Just following the trials and tribulations of Miles away from home. It was looking so promising too 🙂 One of the things about reading your friend’s blogs is that you realise what a perfect vacuum blogging often is. Without feed aggregators and global RSS syndication almost all of our hopes, dreams and disappointments stay within the safe confines of our heads and our friday night drinking buddies. With mass syndication the blog becomes an open digital diary where we frankly reveal our ordeals for all the world to see. The irony of it all isn’t lost on me.
Thought this was an excellent article on the seemingly endless saga surrounding Nigerian footballer John Obi Mikel. It’s well structured and clearly thought out. Read it here
The actions of the players’ agents (if indeed they are that) certainly appear to be highly cynical. In particular, the attempted circumvention of binding arbitration from FIFA in favour of a Norwegian court ruling wasn’t helpful. It’s difficult to argue with the contention that the player himself could have sorted out this mess if he’d adopted a more direct approach with both clubs. Still, given the intrigue of death-threats, kidnappings etc., it’s easy to argue there were mitigating circumstances.
Marco Polo of the West (Waterford)
Befitting his title as the Marco Polo of Bunmahon (a small village in west waterford), my friend Kieran or Miles as he’s sometimes known has left for the east. We wish him well on his new adventures. It’s a real culture shock initially with strange activities such as getting drunk and going to a chinese restaraunt. Not like Ireland at all. BTW, & AFAIK the clear plastic bags for the laptops are to help you carry them visibly throughout the airport for security reasons. Paranoid or what…
A few years ago an Irish comedia called Tommy Tiernan performed a controversial sketch on the most convervative and traditional of Irish television shows, The Late Late show. The sketch depicted Jesus Christ’s (the one from Nazareth circa 30AD) last moments on the cross. It was certainly irreverent, probably blasphemous and left a large portion of the show’s studio audience stunned. Hundreds (not thousands or millions) of calls were received by the RTE switchboard condemning the joke for its tastelessness and blasphemy. Then something strange happened. We quickly got over it. Yes, a country renowned for its staunch catholicism revealed to the world that it had grown up and could accept religious criticism and humour. So just to summarise what happened for those less enlightened than our good selves. To the best of my knowledge:
- There were no marches in the streets
- Nobody was killed for expressing their opinion
- No buildings or cars were set alight
- No children bearing terrorist slogans were put in front of the world media so their parents’ outrage could be recorded
- No death threats were issued
- No beatings resulted
- People within the media were not fired for expressing coherently argued and above-all, peaceful, beliefs
- No foreign contracts with Irish companies were lost
- Nobody needed to be evacuated from our embassies
- No protests, peaceful or otherwise, were staged
- There was no incitement to kill those who insulted a prophet
- There was no cry for a holy war or divine retribution
- No scripture was cited to justify violent and threatening actions
- Freedom of speech was not curtailed
- The world did not look on in horror.
On an island unfortunately known throughout the world for sectarian violence in a northern province, there was little response to mild religious provocation. It was not always so but it’s difficult to sympathise with religious fervour that’s so menacingly displayed. Liberty, fraternity and equality.