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Lawyers Exaggerating Weak Arguments Fools Only Fools

Article No 2 in the series of a commentary on Alternative Mother and Baby Homes Report, authored by 21 Irish legal academics and one sociologist.

Exaggeration is the pillar of comedy, we can all spot it, and the resultant absurdity is so unrealistic, it causes laughter. In the area of science concerned with studying the behaviour of persuasion, exaggeration has also been shown to damage credibility. Consequently, exaggeration diminishes the credibility of the story being told, and the more exaggerated a claim is, the closer it is to falsehood. Outside Ireland, lawyers are taught that using exaggeration to hide bad facts or weak arguments will fool no one. Yet at least 22 teachers of law at Irish universities have produced and published a document thinking that exaggeration will bolster their claims, unaware of its potential to create comedy. Quality argument based on genuine facts are strong enough to stand on their own, especially in a functioning intellectual tradition, which is its most powerful instrument of persuasion. [Read the first article here]

Chores exaggerated into charges of slave labour
Nearly every inpatient or inmate of an institution — worldwide —in the past were given chores to do. Today such chores are titled ‘occupational therapy’ as sitting idle all day is conducive to poor mental health. These chores like making one’s own bed, doing one’s own laundry, preparing food and feeding one’s own infant are now falsely made out to be ‘slave labour’. The same domestic duties which women and girls would be ‘forced’ to do at home they did in institutions. It is not considered slave labour in the past, nor it is not slave labour today. It’s a gross exaggeration, the type which has no business in academic work and would be thrown out with the garbage in any educational system which had functioning quality control mechanisms.

The slavery claims could not pass muster in any generation which came before the recent generations of leisure. At the tender age of five Ireland’s president, Michael D. Higgins and his younger brother were sent to live on his uncle’s farm. They performed the chores that every child was expected to perform.[1] Males were given physically harder work than females, all in keeping with their perceived strengths and abilities. If one is going to redefine this unpaid work as slave labour, then Michael D., myself and millions of others will be entitled to claim to be victims and claim compensation from the taxpayers. The beauty is of course that the leisure generations will be paying the compo.

The slave labour exaggeration evinces the presence of perniciousness in the motivation of some academics, but it can also occur due to innocence. People who grew up in an affluent society, with massive amounts of leisure time, who were not expected to do unpaid chores, will find it difficult to imagine long hours of hard work expected of everyone — not just children — to earn their keep and improve their lot. Michael D. secondary school education was not free. His graft as a young boy and that of his relatives financed his education and his success.

Those generations who endured so much, and worked so hard, that the following generation would have a better life than they, are now pilloried as backward and misogynistic. The reality is that most of Ireland’s academics, for generations back, are there because of the hard graft of their pauper ancestors. They are mere social climbers parroting the prejudices of the elite to social elite to obfuscate their ancestral poverty.

One thing is clear to all who read the alternative report, that the intended target is the church and religious women. The authors fail to distinguish between conditions in secular run institutions (County Homes) and in religious run institutions. Accordingly, the authors miss the opportunity to report the most pertinent of the commission’s findings regarding work, that ‘no mother and baby home inflicted a workload on the mothers comparable to that in county homes’.[2]

The commission states clearly and presents the evidence in abundance that women were far better off in religious run institutions than in the secular variety. However, the commission themselves at times over overstate the workload in County Homes, viewing such work through the eyes of the wealthiest generations in Irish history. Generations who never had to do chores, have no experience of living in unsanitary households, have never slept in the same room as cattle, have never slept in an open dormitory or a long ward, have never used or do not know what a chamber pot or bourdaloue is, have never done the laundry or washed seed in ‘Chamber lye’ (made from urine and wood ash), have never got a bite from typhus carrying louse, and so on.

If that were not bad enough, most academic research is conducted by people who have never been out of school and have no life experience beyond a middle-class upbringing. There is little chance of such individuals being able to comprehend the living conditions of the past without extensive education. That education should be available, especially within the teaching of history. However, it is not available because many Irish people are embarrassed to admit the conditions which their forebearers lived in. It is still not unusual to spot, at graduation day, humble parents, of humble origin, who sacrificed much and worked hard to gift their offspring a college education. Such graduates have been injected into a new class and are keen to disavow their parents and origins for fear that their fellow big knobs will look down on them. Of course, many of their new cohort are of similar humble origins, have similar fears and illusory is reinforced by the group. The upshot is that college graduates are very poorly equipped to be able to analyse historical evidence, and it is abundantly evident in both the official commission report and in the alternative academic report.

Diane B. Kraft College of Law at the University of Kentucky writes that ‘many authors of books on legal writing advise law students not to exaggerate when writing fact statements and arguments in briefs’. […]

If the facts or arguments are on your side, you don’t need to exaggerate them to win. If they’re not, you’re not going to fool anyone by trying to hide bad facts or a weak argument with exaggerated claims about your client’s or the opposing party’s case. Writers use hyperbole thinking it will bolster their arguments, but it often has the opposite effect of signalling to the reader that the facts or arguments are so weak, the writer can’t rely on them alone to win. [3]

If teachers of law at American universities can see the perils of exaggeration, why are their counterparts in Ireland not in possession of such knowledge? That in turn leads to big question, are the clients of Irish lawyers badly served?

As I was writing this article, an article appeared in the Irish Times giving bodice to judges who were complaining about the quality of the work of many barristers. They accused them of making claims without any corroborating evidence and submitting documentary evidence below the required quality standards.

Mr Justice John Edwards sitting in the Court of Appeal said, ‘the practice of barristers giving evidence on a hearsay basis without providing corroboration is “happening all the time” and “has to stop”.’[4]

I think that is a strong indication that Irish universities — for decades — have not been training their lawyers properly, and it has gone full circle where badly trained law graduates have now become badly trained law teachers.

 

EJ

 

Footnotes

[1] Duggan, ‘Brothers Had to Work Hard Growing up on Rural Farm’.

[2] Commission of Investigation, ‘Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation Final Report’. §10.53

[3] Kraft, ‘The Perils of Hyperbole’.

[4] Gallagher, ‘Judges Frustrated with Lawyers’.

 

Commission of Investigation. ‘Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation Final Report’. Irish Government, 30 October 2020.

Deutsche. ‘German Floods: Where Did Fake News about 600 Dead Babies Come from? | DW | 01.08.2021’. DW.COM, 1 August 2021. https://www.dw.com/en/german-floods-where-did-fake-news-about-600-dead-babies-come-from/a-58717714.

Duggan, Barry. ‘Brothers Had to Work Hard Growing up on Rural Farm’. Independent. 12 November 2011. https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/brothers-had-to-work-hard-growing-up-on-rural-farm-26791278.html.

Editor, Carl O’Brien Education. ‘Grade Inflation Undermining Quality of University Degrees, President Higgins Warns’. The Irish Times. 8 June 2021. https://www.irishtimes.com/news/education/grade-inflation-undermining-quality-of-university-degrees-president-higgins-warns-1.4587985.

FitzGerald, John. ‘There Is a Social Gradient in Ill Health and Earlier Deaths: Poor People Die Younger’. The Irish Times. 5 July 2019. https://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/there-is-a-social-gradient-in-ill-health-and-earlier-deaths-poor-people-die-younger-1.3946760.

Gallagher, Conor. ‘Judges Frustrated with Uncorroborated Claims about Criminal Defendants’. The Irish Times. 23 August 2021. https://www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/judges-frustrated-with-uncorroborated-claims-about-criminal-defendants-1.4653360.

Kelly, Laura. ‘The Contraceptive Pill in Ireland c.1964–79: Activism, Women and Patient–Doctor Relationships’. Medical History 64, no. 2 (n.d.): 195–218. https://doi.org/10.1017/mdh.2020.3.

Kraft, Diane B. ‘The Perils of Hyperbole’. B&B – Bench & Bar Magazine 31 (May 2011).

Lappeman, Maura, and Leslie Swartz. ‘Rethinking Obstetric Violence and the “Neglect of Neglect”: The Silence of a Labour Ward Milieu in a South African District Hospital’. BMC International Health and Human Rights 19, no. 1 (30 October 2019): 30. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12914-019-0218-2.

Lynch, Donal. ‘Jackie Lavin Was Right to Question If Costly College Degrees Pay Off’. Independent.Ie, 7 June 2014. https://www.independent.ie/life/jackie-lavin-was-right-to-question-if-costly-college-degrees-pay-off-30337324.html.

POLITICO. ‘The Doctor Who Brought Abortion out of the Shadows in Ireland’, 20 March 2018. https://www.politico.eu/article/ireland-referendum-abortion-rebecca-gomperts-a-hard-pill-to-swallow-in-ireland/.

‘Trinity National Deprivation Index – School of Medicine – Trinity College Dublin’. Accessed 25 August 2021. https://www.tcd.ie/medicine/public_health_primary_care/research/deprivation/.

A Spoofer’s Guide to Infant Mortality Statistics

Numpties beware! A rhetorical technique in use. (see below)

Recent research conducted by the investigative historian Eugene Jordan during 2020 has found that infant mortality rates at the old Rahoon Parish in Galway city, during the 1950s, were extremely high and were multiples of the national infant mortality rate. The parish was known — for almost a century before — to have had higher than average infant mortality rates and higher mortality rates in general.

Several survivors have suggested that the high rates were due to the operation of up to three illegal chemical plants concealed within the enclosures of several private gardens. A newly formed group of survivors have written to the government seeking the establishment of a commission of investigation.

Cancer deaths across all ages were also recorded at much higher levels than the national average. Based on these statistics, some experts have suggested that because areas of the parish are known to have high levels of cancer-causing radon gas, that it might go some way to explaining the cause. However, they point out that the levels are so high that it lends credence to the illegal chemical plants theories and have called for an investigation at the highest level.

In 1958, according to the Report of the Registrar General, Galway County had a standardised mortality rate from cancer of 1.5 per 1,000 of the population which was lower than the national average of 1.64 per 1,000 population. However, the rates in Rahoon parish were estimated at 6.5 deaths per 1,000 of the population.

In response, the Taoiseach Micheál Martin has described the discovery of high infant mortality rates as ‘distressing’. The Tánaiste Leo Varadkar said that because Ireland was a deeply misogynistic nation, at that time, the increased mortality might be an indication of something more sinister.

The commission was established in October 2020 and published its final report the following week. It was the speediest commission of investigation and most competent ever established in the history of the Irish state. The commission found that the high infant mortality rates were due to the presence of a maternity hospital within the parish. Higher rates of death — multiples of the national average — from all other diseases were also recorded. The commission found that the ‘alarming’ mortality rates were due to the presence of a regional hospital in the parish. People would have died elsewhere — had there not been a hospital in Rahoon parish — have their place of death recorded on their death certificate, and hospitals have so many deaths that many have their own morgue. This is known to statisticians as the ‘hospital effect’.

Prior to the building of a Regional Hospital, Rahoon parish had a large workhouse on the same site, where many poor, unfortunate residents passed away causing high mortality rates to be recorded.

Citizens of Ireland would reasonably expect that its government would appoint people to a commission of investigation — investigating high mortality rates — to have expertise in interpreting medical statistics, have a knowledge of basic medical science, have studied or at least looked up the current scientific literature on the causes of high infant mortality rates.

The moral of the story! It is easy to draw excitable conclusions from statistics, but the scurrilous misinformation emitted by bluffers and fluffers dominates due to poor educational standards in Ireland. Evident throughout the system, from its universities right down to its kindergarten schools.

To the commission of investigation into mother and baby homes, namely Judge Yvonne Murphy, Barrister William Duncan and Historian Mary E Daly, may I respectfully suggest you read the Complete Idiot’s Guide to Medical Statistics. Then apologise for your mistakes and wild accusations that you all made against certain Irish women.

EJ

Recently, a numpty decided to critique this article but missed the word ‘spoof’ in the title and has never encountered reductio ad absurdum.

“Satire often reveals the absurdity of the world, but when people miss the joke, they become part of the comedy.” – G.K. Chesterton

You can marvel at the person’s pure genius here.

Reductio ad absurdum is rhetorical technique where an argument or a proposition is intentionally taken to an extreme and absurd conclusion to highlight the flaws, contradictions, or absurdities within the argument or proposition. It’s often used to demonstrate the illogical or undesirable consequences of a particular line of reasoning, making a point by showing how impractical or absurd the argument becomes when taken to its logical extreme.

 

Recommended reading

Embarrassed Irish Academics Rewrite Commission of Investigation Report

A violation of law is one thing but accusing people of violating laws which don’t exist or did not exist in the past, is considered to be such an abuse of power that the constitution of many countries, including Ireland, prevents their governments from enacting such laws — legally termed ex post facto law.[1] Surprisingly, a small band of Irish academics chose to ignore a primary pillar of justice and accuse people — mostly women — back in history of committing crimes and abuses, based, seemingly on the standards of today but mostly using completely imagined non-existent standards and laws. Moreover, they appear to have rode roughshod over the constitutional protection conferred on Irish citizens from unjust attack on their reputation. It affirms their right to a good name and requires that they must be given an opportunity for vindication when unjust attacks occur.[2]

Twenty-three authors — all but one connected to academic law faculties — got together to write and produce a report based on an alternative interpretation of the Final Report of the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes. Unhappy with the commission’s findings, the academics decided to reinterpret it using the prism of present-day human rights law and feminism. Oddly enough, ex post facto laws are prohibited by Article 7 of the European Convention on Human Rights and in Article 15 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Also, ex post facto legislation may also violate citizens’ right to effective legal redress and a fair trial, which is laid down in Article 47 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. As we shall see, if they are using human rights laws, they seem to have been very selective in which human rights laws to use.

While the alternative report is not a piece of legislation, it attempts to castigate people of the past in a manner which is prohibited by law, including human rights law. It is, however, a crime against history and as I shall demonstrate, the report contains an embarrassment of riches in terms of poor-quality thinking, bias, prejudice and of course the now customary academic lack of joined-up thinking.

Surprisingly, these academics have applied the exact same burden of proof to wild and fantastical allegations which was applied to similar evidence at Salem Courthouse in 1692 and 93. Moreover, the report is peppered with exaggeration and imagined transgressions of non-existent laws which have not only passed but passed the threshold of credulity but with such speed, that many of its claims disappear beyond the horizon into the dominion of the preposterous.

To cite a couple of examples, the authors state that because there was no access to contraception and abortion it was ‘almost impossible to avoid unwanted pregnancy’. Yet today, with easy access to contraception, Irish women got rid of 13,243 babies in the last two years alone. More than all the children who died over the period of 76 years examined by the commission. Clear evidence that access to birth control does not eliminate the problem of unwanted pregnancy. Further emphasised by the fact that in countries where contraception was easily available, they too had high numbers of unwanted pregnancies.

The truth is that throughout history most Irish women avoided unwanted pregnancies through abstinence, the rhythm method, coitus interruptus and contraception.

The statute books contained a ban on contraception but that does not mean that contraception was not available. Even today, Irish society has access to many commodities which are technically illegal to possess — and are available in abundance — like cannabis, cocaine, laundered diesel fuel, cigarettes and tobacco ad inf. In times past, that list of widely available contraband included condoms.

The contraceptive pill was first approved for use in the United States in May 1960, but it was not until 1965 that it became legal for married couples to use any type of contraception. Unmarried couples had to wait until 1972 to be able to legally purchase and use contraceptives. Seven years later, Ireland also removed its ban on contraception. However, oral contraception was in wide use in Ireland since the 1960s as a ‘cycle regulator’. To get ‘on the pill’, all a woman had to do was go to the doctor and say she was having irregular or heavy periods. The reality is that the contraceptive pill was heavily prescribed by Irish doctors during the 1960s and 70s.[3]

A common problem among young academic researchers is their tendency to use the false assumption that prohibitions on the statute books reflects reality on the ground. For example, abortion was outlawed until recently but that did not stop Irish women from sending 176,785 babies up the abortion clinic chimneys in the UK and The Netherlands from 1980 to 2020. Moreover, research presented to the Oireachtas revealed that 54% of Irish women who aborted their child abroad were using contraception at the time of conception.[4]

The assumption that without access to contraception it was ‘almost impossible to avoid unwanted pregnancy’ is not based on evidence. It is an exaggeration at best, and at worst is an indicator of bias, either carried out deliberately or it may have been accidental, caused by a lack of knowledge in general and in particular of competent research methods and presentation. That said, the most likely explanation is that any evidence which had the potential to weaken or contradict the authors’ intended conclusions was deliberately excluded and this motivation is palpable throughout the ‘alternative report’.

 

‘The State did not offer adequate financial support to unmarried single mothers to enable them to live independently.’

 

No state did so until relatively recently. This is a clear use of the logical fallacy of presentism, Irish exceptionalism and the inability to make valid comparisons.  A barefaced attempt to put blinkers on the reader leading them to think that because we have such payments today, we should have had them before they were introduced. One would reasonably expect that academics would be in possession of critical thinking ability and be able to validly compare systems of care in Ireland to those in other countries. Leaving out information makes Ireland appear to be an exception. The truth is that the Irish state, like many other states, made valiant efforts to get the father to support his child. The problem was that it was practically impossible to prove paternal parenthood.

The alternative report makes no attempt at balance and cherry picks from the commission’s report, taking unsubstantiated allegations and using phrases out of context, which are then presented to the readers as convincing evidence. However, impartial readers will be forced to compare and contrast the opinions expressed by the authors of the report with the commission’s report. A daunting task and not for the feint hearted.

Moreover, testimony from witnesses who had good things to say about mother and baby homes are completely ignored. A clear use of the logical fallacy called ‘Suppressed Evidence’. In fact, almost the full gamut of logical fallacies can be found spread throughout the report, and those of you who like to fish for red herrings are in for a feast. Worse than that is the barefaced attempt to mislead readers using anachronistic phrases and concepts which are brand spanking new, quixotic and pseudo academic. Take for example the use of the dysphemism ‘Obstetric Violence’.

Medical Violence – That’ll teach you a lesson.

As a child I found myself in A&E on a few occasions the result of sport injuries or from acting the maggot. On practically every occasion many nurses, and sometimes doctors, used a phrase like ‘that will teach you a lesson’. In other words, remember the pain you are now suffering the next time you climb a tree, jump of a wall or crash your bike. All of the comments were said with good intentions, and it was a very common. Today our academics have interpreted such comments as abuse. That’s right, it is now considered degrading treatment to tell anyone to remember their pain as a way to deter future injury and modify their behaviour.

They falsely try to make out that unmarried women, unlike married women were refused pain relief during childbirth, a claim dismissed by the commission, but to save face had to be reinstated using the term ‘obstetric violence’. If there is such a thing then all women who gave birth until relatively recently are victims of such violence. Why are the academics not defending the ‘human rights’ of millions of married women and arguing that the state should compensate them?

The commission report states:

Painkillers were not widely used either in home or hospital births. There is no evidence that the women who gave birth in mother and baby homes were denied pain relief or other medical interventions that were available to a public patient who gave birth in a Dublin or Cork maternity unit. There is evidence of women in mother and baby homes being given pain relief, and being stitched following birth.[5]

The term ‘obstetric violence’ dates from as recently as 2007, a concept which was not in existence during the period of time investigated by the commission from 1922 to 1998.[6] There was no such thing as ‘obstetric violence’, therefore no one can be accused of committing a crime which did not exist. Moreover, the use of such terminology in this case suggests it was used to support a misrepresentation of the facts.

I will wager that these academic authors were well aware of ex post facto law which requires that no one can stand accused of a crime which did not exist at the time of the alleged offence. Accordingly, the misuse of ex post facto allegations reveals much about the motivations of the authors. It could be a lack of education, but ignorance is seldom a good defence, even in a court of law.

Exaggeration is a corner stone of comedy, think of Maxwell Smart on a triple double secret mission or the triple secret probation placed on the occupants of Animal House, both comedic works lampooning childish exaggerations. Although of slightly less comedic value, lawyers regularly and keenly exaggerate the truth to support the advancement of their case. However, the use of exaggeration evinces an inherent weakness of the argument. The degree of weakness is inversely proportional to the amount of exaggeration. In other words, the stronger the exaggeration, the weaker the argument. Skilful lawyers would be cautious of stretching credulity beyond the limits set by credibility, especially in front of an erudite audience. Accordingly, for the less erudite, the credibility threshold is further out in the distance but when it is exceeded it creates the perception that the allegations in question are untrue and quixotic. Evidently the alternative report authors do not expect the claims in their report to be tested in front of an erudite body of people and this may account for why caution appears to have been thrown to the wind.

The final report of the commission of investigation into mother and baby homes runs to nearly three thousand pages because it contains quite a number of transcripts of statements made by witnesses. This has provided the ‘alternative report’s’ authors with a fertile ground to try and twist comments made in these statements into findings of the commission. Readers who have not read the actual report are particularly prone to being misled and guided into the belief that the commission accepted the witness’ testimony as fact. However, the commission did at least subject some testimony to a basic test for truthfulness.

The commission state:

A number of witnesses gave evidence that was clearly incorrect. This contamination probably occurred because of meetings with other residents and inaccurate media coverage.[7]

‘Inaccurate media coverage’ is a polite term for false stories, fake news, speculation and conjecture presented to the public in the guise of factual information. The commission of investigation investigated a number of these stories and found that they had no basis in fact. The journalists who wrote and published such stories clearly do not have the ability to fact check information nor do their editors appear to be bothered about disseminating quality information. The evidence would suggest that they are far more concerned with making bucks through the use of sensationalism. Libelling the dead carries far less risk than libelling the living, in fact it occurs with such frequency that it must be facilitating a lucrative income stream which is irresistible to financially struggling news organisations. It may also account for the decline in standards evident in the output of media organisations, even those once considered ‘quality news’ or a ‘paper of record’ are now — in a battle for survival — forced to engage in populist gutter journalism.

It is no surprise to find — in the alternative report — journalists unconcerned with / or unable to fact check stories, listed as ‘expert readers’. Clearly the title ‘expert’ has been awarded to many people on the list who would not have been deemed to have reached the required threshold of skill to be declared an ‘expert’, even by applying a basic standard of competency. The people chosen, — who were elevated to lofty heights by being conferred with the title ‘expert’ — is a means to an end. There is no attempt to get at the truth but there appears to be clear intent to hoodwink the public and politicians.

False allegations and false stories abound in the Irish media and are never subjected to critical analysis. The Irish media will simply not publish any criticism which could potentially dismiss wild claims nor contradict what they have put forward as evidence which is not evidence.

The Irish media misled the world’s media in claiming that children were starved to death at Irish mother and baby homes. They were egged on by many politicians who made similar claims about the protestant run Bethany mother and baby home in Dublin. Behind the scurrilous claims was the use of the term ‘marasmus’ as a cause of death on a number of infant death certificates. Marasmus is a general term for a form of malnutrition which is diagnosed from the appearance of the patient, the dryness of its skin and brittleness of its hair. It is mainly caused by a failure of the patient’s digestive system to absorb sufficient nutrients to sustain life. The term was never used by Irish doctors to indicate that children were starved to death. Using the term marasmus to indicate starvation through a lack in the provision of food is a medically incompetent analysis but is repeated with alacrity in the alternative report.

The commission of investigation state:

marasmus as a cause of death was cited when an infant failed to thrive due to malabsorption of essential nutrients due to an underlying, undiagnosed medical condition.

All the maternity hospitals in the country have records of infants dying from marasmus but none of these institutions has been accused of abuse and murder by the media nor is the issue presented in anything approaching an erudite commentary in the alternative report.

The commission found that there was no abuse at mother and baby homes, but the alternative report authors reiterate that abuse took place despite the complete lack of evidence. The authors rely entirely on comments made by former residents which were not subjected to even an elementary test for truthfulness.

Chancers are ten a penny in Ireland and when hundreds of thousands and tens of thousands of Euro are on offer as compensation, many chancers will appear out of the woodwork. Moreover, even if no compensation was on offer, chancers would still be in the foray as notoriety just as potent. Compensation and notoriety are such powerful forces that when either is present allegations must be subjected to proper investigation. Many allegations have been reported to the Gardaí (police) who cannot take action against persons or organisations because there is no evidence to support any of the charges.

False allegations are nothing new and are far more common that we realise. During the recent floods in Germany during the summer of 2021, many people on social media — even those with good intentions — spread the fake news that the bodies of 600 children were found when the flood waters receded. The German news station DW investigated the false story and quotes Andre Wolf, a communications expert who works at the Austrian fact-checking site Mimikama:

Babies and children are recurring themes in conspiracy theories, as they provide a simple way to dehumanize enemies such as elites or the government. “The worst thing that these enemies can be accused of is torturing or killing children,” Wolf said, explaining that this allegation triggered a protective mechanism, a sort of primal instinct, among believers. “People tend to share these messages, get caught up in them and get angry,” he said, adding that they then become less inhibited and more prone to attacking their enemies, such as the state. “The idea is to radicalize people.”[8]

In 2014 in Britain, Carl Beech reported to police that as a child he was sexually abused by a paedophile ring, which included high profile members of the British establishment like former Prime Minister Ted Heath, former Home Secretary Leon Brittan, the then chief of the defence staff Lord Bramall. He further claimed that he had witnessed the murder of three boys, killed for sexual pleasure. Beech even supplied the names of two real boys, one had disappeared without trace in the late 1970s and the other who was abducted and murdered but the case was unsolved. The Metropolitan police took the allegations to be credible and launched a police investigation.

Beech’s allegations were entirely false, and in 2018 he was charged with 12 counts of perverting the course of justice, one of fraud and other charges relating to child abuse offences which he had committed. He was convicted and sentenced to 18 years in prison.

Beech’s motivations included, to a small degree, financial compensation and to a much higher degree, notoriety. He received £22,000 in compensation even though there was no evidence to support his claims. More importantly for him, was achieving a rise in social status through notoriety. He wanted to become an international speaker as a ‘survivor’ of child abuse.

Prior to the publication of the commission’s final report and having made allegations or supported allegations where there is no evidence to support them, has left these academics in a rather embarrassing position.

They have been exposed by the commission as being naive at best or without the skillset to able to spot false stories. They have — mostly subconsciously — allowed their own personal prejudices to blind them to reality. Such a sticky situation requires three possible solutions. 1. Admit their mistakes and apologise. 2. Ignore it all and hope it is forgotten in years to come. 3. Attempt to repudiate the findings of the commission.

Irish universities have ben involved in ‘grade inflation’ for decades and so bad has the issue become that it has drawn commentary from the President of Ireland.[9] In effect Irish university authorities have made exams easier to pass to create the impression of increasing educational standards. In reality it has achieved the opposite and the fall in standards is palpable in all the professions. Many Irish graduates are forced overseas to find work while large multinational companies, based in Ireland, are forced to hire in talent from overseas. Despite having decades to respond to changes in the market, universities have been unable to supply the type of talent required.

Clearly talent and expertise are absent in this ‘alternative report’ and so it will stand as a monument to poor Irish education standards and a road marker on the journey to the bottom. Rock bottom, however, remains in the distance. It will not be hit until Irish universities begin the process of reform. There is no evidence that that will happen any time soon.

 

Work in Progress – the report contains such an embarrassment of riches that it will take time to examine and report them all. It is a challenge which will take time but keep an eye out here…. more…. much more to come.

Part 2  Lawyers Exaggerating Weak Arguments Fools Only Fools

EJ

 

Endnotes

[1] Article 15.5.1 The Oireachtas shall not declare acts to be infringements of the law which were not so at the date of their commission.

[2] The State shall, in particular, by its laws protect as best it may from unjust attack and, in the case of injustice done, vindicate the life, person, good name, and property rights of every citizen.

[3] Kelly, ‘The Contraceptive Pill in Ireland c.1964–79’.

[4] Research by Abigail Aiken, Rebecca Gomperts and James Trussell presented to Oireachtas Committee on the Eighth Amendment, October 2017

[5] Commission of Investigation, ‘Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation Final Report’. Para 245

[6] Lappeman and Swartz, ‘Rethinking Obstetric Violence and the “Neglect of Neglect”’.

[7] Commission of Investigation, ‘Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation Final Report’. Introduction, p.12

[8] ‘German Floods’.

[9] Editor, ‘Grade Inflation Undermining Quality of University Degrees, President Higgins Warns’.

References:

Commission of Investigation. ‘Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation Final Report’. Irish Government, 30 October 2020.

Deutsche. ‘German Floods: Where Did Fake News about 600 Dead Babies Come from? | DW | 01.08.2021’. DW.COM, 1 August 2021. https://www.dw.com/en/german-floods-where-did-fake-news-about-600-dead-babies-come-from/a-58717714.

Editor, Carl O’Brien Education. ‘Grade Inflation Undermining Quality of University Degrees, President Higgins Warns’. The Irish Times. 8 June 2021. https://www.irishtimes.com/news/education/grade-inflation-undermining-quality-of-university-degrees-president-higgins-warns-1.4587985.

Kelly, Laura. ‘The Contraceptive Pill in Ireland c.1964–79: Activism, Women and Patient–Doctor Relationships’. Medical History 64, no. 2 (n.d.): 195–218. https://doi.org/10.1017/mdh.2020.3.

Lappeman, Maura, and Leslie Swartz. ‘Rethinking Obstetric Violence and the “Neglect of Neglect”: The Silence of a Labour Ward Milieu in a South African District Hospital’. BMC International Health and Human Rights 19, no. 1 (30 October 2019): 30. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12914-019-0218-2.

View and download the Alternative Report here

 

 

Babies and children are recurring themes in conspiracy theories

During the recent floods in Germany during the summer of 2021, many people on social media — even those with good intentions — spread the fake news that the bodies of 600 children were found when the flood waters receded. The German news station DW investigated the false story and quotes Andre Wolf, a communications expert who works at the Austrian fact-checking site Mimikama:

Babies and children are recurring themes in conspiracy theories, as they provide a simple way to dehumanize enemies such as elites or the government. “The worst thing that these enemies can be accused of is torturing or killing children,” Wolf said, explaining that this allegation triggered a protective mechanism, a sort of primal instinct, among believers. “People tend to share these messages, get caught up in them and get angry,” he said, adding that they then become less inhibited and more prone to attacking their enemies, such as the state. “The idea is to radicalize people.”[1]

Sources

Tortured Human Corpses Surfacing During European Floods

Tortured Baby Corpses Come to Surface During European Floods

[1] Deutsche. ‘German Floods: Where Did Fake News about 600 Dead Babies Come from? | DW | 01.08.2021’. DW.COM, 1 August 2021. https://www.dw.com/en/german-floods-where-did-fake-news-about-600-dead-babies-come-from/a-58717714.

Dublin Universities Involved in Illegal Clinical Trials on Children

The commission of investigation into mother and baby homes named the following people for conducting vaccine trials on children without obtaining permission. The trials were carried out through an arrangement with doctors in charge of various mother and baby homes. The authorities who ran these homes had no idea that children in their care were subjected to clinical trials. Yet they are falsely made to shoulder the blame, when in fact it is the universities who should get all the blame and pay compensation. However, not one has bothered to issue an apology since they were named in the commission report released in January 2021.

  • Professor Patrick Meenan Department of Medical Microbiology, University College, Dublin
  • Dr Irene Hillery, Department of Medical Microbiology, University College, Dublin
  • Dr Victoria Coffey, Trinity College, Dublin the first female president of the Irish Paediatric Association, the paediatric section of the Royal Academy of Medicine in Ireland, the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland (RCSI)
  • Dr Margaret Dunleavy, the first female president of the Biological Society of the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland

The commission concludes that in many of the trials conducted by these university researchers:

  • There was no import licence in place for the vaccine.
  • The researchers did not have a research licence which covered research carried out in the children’s institutions.
  • There is no evidence that consent was properly sought or received.
  • The results of the trial were not published.

In 1968: Dr Victoria Coffey, ran a trials of Glaxo Laboratories measles vaccine, at Pelletstown, Dublin. The commission say of this trial:

34.124 It is clear that this trial did not conform to the ethical and regulatory standards in place at the time. There is no evidence that Dr Coffey applied for or received a research licence under the Therapeutic Substances Act. There is no evidence that the relevant consents were sought or given.

Dr Victoria Coffey was also the institutional medical officer at Pelletstown and facilitated other vaccine trials:

34.70 The Commission has seen no documentary evidence to suggest that the researchers informed the matron or the Dublin Health Authority that children resident in Pelletstown were to be used as research subjects in a vaccine trial. It would appear that Dr Coffey may have been solely responsible for providing Professor Meenan and Dr Hillery with access to Pelletstown.

Nonsense Journalism

Even after the commission’s report was published, biased reporting continued with alacrity. The Irish Examiner published an article on 14 January 2021 where the claimed ‘there were at least 13 vaccine trials carried out on more than 43,000 children, according to the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation.’ The entire article is littered with phrases cherry-picked from the report, conflating information from different areas of the report with as many negative facts as the author can find. I cannot find the total number 43,000 mentioned anywhere, and I doubt if the author summed up all the numbers, as the final report is a compilation of a series of individual reports. The report mentions a figure of 47,000 children who took part in a vaccine trial in Britain in 1964/65, and I surmise that the author mistakenly took this paragraph to be about Ireland and, even then, manage to get the figure wrong.

The author fails to mention that the early vaccination trials of the 1930s were done with the authorities’ support due to ‘one of the worst diphtheria epidemics ever recorded in Europe’. Instead, he continues to weave a tangled web, carefully selecting his facts, taken out of context, and conflating comments about the University College, Dublin studies of the 1960s/70s with earlier studies.

The journalist also fails to mention the commission’s conclusions to each trial: ‘there is no evidence of injury to the children involved as a result of the vaccines.’

 

EJ

Alternative Mother and Baby Home Report

Many academics were made to look foolish because the final report of the commission of investigation into mother and baby homes rubbished many of the allegations they presented as historical fact. Consequently, and to save face, 25 academics have produced an alternative mother and baby homes report or at least and alternative or reinterpreted executive summary.

However, the re-interpretation relies on feminism and the misleading application of today’s morals and standards — which did not exist in the past — but should have existed and had been applied by society and the government. It is a crime against history and the intellectual tradition.

Here are the six factors which the academics say indicates the State is to blame for mother and baby homes, with my observations. Note, blame is deliberately put on the state to force it to pay compensation.

 

1: The State funded all institutions in some way;

No news there. Perhaps the state should not have cared about the plight of unmarried mothers and their children and consequently not have funded care institutions. The commission of investigation also stated that the conditions were worse in secular institutions like county Homes but only the religious run homes have been singled out

 

2: The State regulated mother and baby homes through local government, inspection, funding, criminal, human rights, constitutional and administrative law. They add that where religious authorities objected to more intensive regulation and reform, State agencies preferred to negotiate rather than enforce regulatory arrangements;

That was not always the case. The state acted when appropriate and with the force of the laws in place at that time.

 

3: The State was aware of dangerous and degrading living conditions in many institutions, but did not use its statutory powers of prosecution and did not sanction institutions by depriving them of funding,

The living conditions of the poor in Ireland and elsewhere were far worse than found in any mother and baby home. Unmarried mothers under the British workhouse system in place before 1922 were treated far worse. Only Tuam and Kilrush, former workhouses were singled out by the commission of investigation as being below the standards of other buildings. However, its commentary was biased through an invalid comparison with the standards of today. Anachronistic issues like curtains between the beds in dormitories and a lack of central heating were cited as evidence of poor living conditions.

 

4: Irish law punished family foundation outside of marriage and showed no concern for reproductive justice;

‘Reproductive justice’ is a term which was never heard in the past as the concept is brand new. Applying such terms and concepts by arguing that they should have applied — even though they did not exist at that time — is not revisionism it is just tomfoolery.

 

5: The law criminalised aspects of access to contraception up to 1933 and almost all abortion up to 2019, making it almost impossible to avoid unwanted pregnancy;

Unwanted pregnancy can be easily avoided through abstinence. Besides in other countries where contraception was available continued to produce large quantities of unwanted children.

 

6: Irish law still inhibits efforts to seek accountability for abuses in the institutions by restricting affected people’s access to records of institutionalisation and family; their own records and those of close family members.

Pregnant women entered the homes on the basis that their anonymity would be guaranteed. Many of these mothers do not want to see their children and are primarily responsible for the halting their children from tracing them or contacting them.

A Debt of Gratitude Owed to Our Great Women

Florence Nightingale wanted to learn her nursing craft from the best nurses in the world, the nuns at St Vincent’s Hospital Dublin. Dubliners have enjoyed world-class healthcare provided by the Sisters of Charity, a remarkable achievement by a group of women, yet Irish feminists excoriate these great women.

Nightingale’s famous mission to the Crimea was the result of a report about the dirty, dingy, rat-infested hospital conditions suffered by British troops. The Times war correspondent William Howard Russell, an Irishman, reported on the well-organised services of the French Catholic military nurses, Russell asked rhetorically: “Why have we no sisters of charity?”[1]

The British are boastful in falsely claiming that Florence Nightingale invented the craft of modern nursing. She certainly revolutionised nursing in Britain and contributed to advancements in the field, but the British theft of history has obscured the real history and excluded those who might expose the braggarts of stolen history.

A classic of the genre of anti-Irish prejudice.

Florence Nightingale applied to work with the Irish Sisters of Charity twice, first in 1844 and again in 1852 when she visited Dublin only to find the hospital closed for renovations. The hospital was located on St Stephen’s Green at the former home of the Earl of Meath. It was purchased in 1834 on behalf of the Sisters of Charity, and they turned it into St Vincent’s Hospital. Later, adjacent properties were also purchased to expand the hospital.

The nursing mission to Crimea in 1854 was the result of the public outcry. In the aftermath of Russell’s report, the secretary for war, Sidney Herbert, turned to Nightingale for assistance. Florence was dispatched to Scutari with a contingent of nurses, 14 Anglican sisters, 14 lay nurses and 10 catholic nurses who were also nuns. An Irish sister, Mary Clare Moore was the Chief Executive Officer of the mission, she brought a level business head to counterbalance the more excitable Florence.

At the end of Florence’s mission, the British establishment sought to organise a big event to boastfully celebrate her achievements. To her great credit, she avoided the ruckus, and surreptitiously travelled back into England to avoid the self-aggrandising bluster of her country people dismissing it as, fuzz buzz.

Turning failure into triumph or more correctly creating such illusions is an existential imperative for the ongoing recruitment campaigns of a militaristic society, but the bluster did not go unnoticed. One American publication commenting on the hype of the era asked, “what has she done that thousands of Sisters of Charity have not been doing for the last hundred years?”[2]

Why has the massive contribution of the Sisters of Charity been written out of the history of Irish medicine? The Sisters have over near two centuries built a world-class hospital and provided the people of Dublin with free and affordable healthcare. Why are the Irish so ignorant, that instead of celebrating their magnificent altruism and thanking these great women — which would happen in any normal society — we have turned our back on them and pilloried the good sisters using a slew of falsehoods.

Feminists think that women have been written out of history — a false notion reliant on a lack of erudition — as is their failure to celebrate the achievements of women. Women who built a world-class hospital, worked for free and low wages, are to be commended and given an honoured place in history. This honour will likely be conferred upon great women by men, as Irish women are too busy creating delusions of abuse and misogyny to curry public sympathy and notoriety. It is a sad fact of life that Irish men will have to teach the feminists how to commemorate the achievements of women!

Footnotes

[1] Fealy, ‘Florence Nightingale-Lady with the Lamp: Gerard M Fealy Remembers Florence Nightingale: Writer, Scientist, Reformer, and the Key Individual in Founding Modern Nursing’.

[2] ‘Florence Nightingale, the Protestant Sister of Charity.’

References

Fealy, Gerard M. ‘Florence Nightingale-Lady with the Lamp: Gerard M Fealy Remembers Florence Nightingale: Writer, Scientist, Reformer, and the Key Individual in Founding Modern Nursing’. World of Irish Nursing 18, no. 5 (2010): 22–23.

‘Florence Nightingale, the Protestant Sister of Charity.’ Pilot 24, no. 19 (May 1861).

What the MABH Commission got wrong!

Dear Taoiseach, when appointing an independent ‘expert’ or new commission of investigation, it is imperative that ‘experts’ and members of the commission possess the ability to use modern scientific methods of investigation, have a strong commitment to the continuation of the intellectual tradition and use of impartial investigation techniques. All investigations must be set up in a way to mitigate, in as far as possible, all our natural cognitive biases but in particular, for researcher bias, hindsight bias and presentism in historical investigations. Science has evolved several techniques to combat bias, including a demand that contradictory evidence and contrarian views be evaluated, in order to limit the effects of confirmation bias, thus enable the production of better-quality reports.

Not one of these imperatives was a prerequisite for any commission of investigation set up by the Irish government. In particular, the commission of investigation into mother and baby homes — despite investigating allegations based on medical evidence — had no relevant knowledge or expertise. The result was a report, while not entirely incorrect, was mostly incompetent in its pronouncements on medical matters.

The commission ignored entirely — despite the evidence jumping out from the pages of its report — the causal relationship between poverty and high infant mortality rates. The scientific literature is currently awash with such studies and has been investigating the causal relationship which has been indicated by correlation for decades.[1]

The commission’s lack of basic mathematical/statistical knowledge also caused them to make one of the most basic errors in statistical interpretation. They proceeded to base many of their conclusions and speculations on the ‘false causes fallacy’. Every data scientist and statistician is taught — in their first week — that correlation cannot be used as evidence for a cause.

A correlation is simply a ‘co-relation’ between measurements that appear to increase or decrease at the same time, when one goes up/down, another goes up/down or when one goes up, the other goes down. For example, in warm countries, there is a strong correlation between the number of ice-cream sales and the number of admissions to hospital due to heatstroke. Heatstroke is not causing the increase in ice-cream sales, and neither is the increased volume of ice-cream sales driving the higher number of heatstroke victims. In the terminology of statistics, correlation does not imply causation. Accordingly, statisticians are taught to look for other variables/measurements which might be causing the correlation. In the case above, the hidden variable is hot weather.

The commission — unaware of procedures to be followed in basic statistical interpretation — imagined that there was a correlation between poor quality healthcare and high infant mortality rates. Despite having little or no figures for the healthcare side of the equation, the commission did — what anyone could do — use their imagination to fabricate assumptions to fill gaps in their knowledge.

Consequently, the commission has presented to the nation one of the most incompetent conclusions ever arrived at by a commission of investigation in the history of the State.

In Paragraph 12 of the executive summary, the commission pronounces and speculates:

In the years before 1960 mother and baby homes did not save the lives of ‘illegitimate’ children; in fact, they appear to have significantly reduced their prospects of survival.

There is absolutely no mention that these children were in a high-risk category and intuitions — even today — which deal with high-risk individuals, have higher mortality rates.

Higher Infant Mortality Rates — multiples of the national average — continue to exist in Ireland under your own leadership.

Using the same logic of the commission, we could state emphatically that the mere fact of children who were born to Traveller women seems ‘to have significantly reduced their prospects of survival’. Judge Catherine McGuinness of the Children’s Rights Alliance, tells us that the ‘infant mortality rates for Traveller children are 3.6 times that of the general population.’

In the interests of fairness and justice, the government must now appoint a commission of investigation to avoid any charges of bias for singling out the Christian community for castigation by a government suffering from a scurrilous lack of medical/scientific knowledge.

While you are at it Taoiseach, there are many more cases of high infant mortality rates which you might also want to investigate.

Children unfortunate enough to be born to women over 35 years of age seems to have ‘significantly reduced their prospects of survival’.

Would you believe the fact that children who are born to unmarried mothers in this day and age has ‘significantly reduced their prospects of survival’. The CSO has not yet measured child mortality rates for this cohort, but the Office for National Statistics has measured it in England and Wales. It found that children born to unmarried mothers suffer from a mortality rate forty per cent higher than those born to married parents.[2] Studies from Finland show similar results.[3]

Research in Ireland shows that babies born to mothers under 25 years of age suffer from a mortality rate twice for those born to mothers aged 25 to 29. Children born to women aged over forty also suffer from mortality rates twice that of the mid to late twenties cohort.[4] Can we infer, as the commission has done, that these ‘appalling’ rates are due to poor quality care, or should they have looked for other causes?

You cannot — in light of your comments — fail to launch an investigation or act upon these ‘distressing’ statistics, unless you want your inactions to be the subject of a criminal investigation in 35 years’ time and your name besmirched.

You said:

It is deeply distressing to note that the very high mortality rates were known to local and national authorities at the time and were recorded in official publications. However, there is little or no evidence of State intervention in response to these chilling statistics and deaths. In fact, a number of reports actually identifying the problems were not acted on. [5]

Lazy or incompetent reliance on imagined statistical correlation also forms the basis for your apology or more correctly, your attack on the Irish people. No national leader in history has attacked the entire population in the manner in which you have done. Yet you think that you can label all the people of the past as having ‘a completely warped attitude to sexuality and intimacy’ while holding ‘a perverse religious morality’ and that these labels do not apply to your mother and grandmother.

What is the point in naming Dublin Airport after Seán Lemass when you say that he, along with ‘the agencies of the State showed little or no interest in addressing these crimes’. You say crimes, but did you even bother to read the commission’s report or provide evidence for these alleged crimes.

As can be proved, beyond any reasonable doubt, poverty was the primary cause of high infant mortality rates, and that the issue was completely missed by the commission. Accordingly, all of their conclusions based on such rates are null and void.

While you repeated many of the falsehoods within the commission report, one, in particular, stands out. You went on Taoiseach to repeat another falsehood that illegitimacy was an ‘egregious breach of human rights’. William Duncan, — a human rights lawyer with little or no knowledge of history — went back 1,000 years to tell a lame story, scurrilously declaring a breach of human rights that continued for the duration of a full millennium. Rights that did not exist until very recently. That is not history, it is not even pseudo-history, nor indeed would it qualify as counterfactual history.

History is about what happened not what might have happened but most of all Duncan never once told us about the 2,000-year history of the church saving the lives of hundreds of thousands of unwanted and illegitimate children. He never told us that illegitimacy was designed to protect the inheritance of the children of the queen from potential claims from the children of the king’s concubines. Duncan, however, mentions an Irish bishops’ conference in 1974 which recommended that there should be no distinction between a legitimate and illegitimate child before the civil law, evincing that the discrimination had a mainly secular basis. However, the thrust of his contribution continues to blame the church entirely for its instigation and continuance. It was in fact English ‘common law’ which imposed the ‘abuses of human rights’. Common law strongly supported the primogenitor system and was stringent in order to protect large blocks of property and power, from division and weakness through partible inheritance. Canon law was much more lenient in comparison and even allowed for the subsequent legitimisation of births.

Confirming one’s own biases is common throughout the authorship of the report and is evident in quite a few of the witness statements too.

The commission points out:

A number of witnesses gave evidence that was clearly incorrect. This contamination probably occurred because of meetings with other residents and inaccurate media coverage.[6]

Judge Harding Clarke had the luxury of access to impartial evidence, which when used, showed that one third of the women claimants, who applied for compensation to the symphysiotomy ex-gratia payments scheme, were fraudulent. These women never had the operation and X-Rays were used to prove it.[7]

Many of the witness testimonies supplied to the commission of investigation into mother and baby homes stretches credulity to levels that would not be tolerated by any sensible person or administration. Yet many Irish politicians were forthright in claiming that children were starved to death at the Protestant run Bethany home, before going on to include all catholic run institutions, The politicians — speaking on parliamentary record — included:

Deputy Mary Lou McDonald (Sinn Féin), Deputy Niall Collins (Fianna Fáil), Deputy Caoimhghín Ó Caoláin (Sinn Féin), Deputy Robert Dowds (Labour Party), Deputy Seamus Healy (independent), Deputy Ciara Conway (Labour Party), Deputy Seán Crowe (Sinn Féin), Senator Marie Moloney (Labour), Deputy Lisa Chambers (Fianna Fáil), Deputy Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire (Sinn Féin), Deputy Mick Barry (Irish Solidarity–People Before Profit), Senator Catherine Noone (Fine Gael), Senator Gerald Nash (Labour Party) Deputy Kate O’Connell (Fine Gael)[8]

All of these politicians, and more, relied on the use of the medical term ‘marasmus’ on death certificates. Yet — this is important — infants and children died of marasmus at every Irish maternity hospital. Why were they not subjected to a commission of investigation? The answer is ignorance and prejudice. The commission has also rubbished such claims but has any one of these politicians come out in public and admitted to making a mistake? I surmise their reluctance is reflective of the era we live in.

There is no doubt that we are living through a time of mass hysteria and that the truth has been its first victim. I have no business defending the Catholic church or even the Anglican church. They can defend themselves. I cannot stand back, and watch lies and injustice flourish in a nation that has no regard for competent investigative methods including the use of the scientific method where appropriate.

Andreas Schleicher of the OECD reported recently, that ‘a key challenge for Irish schools will be getting students to think for themselves, and develop a strong sense of right and wrong’.[9] The corollary is that students are not currently taught to think for themselves, consequently, they have to let others do their thinking for them.

All of Europe knows that our education system is bad and that it has been in steady decline for decades. This entire scandal is based entirely on bad education which in turn allowed our cultural prejudice of self-loathing to run riot.

Ask yourself one question, why is it that the organisation which fought for the rights of unwanted children not to be killed, throughout two millennia, — and in the absence of action by the secular authorities — took practical steps to provide lifesaving care, education and establishment in employment for unwanted children, should now stand accused of operating a baby-killing and disposal service.

There is something very rotten in Irish education, I wonder will you be the leader who begins to stop the rot or will it be left to someone else, further down the line. If you are going to appoint an expert to review witness’ testimony you need someone — like the Garda commissioner — from outside the state. We certainly have no one with the relevant expertise within the Irish university system.

Without the right people in place, with the right expertise, the taxpayers and citizens of the nation will be forced to pay for the Disneyland thrills of highly paid investigators going round and round on their merry-go-round. Without leadership and competent impartial investigators the country will be stuck for decades in the home of Mickey Mouse.

 

Is mise le mas

Eugene Jordan,
Science Historian BA BSc MInfoTech

 

Footnotes

[1] Wickham et al., ‘Poverty and Child Health in the UK: Using Evidence for Action’.

[2] Reid et al., ‘Vulnerability among illegitimate children in nineteenth century Scotland’.

[3] Remes, Martikainen, and Valkonen, ‘The Effects of Family Type on Child Mortality’.

[4] Corcoran et al., ‘Perinatal Mortality in Ireland: Annual Report 2017’.

[5] Dáil Éireann debate – Wednesday, 13 Jan 2021 Vol. 1003 No. 1

[6] Commission of Investigation, ‘Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation Final Report’. P12 / 2405

[7] Broadsheet, ‘Confabulation, False Memories And Conspiracy Theories’.

[8] Jordan, ‘Irish Political Fantasists – Children Starved to Death’.

[9] O’Brien, ‘Irish Schools Need to Modernise “20th Century” Approach to Learning, Warns OECD’.

 

References

Broadsheet. ‘Confabulation, False Memories And Conspiracy Theories’. Broadsheet.ie, 23 November 2016. https://www.broadsheet.ie/2016/11/23/confabulation-false-memories-and-conspiracy-theories/.

Commission of Investigation. ‘Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation Final Report’. Irish Government, 30 October 2020.

Corcoran, P., E. Manning, I. B. O’Farrell, and R. A. Greene. ‘Perinatal Mortality in Ireland: Annual Report 2017’. National Perinatal Epidemiology Centre, 2019. https://www.ucc.ie/en/media/research/nationalperinatalepidemiologycentre/NPECPerinatalMortalityinIrelandAnnualReport2017.pdf.

Jordan, Eugene. ‘Irish Political Fantasists – Children Starved to Death’. False History. Accessed 13 June 2021. https://falsehistory.ie/political-fantasy-chidren-starved-to-death/.

O’Brien, Carl. ‘Irish Schools Need to Modernise “20th Century” Approach to Learning, Warns OECD’. The Irish Times. 22 March 2021. https://www.irishtimes.com/news/education/irish-schools-need-to-modernise-20th-century-approach-to-learning-warns-oecd-1.4516222.

Reid, Alice, Ros Davies, Eilidh Garrett, and Andrew Blaikie. ‘Vulnerability among illegitimate children in nineteenth century Scotland’. Annales de démographie historique 111, no. 1 (2006): 89–113. https://doi.org/10.3917/adh.111.0089.

Remes, Hanna, Pekka Martikainen, and Tapani Valkonen. ‘The Effects of Family Type on Child Mortality’. European Journal of Public Health 21, no. 6 (1 December 2011): 688–93. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckq159.

Wickham, Sophie, Elspeth Anwar, Ben Barr, Catherine Law, and David Taylor-Robinson. ‘Poverty and Child Health in the UK: Using Evidence for Action’. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2016, archdischild-2014-306746.

Bias and Prejudice Unbridled on Children’s Committee

When welcoming the report, it was obvious that Kathleen Funchion had not read it… Speaking in the Dáil  Éireann debate on the 13th of January, the day following the public release of the final report of the commission of investigation into mother and baby homes, Kathleen Funchion (Sinn Féin), Chair of the Joint Oireachtas Committee on children… etc. stated.

KF: ‘Mother and baby homes were not homes, they were detention centres’.

Funchion had not managed to read as far as paragraph eight of the executive summary:

  1. There is no evidence that women were forced to enter mother and baby homes by the church or State authorities.

KF: [Women were] forced to give birth in the most appalling conditions, often without medical support or even basic pain relief

The commission wrote:

  1. There is no evidence that the women who gave birth in mother and baby homes were denied pain relief or other medical interventions that were available to a public patient who gave birth in a Dublin or Cork maternity unit. There is evidence of women in mother and baby homes being given pain relief, and being stitched following birth.

Had she been aware at that time that the commission’s report directly contradicted what she was about to say at the Dáil, there is no doubt that she would have attacked the commission’s findings, there and then. Now however, six months later, when she and others realise that the commission have rubbished many of her claims, she now says that ‘the report of the Mother and Baby Homes Commission cannot stand and must be repudiated’.

As it slowly began to dawn on her that her allegations are not supported by evidence, she has followed the only option available — to maintain any semblance of credibility — by calling for the report to be repudiated.

She has been howling from the rafters of Leinster House for the former members of the now disbanded commission to appear before the Oireachtas committee, of which she happens to be the chairperson.

However, given the obvious bias and prejudice which she showed and her motivation to keep her credibility intact, would any sensible person allow themselves to be publicly grilled and abused by political grandstanders.

Clearly many of the witnesses have made false allegations — allegations which stretch credulity to levels where only some sections of Irish society can reach — and the commission have stated, — in an overly polite disposition — that ‘a number of witnesses gave evidence that was clearly incorrect. This contamination probably occurred because of meetings with other residents and inaccurate media coverage’. The amount of inaccurate media coverage has been alarming. It is not really the sheer volume of falsehoods which most alarming, but the ease by which beliefs could be fabricated by the politicians and media, which any normally functioning society would have remained sceptical.

She also said that Irish women operated these institutions as if they were prisons.  We ignored the cries of women and children subjected to ‘torture, deprivation and humiliation on a colossal scale’. She clearly holds the opinion that Irish women are particularly faulty and cruel, all wanting to join an organisation so that they could go about the business of torturing women and children. What was in it for them! Is that not the first question any sensible person would ask not to mind a professional investigator?

There is only one motivation put forward, and the entire scandal rests on this one foundation, women hated unmarried mothers and their illegitimate children. That is what motivated them to kill and torture vulnerable people, not money, not prestige, not notoriety, carrying all that risk for nothing! The risk of excommunication, risk of execution for murder, risk of reputational damage, risk of banishment etc. All that risk for no gain whatsoever.

The science of motivation holds that two things drive human actions: necessities — food, sleep, avoidance of pain; and rewards. There is no reward for killing a baby, unless you happen to be its mother. That is the very reason mother and baby homes were set up in the first place.

In most countries politicians can fool some of the people some of the time, but in Ireland they can fool all the people all of the time because we are too nice and trusting.

EJ

References

Dáil Éireann debate – Wednesday, 13 Jan 2021 Vol. 1003 No. 1
Report of the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes: Statements

Link – page search: funchion

Deputy Kathleen Funchion (Sinn Féin)

Mother and baby homes were not homes, they were detention centres. A home is somewhere where one should feel safe, loved and protected, not a place where one is tortured, imprisoned and forced to give birth in the most appalling conditions, often without medical support or even basic pain relief. These walls hid torture, deprivation and humiliation on a colossal scale. Human rights did not exist in these centres. As a mother, daughter, sister and Irish citizen, I cannot countenance this cruelty. The cries of children and tortured mothers were ignored and trivialised by cruel nuns [women] and others who were involved in these institutions, who ran the institutions as if they were prisons.

Government Snobs Increase the Poverty Penalty

In the same week when medics expressed concern about the high consumption of cannabis and its negative health effects on Ireland’s young people, the Irish government, lacking in the ability to do joined up thinking, put in place a strategy to encourage more young people to consume illicit drugs. One junior minister explained the rationale behind the new minimum alcohol pricing law, was to put ‘alcohol out of the price range of our children and young people.’ Using the same logic, should our politicians have introduced a minim price per gram of cannabis at the same time. Why not include crack cocaine, heroin, smack, speed, yokes and the whole gamut of substances which young people use to go in search of oblivion?

Worse than poor quality thinking is the elitist prejudice expressed as a sneer at Ireland’s struggling classes. Most of the country’s political elite frequent establishments where the cheapest bottle of plonk sells for €25, which after January 2022, will still cost €25. A zero percent price rise for certain classes in Irish society.

Are the struggling classes so detestable that Ireland’s political elite want to punish them and make their lot even more miserable by increasing the poverty penalty? The children of middle-class problem drinkers do not have to rely on charity, unlike working class children. Taking more money out of a family will only increase their reliance on alcohol subsidisation charities like Barnardos. That’s right, tens of thousands of poor families are able to survive on social welfare payments and do not have to rely on charity. In contrast, the households which continually rely on charity have issues with substance abuse and mental health.

An addict will have to have their fix not matter what the cost to them be it in financial terms, health terms or reputationally. Increasing the cost will not reduce consumption but take away from any funds left over after the addict has serviced their addiction.

Minimum price per unit of alcohol is aimed exclusively at the poor and the struggling classes. Its intention is to ‘modify behaviour’ but its foundation is on elitist snobbery best illustrated by egalitarian pricing. The cornerstone of a republic is equality and if price is to be used to modify behaviour, then equality demands that the behaviour of citizens be modified equally. Accordingly, if a person on a social welfare payment of €201 per week pays €6.00 for a pint of beer, then An Taoiseach, should pay pro rata €121.25and Leo Varadkar, €112.07. That would ensure that Micheál Martin is subject to the same behaviour modification demanded by equality. All others should pay pro rata based on their gross income, for example, Robert Watts would pay 167.82 for the €6 pint of beer, a Garda €22.43, a carpenter €20 and so on.

As things stand, a bottle of wine at a restaurant costing €25 will remain at €25, demonstrating that the middle classes will not be affected nor subjected to ‘behaviour modification’. However, if egalitarian pricing was introduced then Micheál Martin would have to pay €506.46, Leo Varadkar €466.97, a Garda would pay €93.45, a carpenter €83.34 and Robert Watts €698.43.

In time, it would of course bring a measure of esteem to some members of the riff-raff, as I am sure a few of whom would be invited to dine with the élite, perhaps even at the same table, for the sole purpose of purchasing the wine.

The Poverty Penalty is the term used to describe the additional cost paid for goods and services by poorer people relative to the more affluent. Thus, the greater a person’s income the less impact price will make to modifying their behaviour, not least because they already drink products which will not be affected by price increases.

Regressive taxation is a related term which acknowledges the Poverty Penalty, and we now have a government, like our colonial masters of old, which seeks to attack its people for no other reason than to pander to their illusions of superiority expressed through a vacuous snobbery. The exact same elitist behaviour which caused the masses to rise up all over the globe to enshrine the three foundation stones upon which a republic is built: equality, liberty and fraternity. All of which have recently been trampled over by Ireland’s over paid elites. The poor are thirsty, Leo Antoinette, ‘let them drink our dregs’!

Most anti-social behaviour due to alcohol and substance abuse is carried out by young people, a cohort with more disposable income than most others. A price increase in alcohol is very unlikely to reduce alcohol consumption and may in fact incline the young and others to illicit drugs. Increased tobacco prices have already made the smugglers rich beyond their wildest dreams, so why send more money their way.

The struggling classed have already been hit hard and are bearing the brunt of carbon taxes, while at the same time they are put to the pin of their collar trying to pay high mortgages, and high rents.

A price increase will not have the consequences its advocates intend, and will bring about many of the problems which only joined up thinking might foresee. It is based on narrow thinking, prejudice and fundamental ignorance of the nature of addiction, self-medication, and the many benefits which alcohol brings to the majority of the people and society in general.

On the public announcement of the strategy, Leo Varadkar declared to the nation ‘the truth is that too many of us drink too much and too often’. OK then, use price increases to modify your own behaviour and introduce egalitarian pricing. Make Ireland no country for the same auld snobs who caused many rebellions on this island and others. #BlueShirt #TaePots

EJ

Ref:

Cannabis ‘gravest threat’ to mental health of young people
https://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/cannabis-gravest-threat-to-mental-health-of-young-people-1.4554489