 2006, representing 188 different countries. While the vast majority of these people were from a very small number of countries 82 per cent from just 10 countries there was also a remarkable diversity in the range of countries represented.
In 1998, the figure for non-Irish nationals living in Ireland was lower than 50,000. Eight years later, it was more than eight times that number. The numbers vary from study to study, but according to official government documents, there was an average non-Irish population of 14.9 per cent for all Irish towns over 1,500 inhabitants in 2016.
That was the average: there were, of course, several very surprised villages in rural Ireland that suddenly saw their population increase radically, and there were also towns that remained relatively untouched. Immigrants, as always, will follow the work. And their arrival brought several unexpected benefits: small rural schools on the verge of closure saw their pupil numbers increase and succeeded in staying open and thriving. Motorway construction benefited due to the influx of immigrant workers, just as it had in the UK some 50 years earlier with the [Irish]men who built Britain. And several towns and villages in Ireland saw their local GAA teams energised by the participation of new players from as far afield as Syria and Pakistan.
At the beginning of the 1990s, work was plentiful. Former taoiseach Garret FitzGerald, himself an economist, outlined in July 2007 the four reasons he believed were responsible for the extraordinary economic growth and development of this country in those years.
In Ireland between 1993 and 2001, output per worker improved by almost one-half, growing by over 5 per cent a year. Elsewhere in Europe, it increased at only one-third of that rate. Second, a major factor ... was the arrival in Ireland during that eight-year period of almost 300 new mainly high-tech industrial projects. These increased almost fivefold the value of our manufacturing output, trebled the volume of exports, and, most important of all, virtually quadrupled the reported money value of the average industrial workers output.
Third, [growth] came from an unprecedented increase of almost one-half in our workforce, a process that involved bringing into paid employment very many people who had previously been outside the labour force, viz. unemployed people, students or women who had been working in the home. All these had until then been dependants, either supported by bread-winning parents or spouses, or, in the case of the unemployed, by the State through social payments.
Finally, a significant proportion of those who had emigrated during the financial crisis of the 1980s returned during this period to join the Irish workforce.
All of these processes together, FitzGerald wrote, meant that by 2001 the average worker was both producing 46 per cent more output and needed to share this increased output amongst 28 per cent fewer people.
Like everybody else living in Ireland at the time, I saw the changes that were taking place during those years. I watched in astonishment as the 1980s receded like some kind of bad dream. When abroad, I was asked constantly about the Irish economic miracle. Everybody in this country who wanted to, or could, was working. There was a collective obsession with property prices: whether the property was at home or in Alicante, in Bucharest or Budapest, in Katowice or Dubai. In a strange reversal of our history, ordinary Irish people were in the buy-to-let market: becoming landlords themselves a status hitherto reserved for the rich.
And then.
*
Early in 2008, no ordinary Irish citizen could have foreseen the extent of the economic crash that was about to happen. Just a couple of years earlier, in 2006,taoiseach Bertie Ahern had mused that the boom is getting boomier. House prices were spiralling, the Celtic Tiger was still walking the land at least in theory and unemployment stood at the all- time low of 4.3 per cent, the third lowest unemployment rate in the EU. Politicians were congratulating themselves that things had never been better; and Irish developers were buying huge tracts of land in Portugal, Spain, Bulgaria, as well as transforming urban spaces at home.
During the affluent years although they werent so for everybody the profiles of the most prominent property developers seemed to be everywhere as they morphed into the latest celebrities. There was a public appetite to read about their extravagant lifestyles, to have some sort of vicarious experience of the lives of those men and women who were moving in high society circles in the UK and elsewhere.
Media profiling of the riches and influence to be amassed through property dealings arguably fuelled the wider wave of speculative development that seized the national economy, housing sector and, indeed, the national psyche through the 2000s.
Congratulatory articles about our rich and suddenly powerful speculators appeared frequently in the media. A report from November 2007 observed: Romania is all set for a property boom, Irish style. Last week a clutch of Irish developers were in Bucharest to tell Romanian politicians, developers and financiers about Irelands experience.
An Irish consortium, headed by former Revenue inspector Derek Quinlan, bought the Savoy Hotel Group in London for 1.1 billion in 2004. Johnny Ronan and Richard Barrett bought the Battersea Power Station for 400 mil- lion in 2006. Irish property magnates had now carved out a space at the centre of the London property market and were becoming international movers and shakers, for the first time ever. They were placed right at the heart of the old colonial foe, [something that] marked a significant economic and symbolic moment in the growth of the Celtic economy and a resonant moment in the progressive transformation in the international perception of Ireland and the Irish.
A couple of years earlier, in 2005, an article in The Economist had declared: [The developers] were influential in shifting both internal and external understandings of Ireland, from an image as EUs welfare-dependent poor cousin to an image as an entrepreneurial global success story, ripe with business and investment acumen.
The Department of Finance seems not to have recognised the dangers to the Irish economy posed by lack of fiscal regulation and the growth of the housing bubble in the early 2000s. However, there were others in Ireland who tried to sound a warning note about what lay ahead.
The ESRI, for one. Over the last twenty years each of the ESRIs Medium-Term Reviews has considered the medium-term outlook for the economy and the appropriate stance of fiscal policy. The introduction to each Review has referred to some relevant story from classical Greek mythology. The 2003 Review began with the story of Icarus! That publication identified the unduly expansionary fiscal policy, and the failure to control the housing market as a serious concern. The warnings became increasingly emphatic in 2005 and 2006 and this advice was picked up and widely reported in the Irish media ... After a decade of generally high growth and low unemployment there was a growing feeling among households and companies that the Irish economy was invincible many people did not want to hear the message and consider the possible remedies.
But the message from the government of the day was that any dire warnings about a crash were vastly overblown. The term soft landing gained widespread currency at that time, referring to the gradual levelling out in house prices over the coming years that was envisaged by many including the Department of Finance.
The economist David McWilliams was another to shout Stop!. He warned over and over from the early 2000s, writing hundreds of thousands of words in newspaper columns about the impending crash; he made documentaries about the subject; he wrote books on the topic.
Appearing before the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis in February 2015, McWilliams stated: The panic of September 2008 did not have to happen. It was not anything that was pre-ordained. It could have been fixed very early. The problem is if there is no housing boom there will be no banking boom. If there is no banking boom there will be no banking crisis. If there is no banking crisis there will be no interventions, such as the [bank] guarantee, and there will be no bailout. All of these things are the consequence of bad economic policy, not the cause.
Back in the early years of the 21st century, those who presided over the Celtic Tiger did not want to listen. In 2007, addressing the Irish Congress of Trades Unions conference, Bertie Ahern observed he didnt know how people who engage in that dont commit suicide. He was referring to those who talked down the economy. At that point, the bank guarantee scheme to underwrite 400 billion of bank debt, and the subsequent IMF 64 billion bailout were both still some 18 months into the future.
When the crash came, it was devastating and the worst hit countries in Europe were the PIIGS: Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain, where unregulated loans to acquire property had been fuelling the ever-expanding bubble in each of those countries.
*
And when the crash did come, emigration came along with it. While some studies emphasise the fact that the correlation between economic downturn and emigration is unsurprisingly strong ... with 50,000 [emigrating] in 2008 and remaining in the 80,000 range since 2011, with a record high of 89,000 in 2013, there are many other factors that feed into the process of emigration: factors that the Emigre study highlights.
In that studys fourth chapter, Departure, the authors observe: The overall picture which emerges is a complex one. As befits a society which is now largely urban, the traditional cliche of the emigrant as rural is no longer true in terms of absolute numbers, [but] the emigration from rural Ireland is still disproportionately higher than the norm.
In terms of education, following the trend of approximately a quarter of a century earlier: the general improvement in educational standards in Ireland in recent decades is reflected in the educational attainments of todays emigrants. In fact, todays emigrants are much more likely to have a high standard of education than the population in general and arguments referencing a brain drain are not misplaced.
And consider the proportion of emigrants with a third-level qualification leaving Ireland post-crash: 62 per cent of them, while the figure for the general population was considerably lower: 47 per cent of Irish people aged between 25-34 hold a tertiary qualification of three years or more, suggesting that university graduates are represented amongst those leaving.
The authors go on to observe that 'between 2006 and 2013 gross emigration of Irish people was in the order of 213,000 persons in total, rising from just over 13,000 in 2005 to almost 51,000 in the year ending March 2013, an increase of nearly 400 per cent in the seven years from the pre-crisis period in the Irish economy to the present. In itself, this gives the lie to the notion that emigration is purely a matter of "lifestyle choice"(Italics mine).
As Ive already noted, there are many and varied reasons for emigration: economic pressure, study, advancement in careers not available at home, a longing for change and adventure. Of those who emigrated post-crash, 47.1 per cent had been in full-time employment before their departure. Their reasons for leaving included having skills that were in demand else- where, in areas such as IT or health. Some felt that they were underemployed; they were often working in jobs below the level of their skills. They saw their opportunities for advancement at home as being limited; they were attracted by the higher salaries and better working conditions elsewhere.
The economic crash caused a huge upheaval in Irish society. Donal Donovan and Antoine Murphy, quoted in the Emigre study, have argued: The scale of the economic and financial catastrophe that befell Ireland was virtually unprecedented in post-war industrial country history ... In April 2013, the IMF calculated that over 23 per cent of the Irish labour force was either unemployed or under- employed. The construction industry suffered one of the most dramatic impacts of those years: from a peak of 380,000 employed in 2006, numbers fell to approximately 150,000: from an unsustainable 25 per cent of Irish GNP to 6 per cent in 2012.
In the 1950s, four out of every five people who emigrated from Ireland went to the United Kingdom. Emigrants after the economic crash followed a similar path, the majority leaving for Britain, with Australia, the US, Spain and Germany also featuring prominently.
*
The impact of emigration on a community is profound. Parents and siblings get left behind. Friends get left behind. Decades later, sitting in rooms all over Kilburn and Cricklewood, those who left Ireland in the 1950s spoke with palpable grief about their leave-takings. They spoke of how the brothers and sisters left behind in the homeplace often resented the responsibility of caring for ageing parents - a responsibility that they felt rested unfairly with them, given the departure of one or more of their siblings. They spoke of the bitterness of both sides feeling that they had got a raw deal those who had to leave, and those who needed to stay.
A national conversation developed on the airwaves during and after the departure of all those tens of thousands after the crash of 2008. Parents spoke openly of their grief at the perceived loss of their adult children. They reminded us of how previous generations of parents, friends and sib- lings must have also grieved those who left the country in the earlier waves of emigration. They reminded us of the pain of not seeing children and grandchildren with any kind of frequency, particularly when destinations such as Australia and New Zealand came into the mix. Skype and email, WhatsApp and FaceTime might have made those separations a little more bearable but they did not make them easy.
Catherine Dunne. Photograph: Noel Hillis
There is always a complex web of emotions to be navigated for parents: not wishing to stand in the way of the adult childs advancement or economic security, yet suffering the wrench of watching their children move far away from home, perhaps for good.
In the 1980s and mid-2000s, whole villages were unable to put a GAA team together, such was the exodus of young people from rural Irish communities. COVID-19 made that loss and those distances even more painful, the loneliness more acute. Families are fractured, wondering if they will ever see each other in person again.
*
In the wider community, after the crash of 2008, years of austerity followed. Spending on public services was vastly reduced. As a result, child poverty increased, health services diminished, spending on health and education was drastically cut.
After some initial green shoots reached towards the light of recovery in 2013 and 2014,the economy began to improve, slowly. The most up-to-date prediction is that The Irish economy is forecast to grow 7.2 per cent this year and by a further 5.1 per cent in 2022, according to a new European Commission report. Are these predictions overly optimistic? Have we had similar assurances before? The debt from March 2020 to mid-2021, a year and a half of COVID-19, is massive, with its final tally still uncertain.
In July 2021, Ursula von der Leyen announced a package of 990 million in EU grants to Ireland. She said it is part of the largest recovery package that Europe has seen since the Marshall Plan in the aftermath of the second World War and it is necessary because we want to spur the recovery for Europe, and indeed Ireland, for now and for the future.
We want to be stronger coming out of this pandemic than we went into it and we want to emphasise and invest in our common objectives, she said.
*
The possibility of improving economic prospects may entice some of the Irish living abroad to return to live here particularly those raising children. The separations and losses of COVID-19 may be a factor in making that return feel more urgent. Perhaps the single biggest obstacle returning emigrants would have to face is the short supply of houses and the rapidly increasing prices of those houses once they do come on the market.
Excerpt from:
Last one to leave Ireland, please switch off the lights - The Irish Times
Posted in Socio-economic Collapse
Comments Off on Last one to leave Ireland, please switch off the lights – The Irish Times
Transhuman Elon Musk: Your Brain Will Get Its Own USB-C Port
Posted: at 12:37 pm
Elon Musk is a consummate Technocrat and Transhumanist who seeks the merging of technology and the human body with the ultimate purpose of achieving immortality. His Neuralink project experiments with Brain Machine Interfaces (BMI) literally puts silicon in your skull and connects it to the outside world. TN Editor
Your brain, with a USB-C port in it. Thats Elon Musks vision for Brain Machine Interfaces (BMI). In a controversialJuly 2019 white paperhe claimed that his companyNeuralinkhad taken a huge step towards building a scalable high-bandwidth BMI system that would let the human brain stream full broadband electrophysiology data to a network, using a combination of ultra-fine polymer probes, a neurosurgical robot that sews them into the brain, and custom high-density electronics.
A single USB-C cable provides full-bandwidth data streaming from the device the paper noted: the device having been stitched, in theory, to your cerebral cortex. Neuroscientists were varying shades of intrigued, appalled and dismissive: the custom hardware would only pick up noise, they suggested: interpretation of brain waves simply wasnt that advanced; the ethical issues were pronounced; the body would reject this level of intervention; where was the peer review of the paper?
A year later, Musk has promised a Neuralink update.
This was cryptically announced by Musk in July 2020, with theTweets: If you cant beat em, join em Neuralink mission statement and Progress update August 28. Tendays ahead of the reveal, we decided to take stock of Neuralinks works and the ongoing discussion around the potential of BMI; speaking to a range of specialists in the sector about where the work was going and how realistic Musks vision was.
Neuralink began as a way to advance the technology of BMI: described by one organisation, the Mayo Clinic, as a technology that acquires brain signals, analyses them and translates them into commands that are relayed to output devices that carry out desired actions. (Many observers suspect that the pending update will have to do with the analyse them part of that statement, and Musks if you cant beat em statement refer to his well-documented concerns about the power of AI.)
These desired actions could be how to move a wheelchair without the use of your arms or how to control bionic limbs: It is plausible to imagine that a patient with spinal cord injury could dexterously control a digital mouse and keyboard wrote Musk in the 2019 paper. When combined with rapidly improving spinal stimulation techniques, in the future this approach could conceivably restore motor function. High-bandwidth neural interfaces should enable a variety of novel therapeutic possibilities.
While this might be the starting point for Neuralink, the ambitions of those working closely on BMI include, for some, the hope that technology could eventually to be used to connect the human race via a bona fide neural network; allowing people to communicate using thoughts and images rather than words, and even give over their motor function to others, with their consent*. The ideas behind this have their roots in a dizzying transhumanism. Meanwhile, very physical issues have remained a hurdle
The most commonly used invasive BMI chip, the Utah Array, comprises an electrode with tiny, incredibly sharp silicone needles, that are pushed into the brain, after some skull has been cut away. There are less invasive ways of collecting data on brain activity but in general terms, the more invasive the technology, the more data from the brain scientists can catch. Neuralinks tech is similar, but designed to gather even more data on how the brain works. The electrodes are long threads rather that short needles, allowing it to follow contours, and sewn into the brain rather than placed on top.
(Musks robot can accurately sew six sensor threads, or electrodes, per minute into the human brain, via small holes in the skull: The robot registers insertion sites to a common coordinate frame with landmarks on the skull, which, when combined with depth tracking, enables precise targeting of anatomically defined brain structures. An integrated custom software suite allows pre-selection of all insertion sites, enabling planning of insertion paths optimised to minimise tangling and strain on the threads.)
These sorts of advancements in BMI have been largelyavoided by neuroscientists at any significant scale due to their invasiveness; although testing on rats and chimpanzees is happening. The consequences of getting things wrong are significant. As Dr Henry Marsh, a leading English neurosurgeon, warned in one interview after the initial paper was published: The brain does not heal in the way bone and muscle and skin heals. Every time you cut the brain you damage it, and it wont recover
However, there are varying degrees of damage depending on the materials used. Co-founder and CSO of full stack neural interface platformBIOS, Oliver Armitage, explained the differences to Computer Business Review as follows: With the existing material, when youre using stiff materials like silicone, silicone substrates and metals, the finer and pointier and deeper into the tissue you go, the more damage you create. With some of the newer technologies based on soft polymer electrodes, that trade-off [between invasiveness and accuracy of data] doesnt really hold anymore.
Read full story here
View post:
Transhuman Elon Musk: Your Brain Will Get Its Own USB-C Port
Posted in Transhuman
Comments Off on Transhuman Elon Musk: Your Brain Will Get Its Own USB-C Port
SRMs Road to The US Open Seattle Part 6: Transhuman in the Box
Posted: at 12:37 pm
The grass is certainly looking greener on the other side at this particular moment, with the contrast of edge highlighting rectangles for untold hours being held up to making my stabby guys stab a bunch of elves. Anyway, lets hop in the bed of an Impulsor and get this antique on the roadshow:
SRMs Road to the Roadshow: US Open Seattle 2022: Part 6: Transhuman in the box: This grunge pun gimmick thing is really overstaying its welcome isnt it
On my first step of SRMs Return to Hovertank Hell, I built an Impulsor. Ill be straight up, this hover El Camino is markedly more user friendly than its bigger Repulsor cousins. Theres a handful of multi-hover plate panels instead of the 15 or so individual hover plates on a Repulsor, and that means a lot less time filing down mold lines. The instructions did have a few mistakes, calling out the wrong numbers for pieces at least twice and on occasion showing parts attached out of order. Building the whole thing took maybe an hour and a half, and thats with the extra Black Templars doodads I glued on. I do wish there was a techmarine gunner on the Impulsor like there is on the big boi tanks, but thats one less thing to paint I guess. None of this should come as a surprise to anyone who paid attention to the last edition and a half of the game, but I was painting smol Black Templars until 2019 so what do I know.
Why was I painting Black Templars Sternguard in 2019? Why???. Credit: SRM
When it came to actually painting the Impulsor, it was a pretty straightforward affair. Notably smaller than a Repulsor, my hope was that it wouldnt take as long as the RepEx. My primer also decided not to be hydrophobic this time, so paint actually stuck to the model! Painting a black tank black is exponentially more tedious when it takes 2-3 coats just to stick.
Impulsor WIP. Credit: SRM
I left off the hover plates, the canopy armor, the shield dome, missile turret, and the pair of cupola hatches. I glued those last few to 25mm bases so I could hold something while I painted them. I committed to the missile launcher because it seemed like the most interesting weapon option of the bunch, and I have a gut feeling the orbital strike relay is never going to be anything but a novelty option. Im not gluing the top armor plate down so if I want to run this cheaply, I super can, or I can swap in the cupola stubber from my RepEx. With vehicles and other expensive models like this, versatility is always the best way to go. Lastly, I painted the hover plates separately, which is a kinda messy affair, but it was a fine way to spend a rainy crafternoon.
The last touches were transfers and weathering. I plastered as many transfers as I could reasonably jam on there, but the top looked a little barren. I did something I feel like I saw Matt Hudson do in White Dwarf years and years ago and slapped a Templar cross on top of one of the cupola hatches. Since its got a crenelated shape I hit it with Micro-Sol a few times to soften it, then gently cut my way through the gap between the hatches with a sharp x-acto knife. Lastly, I hit it with a smidge of black paint from beneath so the loose flaps of cut transfer wouldnt show. Weathering was just a quick sponging of Rhinox Hide, some dashes of Stormhost Silver, and a few drybrushes of various neutral browns. Altogether it wasnt the most arduous painting experience in the world, but it certainly felt like it transitioned from model I decided to paint to project almost immediately.
Black Templars Impulsor. Credit: SRM
Any competitive player will use some athletic metaphor like getting your reps in and I myself am guilty of using this wholly adequate turn of phrase. Unfortunately for me, this has been less getting my reps in and more answering the regular gymgoer question of how much can you bench? only to weakly reply 35 pounds. You see, Ive been enjoying Age of Sigmar far more than 40k lately, making this whole event (and NOVA afterwards) a bit of a farce. Ive only got time for a single 40k game before heading out and I should probably write a list, as my flight is in 71 hours at time of writing.
Ive got 303 Power Level of Templars, and will need both 50 and 100PL lists for the event. Named characters are out, as this is Crusade and should be my own story, not theirs. My first priority will be to fit in every Primaris thing I have, and then from there add in small bois to fill things out. The exception will be my Techmarine, as theres quite a few vehicles in here that are gonna need tuning up. From there, Ill make sure my army is legal by adding and removing units accordingly, and go on from there. Listbuilding isnt my strong suit, and I typically build an army based more on vibes than on anything more concrete like math or competitive data.
Black Templars Crusaders, sans Neophytes on this occasion. Credit: SRM
Is this a vehicle-heavy list in an edition notoriously unfriendly towards vehicles? Yes. Will it do well? Probably not. Will I have fun going 2-4 in this event? Hopefully! I wish I could jam a Chaplain in there, but Marshal Siegward has been my Templar commander since I first started this force in 2017, a Techmarine is gonna be necessary for this motor pool, and a Crusade without The Emperors champion just seems foolhardy.
Dont talk to me or my son ever again. Credit: SRM
With a flight coming up alarmingly soon, a stack of homework still to be done for this event, and altogether too little time to actually get a game in before I bounce, Im afraid this is the last article in this series before hitting Seattle itself. Stay tuned in the coming weeks for one last pained grunge pun made for my amusement and my amusement only, and my recap of the event.
Have any questions or feedback? Drop us a note in the comments below or email us atcontact@goonhammer.com.
See more here:
SRMs Road to The US Open Seattle Part 6: Transhuman in the Box
Posted in Transhuman
Comments Off on SRMs Road to The US Open Seattle Part 6: Transhuman in the Box
Elon Musk unveils Optimus: A humanoid robot where you will … – Marca
Posted: at 12:37 pm
Elon Musk's expeeriments with Artificial Intelligente just took a wild turn that leaves us puzzled, to day the least. Last year, he had previously presented the Tesla Bot. A humanoid-shaped robot with capabilities that came from his car technology company. He promised to deliver the first actual prototype before the end of 2022 and begin production on a moderate number of models for sale in 2023. But what shocked us even more is Optimus, a perfected humanoid robot that will have the capabilities to have the personality of its owner. If you buy one of these robots, you will be able to download many of your traits to it and make it behave like you do. Sounds creepy but that's where technology has gotten us thus far.
During an interview with Business Insider's CEO, here's what Musk said: "Humanoid robots are happening. The rate of advancement of AI is very rapid. Optimus is a general purpose, sort of worker-droid. The initial role must be in work that is repetitive, boring, or dangerous. Basically, work that people don't want to do. We could download the things that we believe make ourselves so unique. Now, of course, if you're not in that body anymore, that is definitely going to be a difference, but as far as preserving our memories, our personality, I think we could do that. Humanity has designed the world to interact with a bipedal humanoid with two arms and ten fingers. So if you want to have a robot fit in and be able to do things that humans can do, it must be approximately the same size and shape and capability."
Although Optimus still seems like a project for the future, the Tesla Bots are hitting the market in 2023. Knowing how quickly Elon Musk tends to grill his workers, we completely believe in his time frames for delivery. At 5-foot-8 and 125 pounds, the Tesla Bot will have similar capabilities to the actual cars. It will basically be a walking computer who will also be able to perform physical activities. In its face there's a screen that will present all the information the owner needs. Physically, they will be capable to deadlift 150 pounds and carry about 45 pounds. However, they will walk painfully slow at only 5mph. Although these mechanical limitations were put in place on purpose in order to remain unable to harm humans. The future is here, we only hope it's not a Skynet scenario where robots take over the world.
Read more from the original source:
Elon Musk unveils Optimus: A humanoid robot where you will ... - Marca
Posted in Transhuman
Comments Off on Elon Musk unveils Optimus: A humanoid robot where you will … – Marca
WISeKey Announces the Launch of The Code to The Metaverse an Interactive Multi-Media Platform at Davos Event – GlobeNewswire
Posted: at 12:37 pm
WISeKey Announces the Launch of The Code to The Metaverse an Interactive Multi-Media Platform at Davos Event
TransHuman Code Authors, Carlos Moreira and David Fergusson Introduce The Code to The Metaverse at Davos Event
Geneva and Zug Switzerland, May 31, 2022 WISeKey International Holding Ltd (WISeKey, SIX: WIHN), a leading cybersecurity, IoT and AI company, announced that its CEO and founder, Carlos Moreira and David Fergusson, Executive Managing Director, M&A at Generational Equity, introduced their latest project, The Code to The Metaverse at Davos event.
In the bestselling 2019 book, The transHuman Code, Carlos Moreira and David Fergusson offered a carefully curated take on the essential conversations that will determine if technology will upgrade or undermine our humanity. Born at Davos event, through multiple conversations and workshops, fittingly, it could be argued that the books origin was decentralized.
At unprecedented speed, the expanding frontier of the Metaverse is now stretching well beyond its Second Life gaming roots, said Mr. Fergusson at the launch event. In the most dramatic technological innovation of the last decade, we are truly at the threshold of our future lives as we build the bridges between our physical universe and the Metaverse.
However, the founding premise of The transHuman Code still holds true as we venture into the unknown of the Metaverse, said Mr. Moreira. Firstly, that the Human is greatest technology of all and, most importantly, that it is paramount to keep humans at the center of gravity in this technological revolution.
In a series of events at the 2022 annual Davos gathering of business, policy and philanthropic leaders, Moreira and Fergusson announced the sequel to The transHuman Code with the creation of the new groundbreaking multi-media platform - The Code to The Metaverse. Through the interactive series, participants, viewers and readers will be invited backstage into the laboratories and into the Metaverse to experience their future in this 3D virtual realm.
To provide a glimpse into whats coming, the authors engaged 6 Metaverse pioneers to discuss how the rapidly evolving gateways into and tools for the Metaverse will transform our personal, professional & social life experiences in ways unimagined. Joining Carlos Moreira and David Fergusson were:
Offering exclusive insights and announcing dynamic initiatives, the contributors all echoed a common theme: The Metaverse will have a dramatic impact on how we socialize, work, and learn in the future. At the forefront of the collective agreement, Carlos Moreira and David Fergusson aligned with the esteemed technology innovators on the premise that all people be able engage safely and with confidence in the Metaverse so that we as individuals, are respected and treated fairly on all virtual platforms.
About WISeKeyWISeKey (NASDAQ: WKEY; SIX Swiss Exchange: WIHN) is a leading global cybersecurity company currently deploying large-scale digital identity ecosystems for people and objects using Blockchain, AI, and IoT respecting the Human as the Fulcrum of the Internet. WISeKey microprocessors secure the pervasive computing shaping todays Internet of Everything. WISeKey IoT has an installed base of over 1.6 billion microchips in virtually all IoT sectors (connected cars, smart cities, drones, agricultural sensors, anti-counterfeiting, smart lighting, servers, computers, mobile phones, crypto tokens, etc.). WISeKey is uniquely positioned to be at the leading edge of IoT as our semiconductors produce a huge amount of Big Data that, when analyzed with Artificial Intelligence (AI), can help industrial applications predict the failure of their equipment before it happens.Our technology is Trusted by the OISTE/WISeKeys Swiss-based cryptographic Root of Trust (RoT) provides secure authentication and identification, in both physical and virtual environments, for the Internet of Things, Blockchain, and Artificial Intelligence. The WISeKey RoT serves as a common trust anchor to ensure the integrity of online transactions among objects and between objects and people. For more information, visitwww.wisekey.com.
Press and investor contacts:WISeKey International Holding LtdCompany Contact: Carlos MoreiraChairman & CEOTel: +41 22 594 3000info@wisekey.com
WISeKey Investor Relations (US)Contact: Lena CatiThe Equity Group Inc.Tel: +1 212 836-9611lcati@equityny.com
Disclaimer:This communication expressly or implicitly contains certain forward-looking statements concerning WISeKey International Holding Ltd and its business. Such statements involve certain known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors, which could cause the actual results, financial condition, performance, or achievements of WISeKey International Holding Ltd to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. WISeKey International Holding Ltd is providing this communication as of this date and does not undertake to update any forward-looking statements contained herein as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
This press release does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities, and it does not constitute an offering prospectus within the meaning of article 652a or article 1156 of the Swiss Code of Obligations or a listing prospectus within the meaning of the listing rules of the SIX Swiss Exchange. Investors must rely on their own evaluation of WISeKey and its securities, including the merits and risks involved. Nothing contained herein is, or shall be relied on as, a promise or representation as to the future performance of WISeKey
Excerpt from:
WISeKey Announces the Launch of The Code to The Metaverse an Interactive Multi-Media Platform at Davos Event - GlobeNewswire
Posted in Transhuman
Comments Off on WISeKey Announces the Launch of The Code to The Metaverse an Interactive Multi-Media Platform at Davos Event – GlobeNewswire
Upcoming Supreme Court ruling in major Second Amendment case looms over calls for new gun laws – CBS News
Posted: at 12:35 pm
Washington As lawmakers at the state and federal level mount renewed efforts to enact stricter gun control laws in response to the latest mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, the Supreme Court is poised to issue its most significant Second Amendment ruling in more than a decade.
The decision from the high court in a dispute over New York's stringent licensing regime for carrying concealed handguns outside the home could come as soon as next week, setting it against the backdrop of two mass shootings in a span of 10 days that shocked the nation the first, a racist attack at a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, that left10 dead; the second at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas where 19 students and two teachers were killed.
New York's rules require a resident seeking a license to carry a firearm outside the home to demonstrate a "proper cause" to obtain one, which state courts have said is a "special need for self-protection." Challengers to the law argue the Second Amendment protects the right to carry firearms outside the home for self defense, while supporters warn invalidating the restrictions could lead to more firearms on the streets.
Following oral arguments in November in the case, known as New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen, a majority of the court appeared poised to invalidate the New York law, though the scope of a forthcoming decision on the right to carry outside the home remains unclear.
Joseph Blocher, a law professor at Duke University and co-director of its Center for Firearms Law, said it's unlikely the Supreme Court finds all permit requirements for public carry of handguns to be unconstitutional, which would be a sweeping decision mandating nationwide permitless carry. Instead, the high court could strike down the New York law on the grounds it is too strict or gives too much discretion to state licensing officials.
Either way, Blocher predicted that a decision from the Supreme Court to invalidate New York's rules could prompt states to shift their focus to new restrictions that prohibit firearms in sensitive spaces, such as in bars.
The prospect of location-specific restrictions on public carry was an issue raised by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett in November, as they questioned whether a city or state could ban guns on university campuses, in football stadiums or in Times Square. Justice Clarence Thomas and Elena Kagan, meanwhile, questioned the potential for varying degrees of regulation based on the density of the population.
"It seems completely intuitive that there should be different gun regimes in New York than in Wyoming or that there should be different gun regimes in New York City than in rural counties upstate," Kagan said. "But it's a hard thing to make with our notion of constitutional rights generally."
Blocher, though, noted that throughout the nation's history, guns have been regulated more in urban areas than in rural places.
"Rules about permit requirements or open carry and the kinds of guns people possess might be tailored to the communities where they're being used," he said, adding that Thomas appeared open to the notion that the "urban-rural divide could play a role in charting the boundaries of the Second Amendment going forward."
The New York case is the most significant involving gun rights that the justices have heard since 2008, when the high court ruled the Second Amendment protects the right to have a handgun in the home for self-defense, and in 2010, when the court said the right applies to the states.
Writing for the majority in 2008's Heller v. District of Columbia, which involved D.C.'s handgun ban, Justice Antonin Scalia noted a rise in handgun violence nationwide and said the Constitution leaves the government a "variety of tools for combatting that problem, including some measures regulating handguns," but the court provided little guidance as to what gun restrictions are constitutionally permissible.
Since then, the 2008 decision is often cited by both sides of the gun control debate as a reason against enacting new firearms regulations and as the reason why gun violence has continued to rise in the U.S.
Nelson Lund, a law professor at George Mason University who is an expert on the Second Amendment, said the forthcoming ruling in the New York legal fight could allow the court to clear up uncertainties left after the Heller decision.
"There are so many questions left unanswered by Heller, and ever since that case was decided in 2008, people have been arguing about what it implies," he said. "You can make arguments on both sides because Heller was written in a way that allowed people to do that."
Lund noted that a decision from the high court voiding New York's concealed-carry licensing framework could jeopardize regimes in other states at least six allow a person to carry a firearm in public only if they demonstrate a need to do so though that raises the question of what law then could replace those rules.
"They could write an opinion that basically has very little effect beyond invalidating this particular statute, or they could also write an opinion that gives a lot of guidance about how far state and local governments may go," he said.
Amid the wait for the Supreme Court's decision in the challenge to New York's limits, the mass shootings in Buffalo and Uvalde have spurned new attempts by elected officials at the state and federal levels to change laws to curb gun violence.
In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, said the state "must reassess the twin issues of school safety and mass violence" and requested state legislative leaders convene special legislative committees to develop recommendations on issues to prevent future school shootings, including mental health and gun safety.
And in Congress, a bipartisan group of senators has been meeting this week to find common ground on new firearms laws.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut, said in a statement Wednesday that he and Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, are working through details of a measure focusing on "red flag" laws, which allow courts to order the confiscation of firearms from those threatening to harm themselves or others. He is also discussing with senators a plan for the safe storage of firearms.
Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine who is also involved in gun control talks, said negotiators are "making rapid progress toward a common sense package" that could garner bipartisan support.
The House Judiciary Committee is meeting to consider eight different gun control measures that together will be packaged as the "Protecting Our Kids Act" and taken up by the full House next week. Among the bills are plans to raise the minimum purchasing age for semiautomatic rifles from 18 to 21, ban large-capacity magazines and establish requirements regulating the storage of firearms on residential facilities.
Any legislation that clears the House, though, must be able to garner 60 votes to advance in the evenly divided Senate.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has blessed the attempt at bipartisan negotiations to reach consensus on laws to reduce gun violence, but he warned last week that the Senate will proceed with a vote on gun control legislation in the near future even if the talks fail.
Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said during an event in Kentucky on Wednesday that the discussions are meant to "see if we can find a way forward consistent with the Second Amendment that targets the problems."
But Blocher said the failure by Congress to enact new limits on firearms has more to do with politics than constitutional bounds.
"Politically, we are nowhere near the limits that the Supreme Court has set out. In Heller, the Supreme Court made clear that a potentially wide range of gun regulations are perfectly constitutional, and thus far we have for political reasons not taken advantage of that, whether it's expanded background checks or extreme-risk laws or other possibilities as well. The [New York] case could change that, but I expect the court will recognize gun rights and regulations can go hand-in-hand like they have for all of American history," he said. "The greatest obstacle to gun regulations in the United States is political, not judicial."
Trending News
Here is the original post:
Upcoming Supreme Court ruling in major Second Amendment case looms over calls for new gun laws - CBS News
Posted in Second Amendment
Comments Off on Upcoming Supreme Court ruling in major Second Amendment case looms over calls for new gun laws – CBS News
What is the Second Amendment? – Voice of America – VOA News
Posted: at 12:35 pm
What is the Second Amendment?
The Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution gives Americans the right to bear arms. It states:
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
Bill of Rights
The Second Amendment is one of 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution, collectively called the Bill of Rights. These amendments were written to protect individual Americans from tyrannical rule and include the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech, religion and press, and the Seventh Amendment, which proclaims the right of a trial by jury in civil cases. Other rights include the right to due process and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment.
Historical perspective
When the Founding Fathers added the Bill of Rights to the Constitution in 1791, they wanted to protect individuals from potentially dangerous central and state governments. Most scholars say the Constitution might not have been ratified without the 10 amendments, as many Americans feared the power of a centralized government and military. Much of that fear stemmed from laws the British imposed in the lead-up to the American Revolution, including levying taxes that were deemed too high and depriving some colonists of the right to bear arms.
A well regulated Militia
Legal scholars have debated the Founding Fathers intentions with respect to the Second Amendment. Those who support gun control measures often argue that the Founders intentions was only for well-regulated forces authorized by state governments to have access to weapons, and not for all individuals to be able to bear arms. Those who oppose restrictions on gun rights say the Second Amendment protects the right of ordinary citizens to own weapons and argue that the Founders included the words a well-regulated militia as just one example of why citizens could be in need of arms.
What have courts said?
In 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Second Amendment protects a persons right to own firearms unconnected to military service and allows them to use those weapons for lawful purposes, including self-defense. Courts have also upheld a range of laws that put some restrictions on gun ownership, including for reasons of age, prior criminal convictions and issues of mental health.
Gun culture
Thirty percent of all Americans own a gun, while 42% live in a household with a gun, according to a 2017 Pew Research Center survey. Guns have long been a part of the countrys history and culture from its days fighting the American Revolution and exploring the Wild West and continue to be an enduring part of life for many people. However, the right to self-defense, while long held in the country, has in recent decades started to come under question in the wake of numerous high-profile mass shootings and a rise of gun violence that has led to guns becoming the leading cause of death among children and teens.
Gun control
Because of the Second Amendment and Americas long history with gun ownership, the gun control debate in the country generally focuses not on questions of whether or not citizens have the right to bear arms, but over matters of who should have access to guns and which weapons should be legal. Even those questions have been difficult for politicians to come to agreement over, with Congress unable to act on the issue for more than a decade.
World comparisons
America has more guns per person than anywhere else in the world, according to a 2018 report by the Small Arms Survey, a Geneva-based organization. U.S. gun owners possess 393.3 million weapons, higher than the countrys population of 330 million, according to the report. The Small Arms Survey says India has the second-highest number of civilian-owned firearms, with 71.1 million for its population of 1.4 billion.
See the original post here:
What is the Second Amendment? - Voice of America - VOA News
Posted in Second Amendment
Comments Off on What is the Second Amendment? – Voice of America – VOA News
Washington Post reporter claims the Second Amendment was reinterpreted to include individual gun rights – Fox News
Posted: at 12:35 pm
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
A Washington Post reporter argued on Tuesday that conservative groups reinterpreted the Second Amendment to claim individuals have a right to own a gun.
Staff writer Amber Phillips explained in an analysis titled "How the Second Amendment was reinterpreted to protect individual rights" that historians claim the amendments protection of individual gun rights is a "relatively recent reading" pushed by conservative groups rather than the text of the Second Amendment.
"The historical consensus is that, for most of American history, the amendment was understood to concern the use of guns in connection with militia service. The Founding Fathers were likely focused on keeping state militias from being disarmed, said Joseph Blocher, who specializes in the Second Amendment at Duke Universitys law school," Phillips wrote.
Joseph Blocher similarly attributed claims that the amendment protects individual rights "to a relatively recent political push by gun rights groups to reinterpret the Constitution."
PRO-SECOND AMENDMENT LAWMAKERS MAKING TEXAS SHOOTING POLITICAL, NOT BETO OROURKE: NEW YORKER
Bodyguard with gun indoor home (iStock)
"There has been a decades-long and very successful movement to change the public perception of what the Second Amendment is for," Blocher said.
Phillips also cited Yale law professor Reva Siegel insisting that "an individuals right to use guns in self-defense is not expressly written in the Constitution."
"The interpretation that the Second Amendment extends to individuals rights to own guns only became mainstream in 2008, when the Supreme Court ruled in a landmark gun case, District of Columbia vs. Heller, that Americans have a constitutional right to own guns in their homes, knocking down the Districts handgun ban," Phillips wrote.
FOLLOWING TEXAS SHOOTING, REPUBLICANS ARE FAILING AT PROTECTING CHILDREN FROM HARM: LA TIMES
Comedian Dean Obeidallah echoed this view in an MSNBC column on Saturday in which he insisted the individuals right to own a firearm came from a "cravenly political" Supreme Court following the Heller decision rather than the Constitution.
Phillips concluded with a quote from Saint Josephs University professor Susan Liebell suggesting that an upcoming gun case in the Supreme Court could expand gun rights even further.
"We have moved to more and more radical interpretation of the Second Amendment," Liebell said.
With loaded firearms in hand and flags all around people gather for a 5 Mile Open Carry March for Freedom organized by Florida Gun Supply in Inverness, Florida, U.S. July 4, 2016. (REUTERS)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
In 2021, the Supreme Court announced it will hear the case New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen. The case focuses on whether people have the right to carry a firearm in public for self-defense. The court is expected to announce its decision in the next few days or weeks.
See original here:
Washington Post reporter claims the Second Amendment was reinterpreted to include individual gun rights - Fox News
Posted in Second Amendment
Comments Off on Washington Post reporter claims the Second Amendment was reinterpreted to include individual gun rights – Fox News
Justice Scalia’s words on Second Amendment absolutism are true, prophetic – Daily Leader – Dailyleader
Posted: at 12:35 pm
On the brutal reality of the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting and all the others in our country dating back to Columbine and Luke Woodhams rampage at Pearl High School in Mississippi the thoughts and prayers of do-nothing politicians ring particularly hollow and meaningless.
I come at this as a gun owner, a hunter, someone who absolutely will defend my home and family with force, and as one who supports the rule of law and respects the authority of those who wear the badge and stand their posts.
Likewise, I come at this as a father, grandfather, and educator responsible for other peoples children. Democrats and Republicans, conservatives and liberals, gun owners and gun opponents, its time to come to the table and find common ground that makes us all safer particularly innocent children.
All of us in this country have let the National Rifle Association and similar groups make us afraid and we as voters have allowed them to hold our political processes hostage. When party primaries are made litmus tests on who can genuflect most to the gun lobby, responsible government and sensible public policy are not the results.
Having safer schools may hit us all in the wallet through higher taxes to pay for the security we say we want. More stringent background checks may slow gun transactions. The current distinctions between handguns, long guns, and assault weapons need to be reconsidered. But our current laws and the enforcement of them or lack thereof arent working.
No, background checks and other deterrent strategies will not categorically stop school shootings. Yes, those measures will annoy and inconvenience law-abiding citizens. But they almost certainly will decrease incidents like Uvalde, Sandy Hook, Pearl, and Columbine.
As a society, we have made it too easy for the evil, the angry, or the mentally ill among us to get and possess guns. They are using those easily acquired guns to kill our children.
Congress and our state legislatures face the challenge of making schools safer from gun violence and those lawmakers must somehow find the political courage to risk alienating the gun lobby.
The gun lobby makes a lot of noise about activist judges limiting freedom and grabbing guns. Most of it is fundraising nonsense that plays on fear, prejudice, and anger.
I had a chance conversation with a sitting Supreme Court justice at an art gallery opening in Jackson, Mississippi on March 31, 2001. Justice Antonin Scalia, the conservative lion of the high court, was appropriately dressed for the occasion except for the knee-high snake boots into which his trousers were neatly tucked.
Scalia was in Mississippi that day for two reasons. First and foremost, the jurist was here to go turkey hunting in Jones County. Second, Scalias time in Mississippi coincided with the day King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sophia of Spain paid a royal visit to Jacksons Mississippi Arts Pavilion for a private tour of the states The Majesty of Spain exhibit.
In talking with Scalia, it became obvious that he loved both the fine arts and rural Mississippi hunting pleasures with nearly equal passions. After his 2016 death (while he was on a hunting trip in Texas), I reflected on the dichotomy of this learned mans worldview and his surprisingly forthright views on the Second Amendment.
In 2008s District of Columbia v. Heller, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that gun rights did not inure only to those in a well-regulated militia as anti-gun forces argued but to individuals in their homes which affirmed the pro-gun arguments in the case and overjoyed the NRA. Scalia wrote the majority opinion.
But Scalia also wrote something else in the Heller decision that the NRA didnt applaud: Nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.
Scalia would also assert the belief that like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited and that it is not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose.
Justice Scalias assertion remains as true today as it was 20 years ago. The Second Amendment is not a blank check.
Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.
See the article here:
Justice Scalia's words on Second Amendment absolutism are true, prophetic - Daily Leader - Dailyleader
Posted in Second Amendment
Comments Off on Justice Scalia’s words on Second Amendment absolutism are true, prophetic – Daily Leader – Dailyleader
Revisiting the Second Amendment – Monadnock Ledger Transcript
Posted: at 12:35 pm
Published: 6/2/2022 9:25:28 AM
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
Do the rights to bear arms remain if there is an existing well regulated militia? Is a well regulated militia to be formed by those who have the rightto bear arms? Hasnt Congress decided that the National Guard is the militia? Hasnt the security of the United States been repeatedly and successfully defended by the U.S. armed forces? Can the security of a free state, or more importantly its citizens, be ensured by the peoples right to bear arms, or can it also be threatened, compromisedeven violated because of that right?
Shouldnt we be more concerned about how this amendments interpretation has changed our society for the worse? How it has led to increased violence, fears of public exposure, changed schools settings from places of safe learning to increasingly militarized fortresses.
This amendment has been addressed by the Supreme Court in 1876, 1886, 1939 and 2008, when the current ruling passed by a 5-4 decision. I think it time for the Supreme Court to revisit the issue.
Frank Meneghini
Peterborough
Here is the original post:
Revisiting the Second Amendment - Monadnock Ledger Transcript
Posted in Second Amendment
Comments Off on Revisiting the Second Amendment – Monadnock Ledger Transcript