Worker & Community Struggles and Protests Madrid Police "Dumbfounded" After Amazon Called The Cops On Striking Workers 22:31 Nov 27 0 comments George Soros’ Open Society Foundation unmasked in a major leak 22:31 Aug 24 1 comments Shell in court over major Corrib gas refinery flaring events. 23:32 Jul 28 0 comments Eddie Hobbs: Largest act of larceny against Irish people 23:22 Jun 02 0 comments CHASE Fundraising Events Calendar for June 23:10 Jun 01 0 comments more >>Blog Feeds
Anti-EmpireNorth Korea Increases Aid to Russia, Mos... Tue Nov 19, 2024 12:29 | Marko Marjanovi? Trump Assembles a War Cabinet Sat Nov 16, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi? Slavgrinder Ramps Up Into Overdrive Tue Nov 12, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi? ?Existential? Culling to Continue on Com... Mon Nov 11, 2024 10:28 | Marko Marjanovi? US to Deploy Military Contractors to Ukr... Sun Nov 10, 2024 02:37 | Field Empty
The SakerA bird's eye view of the vineyard
Alternative Copy of thesaker.is site is available Thu May 25, 2023 14:38 | Ice-Saker-V6bKu3nz
The Saker blog is now frozen Tue Feb 28, 2023 23:55 | The Saker
What do you make of the Russia and China Partnership? Tue Feb 28, 2023 16:26 | The Saker
Moveable Feast Cafe 2023/02/27 ? Open Thread Mon Feb 27, 2023 19:00 | cafe-uploader
The stage is set for Hybrid World War III Mon Feb 27, 2023 15:50 | The Saker
Public InquiryInterested in maladministration. Estd. 2005RTEs Sarah McInerney ? Fianna Fail?supporter? Anthony Joe Duffy is dishonest and untrustworthy Anthony Robert Watt complaint: Time for decision by SIPO Anthony RTE in breach of its own editorial principles Anthony Waiting for SIPO Anthony
Human Rights in IrelandPromoting Human Rights in Ireland |
TCD students forced to vote on Coke and Nestle bans again
dublin |
worker & community struggles and protests |
news report
Thursday February 03, 2005 17:36 by TCD1styear - Trinity Left
Far Right at it again. The students of TCD have been hit with the news that once again we will have to fight the far right on the issue of the bans on the sale of coke and Nestle products in SU-run outlets The referendum proposal, which has the backing of 350 students, is interesting in that it ties the fate of coca cola to that of nestle, by putting both bans on one ballot paper. The campaign is being organised by far-right Freedom Institute hack John McGuirk, and several members of Young Fine Gael. |
View Comments Titles Only
save preference
Comments (16 of 16)
Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16Good luck to the Trinity left putting a stop to the bastards. The "Freedom Institute" and YFG got a bloody nose when they tried to overturn the Coke ban in UCD - hopefully yis can humiliate them again. Just have a look at the FI message boards if you want proof of what an utter clown McGurk is...no reason to be afraid
The wingers will be organised, no doubt of that. Will we focus on Coke or Nestle?
Elections taking place at the same time - who are the lefts? Will this mean things for the referendum?
President
John Mannion
Séamus McGoldrick
Ed Reilly
Deputy President
Tom Dillon
Séamus Murphy
Shane O'Brien
Andrew Payne
Education Officer
Lorna Jennings
Dónal McCormack
Denise O'Connell
Welfare Officer
Thomas Lowth
Stephanie O'Brien
Ents Officer
Mick Cullinan
Niall Hughes
Johanna Moran
"we of YFG want to be free to buy coke".
"we of YFG want to be free to support a global corporation mired by famine scandals for selling artificial baby milk to mothers who could and would be better breast feeding."
why?
because we're tits.
Come on leaids, register yourself with the TCDSU officer to help the NO campaign and we'll show the FG boys what solidarity is all about! I've just e-mailed him there, and I'm on board, so get on board and roll the union over coke/nestle
above where it says TCDSU officer, it should say TCDSU education officer.
I see this carry-on by the representatives of the political right in the respective colleges as entirely in keeping with the behaviour of their grown-up mentors, whom they hope to replace at the top of the dungheap some day. The tactic comes from the infamous Nice Referendum re-run, the tactic being to keep holding the referendum until the required result is obtained. The 'selflessness' displayed by the student YFGers et al. is quite remarkable: they're representing the multinational corporations' interests for no immediate gain of their own! They have shown incredible stamina on this issue as well - it makes me believe that these folks' concern for the welfare of big business is genuine. Such devotion to their duty! It would bring tears to the eyes of hardened cynics, and it will not pass unnoticed. Perhaps their sacrifices will earn their reward in Dáil Éireann, where the real jam is, to where they shall 'naturally' ascend when their transformation from student beer-monster ugly duckings to fully-fledged members of the republican aristocracy has been completed. Maybe the prize for sticking their necks out for Nestlé and Coca-Cola free of charge will come sooner, in the 'milk round', where fighting the fatcats' corner would look good on their CVs. Then again, they could be spoofing for a bit of notoriety and cheap publicity. Aaaah, the cream of the country - rich and thick. As a Jesuit or Holy Ghost Father would say: "The future of the country is in safe hands!"
I heard that SIPTU had opossed the ban last year!
There are plenty of things that the Freidom Insitute and Jung Fine Gael could investigate in Trinity, but Nestle and Coke aren't any of them. This Nestle argument has been raging in Trinity since the 1980's, and if you bother to check, I think you'll find there's a whole range of products that the SU won't carry in its shop. Remember the uproar over the Sunday World and it's objectification of women that led to it being expunged from the Inventory? And the British tabloids?
Here's some things they could investigate investigate.
1) Why is Trinity adopting an affirmative action policy for entrants from schools who do A-levels (translation: Northern Ireland, Prods, and Brits)? Wouldn't they be better off with such a policy for say, recent immigrants or victims of IRA punishment beatings?
2) Why are children of staff members not paying their fare share of fees? The rest are carrying the spolied offspring of academia.
3) When are the CSC going to stop shovelling student's capitation money into rubbish like the Hist and the Phil and go about reclaiming the GMB for use by all societies?
4) Why does TCD tolerate staff members using their titles when speaking in their own capacity? Are the opinions of Ivana Bacik, Sean Barrett et al the official policy of TCD?
5) When are they going to get rid of the antedeluvian nonsense of the 3 Trinity seats in the Seanad (see translation of 1)?
6) Has Tommy Murtagh finished his book on Simone de Beuvoir yet? I lost track about 1989...
I agree with Toneore.
Especially about the Seanad. The idea that there should be a special "regulatory" assembly whose members are not democratically elected by all the people that their decisions affect, but instead by the Church, State and "the educated" (read anyone that had enough money to go to TCD) is repulsive.
1) Why is Trinity adopting an affirmative action policy for entrants from schools who do A-levels (translation: Northern Ireland, Prods, and Brits)? Wouldn't they be better off with such a policy for say, recent immigrants or victims of IRA punishment beatings?
As far as I know, there isn't an affirmative action plan for Northern students. The value of an A-level is being changed, and in order to avoid throwing A-level students into trouble (what if you're doing three A-levels and you want to do Bess? It's a bit hard to suddenly add an entire subject to your workload halfway through your studies) they decided that places for A-level students would be allocated as a percentage of applicants, equal to the same percentage for CAO students. So if 15% of Leaving Cert applicants for a certain course get it, then 15% of A-level courses get it. It's probably going to result in fewer A-level students, and at any rate, it's only for one year, so as to give a fair chance to those already studying for their A-levels.
Aside from that, I find your reference to Prods and Brits offensive. If you hate Brits, take it out somewhere else. Xenophobe.
2) Why are children of staff members not paying their fare share of fees? The rest are carrying the spolied offspring of academia.
What fees, exactly? The government are paying the fees.
3) When are the CSC going to stop shovelling student's capitation money into rubbish like the Hist and the Phil and go about reclaiming the GMB for use by all societies?
The Hist and Phil have about three and a half thousand members between them and usually command weekly audiences of well over a hundred at a time. Secondly, the legal status of the GMB is, generally speaking, weird. The rooms are all legally owned by the societies, and any attempt to seize control of them usually goes badly. About six or seven years ago the College tried to take over the top floor and were hit with a High Court injunction. The building is never going to be "reclaimed", and at any rate, plenty of societies use the building at no cost. And finally, the Hist and Phil finance themselves to a far greater degree than the majority of societies. They get less as a proportion of their total budget than almost anyone else.
4) Why does TCD tolerate staff members using their titles when speaking in their own capacity? Are the opinions of Ivana Bacik, Sean Barrett et al the official policy of TCD?
If they're speaking on issues related to Trinity, then why not? If Barrett is talking about restructuring, then why wouldn't he divulge his status as a Fellow? If he didn't, people would be loudly claiming that he was being untruthful about his interest in the college. Aside from that, the Fellows are listed as the owners of the college, so it's hardly a bizarre idea for them to mention that they're fellows.
5) When are they going to get rid of the antedeluvian nonsense of the 3 Trinity seats in the Seanad (see translation of 1)?
I honestly don't see this as a problem. It's undemocratic, but surely a far more important target is the Taoiseach's 11 personal nominations. The Trinity senators aren't elected in a wholly democratic way, but they have more of a mandate than the vast majority of the Senate.
Just for the record, there is no affirmative-action-for-Northern-Ireland in Trinity. (And by the way, you sectarian idiot tonoroe, Catholic students in Belfast schools take A-levels too).
The major recent change to admissions is to aim for 15% admission from non-traditional backgrounds (access/socio-economic, mature, disabilities) - much of it by way of foundation course or interview, rather than through the points system.
The recent change to the points value of A-levels brings them more accurately into the system (and is if anything favouring Leaving Cert students). A proportionate system's in place for this year to make sure that no-one's screwed during the changeover.
The idiocy of the national papers on this matter is astounding. You'd never get a front page story about the cost of third level education, or the socio-economic factors that stop a student even getting to Leaving Cert, or the barriers faced by students with disabilities (hidden or otherwise), but a chance for a cheap and inaccurate allegation about the North somehow becomes newsworthy.
Reserving any places for any sector of the community where there is no evidence of disrimincation and not allocating the places by competition IS Affirmative Action. The only justifiable case for affirmative action is where there has been invidious discrimination against a sector of the community to date. In the case of A-Level Students in TCD that is clearly NOT the case. What is going on here is little better than academic apartheid - an attempt to preserve a Protestant, Anglophile Ascendacy Ethos (read: contributors to the college funds and opposition to the various university bills promoted by An Oireachtais). Furhter more, any counterargument about Catholics in Belfast taking A-levels is pure hogwash. The issue of access to education isn't about religion - it's about resources and financial security. Are you seriously telling is the Catholics in Belfast compete on equal grounds in that respect with Protestants? Complete BS. Wake Up.
The good people from Babymilkaction in Cambridge can send you as many posters, flyers, aluminium badges, videos and other matierial you need to help the campaign.
They might even send somone over for debates. They regularily debate people from Nestlé in the UK. There is an Irish Babymilkaction called Lionra - try emailing
[email protected]
though I am not sure if they active. Also, Peter Brabeck CEO of Nestlé, when profiled in Time magazine about two years ago, admitted that there were differences of opinion with the Nestlé boycott organisers. In other words he did not deny their claims...
This is puerile idiotic stuff indeed, I can't believe I've actually found some fool seeking to justify his leftist postions by slandering Germans, British, protestants and students....
. . . this is just more of the idealistic left wingnut student body who ironically enough feel that they're "up for a go" at anything which can be tenuously blamed on "big business" - especially when most of these student types are the very ones who benefitted from a labour coalition government decision to drop fees.
Wait until they go out into the working world, add a spouse, a couple of chislers and a mortgage, and then reality will begin to settle in fairly lively ..