General Chat in The Marcus Lounge.


Did any of you see the photos of the Afghan suspected of shooting the three national guardsmen, being loaded onto an ambulance?
All looks a bit odd. One report says that he was stabbed in the head by a soldier then shot once in the buttock and once in the leg. Another reports claim he was shot four times. President trump on social media said he was "severely wounded".
Looking at the photo, the suspect is on a semi-seated position on a stretcher with a white sheet under him. Surely if he was shot in the buttock they wouldn't put the weight of his rather large frame on the injured cheek. There is no sign of blood on the white sheet, no bandages to be seen. If a trained soldier stabbed him in the head he would have gone for the temple, which would leave him half dead, or at least if he missed the temple any wound to the scalp would bleed profusely. We would see blood and bandages, but there's nothing. The second thing I find odd is that, apart from maybe his hands cuffed behind him there doesn't seem to be much restraints or people guarding him. You would imagine national guardsmen having three of their colleagues shot would be circled around with arms ready in case he made a move.
There seems only to be one female police officer. There's huge open space around for him to jump off and run as fast as he could with a sore arse.
Finally, had they none of those foil blankets in the ambulance ffs?View attachment 8463View attachment 8463

View attachment 8462View attachment 8462
Looks more like a, Before Ozempic, photo that anything else ! ! !
 
No idea Myles. The professionals looking after him must decide, in their wisdom, to leave him without clothing. I think they should have sought a second opinion.
The should have put him in a Bacon Wrap !

Crispy Bacon Wrap !

Wrapping these Islamic Nutters in Bacon could be a Game Changer ! ! !
 
I'll leave this here because I'm not sure where the examples of woke retardery thread is.

Fireman disciplined for allowing firemen to say ‘fireman’ loses unfair dismissal case https://share.google/uZPfI7GoNQF4uLf8W
As I noted before, leftists are only leftists when it suits them, workers rights obviously do not enjoy their protection.
 
No idea Myles. The professionals looking after him must decide, in their wisdom, to leave him without clothing. I think they should have sought a second opinion.
Normally he would have been given at least a sheet. No one should have to see that 🤣. ..but they were mad and out of blankets. Now the whole world has seen what's under the bonnet and is rolling around laughing. No wonder they have to bully their females into submission. I mean i have seen more impressive baby carrots.. Clearly a humiliation thing - not that I blame the EMTs.
 
Normally he would have been given at least a sheet. No one should have to see that 🤣. ..but they were mad and out of blankets. Now the whole world has seen what's under the bonnet and is rolling around laughing. No wonder they have to bully their females into submission. I mean i have seen more impressive baby carrots.. Clearly a humiliation thing - not that I blame the EMTs.
Mam, kindly consider the shock and the cold, neither are conducive to a display of pride.
 
Snitch posting more bullshit.🙄
You know what, I'd say that you think Morgan is the bee knees, sure doesn't he talk about the trannies in women's sports..

You have the most rubbish takes on everything
 
You mean like when BIlly Connolly and his classmates were forced into the north sea to swim and "we went in as boys but came out girls"?
The very same! Something similar happened to me many years ago when I was doing some diving training. Having broken the ice to get in to the lake the homemade wetsuit split along the crotch. Took a week or so for the then girlfriend to find it again! Good for the sperm count though, or so it is said!
 
The heart of the cancer lies in Brussels.
It has to be removed.

Western Europe isn’t leading the world anymore, so it’s threatening it instead​

The region’s insecurity is driving global instability
Western Europe isn’t leading the world anymore, so it’s threatening it instead

NATO leaders attend 2025 summit in the Hague © Getty Images / Ben Stansall - WPA Pool/Getty Images

Few serious observers of international politics doubt that Western Europe has once again become one of the world’s most dangerous sources of instability. It’s a bitter conclusion, given that the entire post-1945 order was built to stop the continent from dragging humanity into catastrophe a third time. Yet here we are: the loudest calls for confrontation come from west of the Bug River, and nowhere else do governments prepare for war with such nervous energy.

The hostility is directed above all at Russia, Western Europe’s neighbour and main trading partner for decades. Increasingly though, it spills toward China as well, despite the absence of any genuine political or economic conflict between the sub-continent and Beijing. That tells us something important. The source of today’s aggressive Western European posture isn’t external at all. It lies in the region’s own political structures, its confused sense of itself, and the growing panic of elites who no longer understand the world that has taken shape around them.
It would be deeply irresponsible to assume that American supervision of Western Europe will be enough to prevent disastrous miscalculations. After all, this part of the world has already given humanity two world wars. And we should never forget that the sub-continent contains two nuclear-armed states, Britain and France. Western Europe may no longer be the center of world politics, but it remains undeniably a place where a conflict could start that would engulf everyone.

The roots of its behaviour run deep. The first cause is internal. Since the mid-twentieth century, Western European societies have become unusually consolidated. Their elites have mastered the art of preventing domestic upheaval; social unrest, ideological revolt and large-scale political renewal have all faded away. Revolutions once shaped the region’s history. Now their very possibility has disappeared.


This creates a paradox. A political system that cannot change itself begins to project instability outward. Western Europe’s elites are tightly entrenched, even when they are painfully incompetent. Its societies are apathetic, convinced they have little influence over their own fate. Across the EU, individual governments may quarrel, but on the big questions, especially the approach to the outside world, they are strikingly unanimous. Mechanisms of conformity work so effectively that even the most reckless foreign-policy decisions attract little dissent. Western Europe has reached a point where individual thinking gives way to collective instinct.
In other words, the sub-continent has lost the ability to reinvent itself peacefully. And that internal stagnation is now spilling into its external behaviour.

The second major cause is Western Europe’s declining global position. For decades the region’s powers could afford a more measured diplomacy because its economic weight guaranteed respect. When these Europeans lectured the world, others listened. Not always happily, but they listened. Those days are gone. China’s meteoric rise, India’s emergence as a global player, Russia’s recovery and insistence on defending its interests, and the political awakening of the Global South have pushed the EU down the hierarchy of world powers.
The world has changed; Western Europe has not.

Suddenly, this bloc faces a landscape in which it is no longer the central actor, yet it knows no other way to behave. Throughout its history, Western Europe has never experienced being a peripheral region. Today it is edging dangerously close to that status, and its elites simply cannot process the shift. Hence the frantic attempts to attract attention by escalating military rhetoric and painting Russia and China as existential threats. If Western Europe can no longer command influence through economic or diplomatic power, it will try to do so through alarmism and the language of war.


The rise of groups like BRICS only strengthens the region’s anxiety. These Europeans once imagined the G7 as a vehicle for preserving their centrality by hitching themselves to Washington. BRICS demonstrates that the world can organize itself without the EU, and even against its preferences. No wonder these European leaders feel cornered.
Western Europe remains part of what Russians call the collective West, and its ties to the United States are strong. But these ties no longer deliver what the locals have come to expect: a guaranteed place at the top. The entire debate about the American “security umbrella” is really about something else. It is about Western Europe’s fear of losing status, and its desperate hope that the United States will keep treating it as a co-equal power. Washington, however, sees the world differently, and increasingly has its own priorities.
Taken together, these internal and external forces make Western Europe the most combustible player on the global stage as we enter the second quarter of the 21st century. This is not a problem created by one or two inept leaders, nor is it a passing mood linked to temporary economic pains. It is structural. That makes it far more dangerous.

What is the cure? At the moment, no one knows. History offers no comforting examples. When a formerly central power loses influence and cannot adapt, the outcomes have rarely been peaceful. Western Europe today is replaying this old script: locked into outdated assumptions, unable to reform itself, and convinced that the only way to stay relevant is to shout louder and brandish threats.
For Russia, China, and the United States, this situation creates a difficult challenge. Their choices will shape whether Western Europe’s new instability becomes manageable or erupts into something far worse. Ordinary citizens across the world have every reason to hope these decisions will be wise. But hope is not certainty.

What we can say with confidence is that Western Europe’s behaviour is not the product of strength, but of insecurity. A sub-continent that once dominated world affairs now sees others overtaking it. And instead of adapting to a multipolar order, it lashes out, insisting on a global role it can no longer sustain.

This is what makes Western Europe, tragically but unmistakably, an enemy of peace today.
 
More euro bollox.
The heart of the cancer lies in Brussels.
It has to be removed.

Western Europe isn’t leading the world anymore, so it’s threatening it instead​

The region’s insecurity is driving global instability
Western Europe isn’t leading the world anymore, so it’s threatening it instead

NATO leaders attend 2025 summit in the Hague © Getty Images / Ben Stansall - WPA Pool/Getty Images

Few serious observers of international politics doubt that Western Europe has once again become one of the world’s most dangerous sources of instability. It’s a bitter conclusion, given that the entire post-1945 order was built to stop the continent from dragging humanity into catastrophe a third time. Yet here we are: the loudest calls for confrontation come from west of the Bug River, and nowhere else do governments prepare for war with such nervous energy.

The hostility is directed above all at Russia, Western Europe’s neighbour and main trading partner for decades. Increasingly though, it spills toward China as well, despite the absence of any genuine political or economic conflict between the sub-continent and Beijing. That tells us something important. The source of today’s aggressive Western European posture isn’t external at all. It lies in the region’s own political structures, its confused sense of itself, and the growing panic of elites who no longer understand the world that has taken shape around them.
It would be deeply irresponsible to assume that American supervision of Western Europe will be enough to prevent disastrous miscalculations. After all, this part of the world has already given humanity two world wars. And we should never forget that the sub-continent contains two nuclear-armed states, Britain and France. Western Europe may no longer be the center of world politics, but it remains undeniably a place where a conflict could start that would engulf everyone.

The roots of its behaviour run deep. The first cause is internal. Since the mid-twentieth century, Western European societies have become unusually consolidated. Their elites have mastered the art of preventing domestic upheaval; social unrest, ideological revolt and large-scale political renewal have all faded away. Revolutions once shaped the region’s history. Now their very possibility has disappeared.


This creates a paradox. A political system that cannot change itself begins to project instability outward. Western Europe’s elites are tightly entrenched, even when they are painfully incompetent. Its societies are apathetic, convinced they have little influence over their own fate. Across the EU, individual governments may quarrel, but on the big questions, especially the approach to the outside world, they are strikingly unanimous. Mechanisms of conformity work so effectively that even the most reckless foreign-policy decisions attract little dissent. Western Europe has reached a point where individual thinking gives way to collective instinct.
In other words, the sub-continent has lost the ability to reinvent itself peacefully. And that internal stagnation is now spilling into its external behaviour.

The second major cause is Western Europe’s declining global position. For decades the region’s powers could afford a more measured diplomacy because its economic weight guaranteed respect. When these Europeans lectured the world, others listened. Not always happily, but they listened. Those days are gone. China’s meteoric rise, India’s emergence as a global player, Russia’s recovery and insistence on defending its interests, and the political awakening of the Global South have pushed the EU down the hierarchy of world powers.
The world has changed; Western Europe has not.

Suddenly, this bloc faces a landscape in which it is no longer the central actor, yet it knows no other way to behave. Throughout its history, Western Europe has never experienced being a peripheral region. Today it is edging dangerously close to that status, and its elites simply cannot process the shift. Hence the frantic attempts to attract attention by escalating military rhetoric and painting Russia and China as existential threats. If Western Europe can no longer command influence through economic or diplomatic power, it will try to do so through alarmism and the language of war.


The rise of groups like BRICS only strengthens the region’s anxiety. These Europeans once imagined the G7 as a vehicle for preserving their centrality by hitching themselves to Washington. BRICS demonstrates that the world can organize itself without the EU, and even against its preferences. No wonder these European leaders feel cornered.
Western Europe remains part of what Russians call the collective West, and its ties to the United States are strong. But these ties no longer deliver what the locals have come to expect: a guaranteed place at the top. The entire debate about the American “security umbrella” is really about something else. It is about Western Europe’s fear of losing status, and its desperate hope that the United States will keep treating it as a co-equal power. Washington, however, sees the world differently, and increasingly has its own priorities.
Taken together, these internal and external forces make Western Europe the most combustible player on the global stage as we enter the second quarter of the 21st century. This is not a problem created by one or two inept leaders, nor is it a passing mood linked to temporary economic pains. It is structural. That makes it far more dangerous.

What is the cure? At the moment, no one knows. History offers no comforting examples. When a formerly central power loses influence and cannot adapt, the outcomes have rarely been peaceful. Western Europe today is replaying this old script: locked into outdated assumptions, unable to reform itself, and convinced that the only way to stay relevant is to shout louder and brandish threats.
For Russia, China, and the United States, this situation creates a difficult challenge. Their choices will shape whether Western Europe’s new instability becomes manageable or erupts into something far worse. Ordinary citizens across the world have every reason to hope these decisions will be wise. But hope is not certainty.

What we can say with confidence is that Western Europe’s behaviour is not the product of strength, but of insecurity. A sub-continent that once dominated world affairs now sees others overtaking it. And instead of adapting to a multipolar order, it lashes out, insisting on a global role it can no longer sustain.

This is what makes Western Europe, tragically but unmistakably, an enemy of peace today.
The weight of reality will be crushing for the clown elite.
It's fair to observe that they do not expect to suffer the consequences of the totally detached from reality decisions endorsed by themselves.
And the kicker.
Neither the means nor the capacity to do anything meaningful offensively is available.
The US is leaving their chat group.
So what now for the vassals.?
 
More euro bollox.

The weight of reality will be crushing for the clown elite.
It's fair to observe that they do not expect to suffer the consequences of the totally detached from reality decisions endorsed by themselves.
And the kicker.
Neither the means nor the capacity to do anything meaningful offensively is available.
The US is leaving their chat group.
So what now for the vassals.?
The same as they did in 1914 and 1939.
 
The heart of the cancer lies in Brussels.
It has to be removed.

Western Europe isn’t leading the world anymore, so it’s threatening it instead​

The region’s insecurity is driving global instability
Western Europe isn’t leading the world anymore, so it’s threatening it instead

NATO leaders attend 2025 summit in the Hague © Getty Images / Ben Stansall - WPA Pool/Getty Images

Few serious observers of international politics doubt that Western Europe has once again become one of the world’s most dangerous sources of instability. It’s a bitter conclusion, given that the entire post-1945 order was built to stop the continent from dragging humanity into catastrophe a third time. Yet here we are: the loudest calls for confrontation come from west of the Bug River, and nowhere else do governments prepare for war with such nervous energy.

The hostility is directed above all at Russia, Western Europe’s neighbour and main trading partner for decades. Increasingly though, it spills toward China as well, despite the absence of any genuine political or economic conflict between the sub-continent and Beijing. That tells us something important. The source of today’s aggressive Western European posture isn’t external at all. It lies in the region’s own political structures, its confused sense of itself, and the growing panic of elites who no longer understand the world that has taken shape around them.
It would be deeply irresponsible to assume that American supervision of Western Europe will be enough to prevent disastrous miscalculations. After all, this part of the world has already given humanity two world wars. And we should never forget that the sub-continent contains two nuclear-armed states, Britain and France. Western Europe may no longer be the center of world politics, but it remains undeniably a place where a conflict could start that would engulf everyone.

The roots of its behaviour run deep. The first cause is internal. Since the mid-twentieth century, Western European societies have become unusually consolidated. Their elites have mastered the art of preventing domestic upheaval; social unrest, ideological revolt and large-scale political renewal have all faded away. Revolutions once shaped the region’s history. Now their very possibility has disappeared.


This creates a paradox. A political system that cannot change itself begins to project instability outward. Western Europe’s elites are tightly entrenched, even when they are painfully incompetent. Its societies are apathetic, convinced they have little influence over their own fate. Across the EU, individual governments may quarrel, but on the big questions, especially the approach to the outside world, they are strikingly unanimous. Mechanisms of conformity work so effectively that even the most reckless foreign-policy decisions attract little dissent. Western Europe has reached a point where individual thinking gives way to collective instinct.
In other words, the sub-continent has lost the ability to reinvent itself peacefully. And that internal stagnation is now spilling into its external behaviour.

The second major cause is Western Europe’s declining global position. For decades the region’s powers could afford a more measured diplomacy because its economic weight guaranteed respect. When these Europeans lectured the world, others listened. Not always happily, but they listened. Those days are gone. China’s meteoric rise, India’s emergence as a global player, Russia’s recovery and insistence on defending its interests, and the political awakening of the Global South have pushed the EU down the hierarchy of world powers.
The world has changed; Western Europe has not.

Suddenly, this bloc faces a landscape in which it is no longer the central actor, yet it knows no other way to behave. Throughout its history, Western Europe has never experienced being a peripheral region. Today it is edging dangerously close to that status, and its elites simply cannot process the shift. Hence the frantic attempts to attract attention by escalating military rhetoric and painting Russia and China as existential threats. If Western Europe can no longer command influence through economic or diplomatic power, it will try to do so through alarmism and the language of war.


The rise of groups like BRICS only strengthens the region’s anxiety. These Europeans once imagined the G7 as a vehicle for preserving their centrality by hitching themselves to Washington. BRICS demonstrates that the world can organize itself without the EU, and even against its preferences. No wonder these European leaders feel cornered.
Western Europe remains part of what Russians call the collective West, and its ties to the United States are strong. But these ties no longer deliver what the locals have come to expect: a guaranteed place at the top. The entire debate about the American “security umbrella” is really about something else. It is about Western Europe’s fear of losing status, and its desperate hope that the United States will keep treating it as a co-equal power. Washington, however, sees the world differently, and increasingly has its own priorities.
Taken together, these internal and external forces make Western Europe the most combustible player on the global stage as we enter the second quarter of the 21st century. This is not a problem created by one or two inept leaders, nor is it a passing mood linked to temporary economic pains. It is structural. That makes it far more dangerous.

What is the cure? At the moment, no one knows. History offers no comforting examples. When a formerly central power loses influence and cannot adapt, the outcomes have rarely been peaceful. Western Europe today is replaying this old script: locked into outdated assumptions, unable to reform itself, and convinced that the only way to stay relevant is to shout louder and brandish threats.
For Russia, China, and the United States, this situation creates a difficult challenge. Their choices will shape whether Western Europe’s new instability becomes manageable or erupts into something far worse. Ordinary citizens across the world have every reason to hope these decisions will be wise. But hope is not certainty.

What we can say with confidence is that Western Europe’s behaviour is not the product of strength, but of insecurity. A sub-continent that once dominated world affairs now sees others overtaking it. And instead of adapting to a multipolar order, it lashes out, insisting on a global role it can no longer sustain.

This is what makes Western Europe, tragically but unmistakably, an enemy of peace today.
America's Gimps ! ! !
 
It's a fucker when one logs out and all the shit threads that one has on ignore are there to be seen.
I unfortunately replied to one of Pervert/Snitch's there.
Silly boy. :ROFLMAO:
Anyway, the post I replied to was Pervert congratulating me on taking Snitch's 'Top Poster of Month' crown only two days into December....What a fucking retarded idiot troll that cunt truly is. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
 
It's a fucker when one logs out and all the shit threads that one has on ignore are there to be seen.
I unfortunately replied to one of Pervert/Snitch's there.
Silly boy. :ROFLMAO:
Anyway, the post I replied to was Pervert congratulating me on taking Snitch's 'Top Poster of Month' crown only two days into December....What a fucking retarded idiot troll that cunt truly is. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
I don't actually want to be Top Poster of Month (I'd rather not be, truth be told) and besides, I'd be anyway even if I didn't make the most posts (because I'm simply the best)

I treat this site as what it says on the tin - Ireland's Premier Discussion Site. So I think that adds quite a bit to my post count, I like to discuss things, certainly not exclusively but probably mostly with people I disagree with, it's more intellectually stimulating
 
I treat this site as what it says on the tin - Ireland's Premier Discussion Site. So I think that adds quite a bit to my post count, I like to discuss things, certainly not exclusively but probably mostly with people I disagree with, it's more intellectually stimulating
Just like Pervert!!
 
Just like Pervert!!
I find the violent reaction to anyone here who isn't part of your echo chamber very lame

I mean, Jaysus, you can swat @Haven like a fly, I know I can, but there's not much meat on those bones for me. He mostly just spams the site with partisan politics and MSM crap, like you. You're worse though because of your spam-stalk behaviour
 
I find the violent reaction to anyone here who isn't part of your echo chamber very lame

I mean, Jaysus, you can swat @Haven like a fly, I know I can, but there's not much meat on those bones for me. He mostly just spams the site with partisan politics and MSM crap, like you. You're worse though because of your spam-stalk behaviour
Says the drunkard little tosser who cannot help but reply to my every post with the childlike and highly original 'Woof'. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
Tell it all to Dan, Snitch. :)
 
Tech question: I want to freeze the Gerry Hutch thread but keep the comments in place. So, no more new comments, but people can still see previous comments.

Not just yet: there's an open letter to Gerry first and give him a week to respond.

It's effectively switching into the Dublin Galway by election discussion, so we might as well do that on the orginal thread.

Is this possible? How?
 
Tech question: I want to freeze the Gerry Hutch thread but keep the comments in place. So, no more new comments, but people can still see previous comments.

Not just yet: there's an open letter to Gerry first and give him a week to respond.

It's effectively switching into the Dublin Galway by election discussion, so we might as well do that on the orginal thread.

Is this possible? How?
If it is in your blog, you are a moderator and can Lock the thread. Tap the three dots to the right of “Unwatch” at the very bottom and it will pop up
 
If it is in your blog, you are a moderator and can Lock the thread. Tap the three dots to the right of “Unwatch” at the very bottom and it will pop up
Go raibh maith agat!

I'm worried that I'm getting addicted to the trophy awards. Can I switch the notifications off?

Can we award trophies to the funniest posters? In this vale of tears, laughter is something to be strongly encouraged. There is great potential to encourage ribald limericks and new versions of well known songs.
Is there no award for the most liked poster?
Can we add a "Thank You/GRMA" emoji?
Controversial question - can we include a God Bless You/ Beannacht De ort emoji? But nobody will be forced to use it, obviously...
 
Go raibh maith agat!

I'm worried that I'm getting addicted to the trophy awards. Can I switch the notifications off?

Can we award trophies to the funniest posters? In this vale of tears, laughter is something to be strongly encouraged. There is great potential to encourage ribald limericks and new versions of well known songs.
Is there no award for the most liked poster?
Can we add a "Thank You/GRMA" emoji?
Controversial question - can we include a God Bless You/ Beannacht De ort emoji? But nobody will be forced to use it, obviously...
I do not know !!
 

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