I didn't imagine there'd be an expert on the Hawaii Stairway to Heaven here, SGR! What you say, and the story of Daylenn Pua looks very interesting.

I completely agree with you: it makes a lot of sense for Hawaii to turn the stairway into a slightly more orderly tourist attraction. Mind you, having said that, I've heard that people born in Hawaii are pretty hostile to tourists and settlers from elsewhere now, on account of there being so many of them, buying up the island's houses, etc.

I'll take a look at your Missing Persons thread, because I like these real-life stories: murders, wildlife adventures gone wrong, etc.

What you desire is of lesser value than what you have found.


As per usual, it's the violent element/right wing groups organising these. It's telling that at the same time a Pro-Palestinian march was taking place and the two traded "chants" (luckily nothing more, as there was a police presence). So what does that tell you? Why would so-called anti-immigrationists have anything against Palestinians who aren't coming to Ireland for sanctuary? The mask slips, and we can see that the real driving force behind this march is right-wing xenophobia and hatred, racism and perhaps zionism? Very odd, you'd have to say, that these people who in general hate the Jews, would actively, as it were, defend them by attacking (only verbally, as I said) their enemies, and essentially supporting them. Just shows you there is no logic to the extreme right.

As for me, I continue to see (and hear) these protests down the road, and now we have up to seventy tents camped out in our city centre, with a major encampment having been broken up by the cops. I guess I'm ambivalent: I still can't say I want the refugees so close to my doorstep, but I couldn't and don't agree with the right-wing anti-immigration rhetoric being spouted by rabble-rousers and agents provacateur on the streets of my city.





Jesus on a surfboard! Irish Lives Matter? What the actual fuck? I'm ashamed for my countrymen and women. :banghead:


Trollheart opened this thread with a real-life dilemma which imo rolls two issues into one:
i) how to deal with refugees and other immigrants
ii) how to react when changes are imposed on your neighbourhood

Refugees and immigrants pose a really complex moral problem, so I'm happy to divert this thread to a more clear-cut case, where there is a discernable bad guy: Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman - yes, Jared Kushner's buddy and the guy who ordered a dissident journalist assassinated.

The extremely dubious, super-ambitious, construction project called The Line is a pet project of the Crown Prince, so no surprise that local NIMBYs are shown no mercy:  
Quote[A Saudi coronel charged with land clearance] said the April 2020 order stated ... "whoever continues to resist [eviction] should be killed, so it licensed the use of lethal force against whoever stayed in their home".

[Humble NIMBY]Abdul Rahim al-Huwaiti refused to allow a land registry committee to value his property, and was shot dead by Saudi authorities a day later, during the clearance mission. 

source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-68945445

So, yeah, by all means, be a NIMBY in Ireland with my blessing, Trollheart, but please don't go to Saudi Arabia and be one there.

What you desire is of lesser value than what you have found.

You know, it's not the same of course (not state-sanctioned) but as I said, violent methods are used. Places mysteriously burn down only days/weeks/hours after being announced or discovered as being slated as refugee shelters. I know all about SA though, as I tackled its reaction to Covid-19 in that journal. Let's just say, there weren't too many anti-vaxxer protests on the streets of Riyadh, and nobody rushed the royal palace...  ::)


Will refugees and NIMBYs ever live in peace with each other? There's a conflict going on all over the world that reminds me of a family squabble: it may sometimes erupt into violence, but it's main characteristic is the way it plays out continuously in small-scale disputes, often turning up at unexpected moments.

Here's what's happening today along the Dublin Canal:- https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c72pplgjdkjo

Dublin Canal as it used to be:-



Dublin Canal with fencing to prevent asylum seekers from camping along the banks:-



This is not going to win the refugees any sympathy from Dubliners. :(

 

What you desire is of lesser value than what you have found.

Didn't work; numbers increasing every day. Standing at about 90 now.

Generally, people - especially those who live along the Grand Canal - are sympathetic to the asylum seekers. Most blame the government for a totally inadequate response. But you're right Lisna: it's fuel to a fire that the right wing groups and anti-immigrants will fan even higer.

They now want to use this place, state land, as an official tented site. Let's see how long before the protesting crowds turn up.

And they're reducing the social welfare payment for Ukranian refugees who aren't working from 232 Euro to, wait for it, 38! Who can live on that?

The Government has estimated that 27,000 Ukrainian refugees who benefit from temporary protection will receive reduced payments within three months following a decision by the Cabinet.

Ministers have signed off on the plan brought by Taoiseach Simon Harris, Minister for Social Protection Heather Humphreys, Minister for Integration Roderic O'Gorman and Minister for Justice Helen McEntee.

The reduced payments will apply to Ukrainians who do not work and live in what is termed 'State-provided serviced accommodation', such as a hotel where meals are provided.

It will not apply to Ukrainians living in what is termed 'pledged accommodation', such as people living in homes which have been leased to the State.

It also will not apply to Ukrainians who live in State-provided accommodation that is not serviced, such as a converted school building.

Last December, the Government reduced payments to new arrivals - from March - from €232 a week to €38.80.

Now the lower payment will become the baseline for all Ukrainians in such circumstances.

Labour Party leader Ivana Bacik expressed serious concern that this could amount to targeting of older people and women with children who cannot work.

She has called for "clarity" that the new Government policy will be fair and not target the weakest in society.

Taoiseach Simon Harris has defended the approach, saying on his way into Cabinet, that it does not seem sensible that two children from Ukraine in the same school are treated very differently.

Mr Harris said that Ireland "is a compassionate country, but compassion does need to align with common sense".

"It doesn't seem sensible to me that you would have two children from Ukraine in the same school today in a very different system of treatment for one person's family versus the other," Mr Harris said.

In addition to having a "consistency of approach" Mr Harris said it had to be "financially sustainable."



Quote from: Lisnaholic on May 16, 2024, 04:52 PMWill refugees and NIMBYs ever live in peace with each other? There's a conflict going on all over the world that reminds me of a family squabble: it may sometimes erupt into violence, but it's main characteristic is the way it plays out continuously in small-scale disputes, often turning up at unexpected moments.

Here's what's happening today along the Dublin Canal:- https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c72pplgjdkjo

Dublin Canal as it used to be:-



Dublin Canal with fencing to prevent asylum seekers from camping along the banks:-



This is not going to win the refugees any sympathy from Dubliners. :( 

Lisna, you are a wise fellow which is I why voted for you as the best writer in the SCD awards 2023 but JWB narrowly beat you to it. All of you guys will sort this situation out with your analyses and thoughts. And TH, this is yet another very important thread which you created.

One thing I would like to add is that, having followed/studied modern economics and accounting, if certain groups are experiencing a loss in income or getting into more and more debt, then another group is benefiting from that debt and milking it to the max right now.

We are against the wall, as a species in the capitalist system. How much more can we tolerate? Well that depends how many more fences we will accept are erected in some weird circus diffused by the main media, by so-called governments of the day (who as you and I know are pampering to the big banks, grand investors and nobody else).
 





I don't think it's fair to just smear those who have concerns or objections as being right wing and the like.

What is Sinn Fein's stance on this? They are left wing after all.

It is behind a pay wall but this article in the Irish Times suggests that attitudes towards the migrants is toughest among those who support Sinn Fein:



https://www.irishtimes.com/politics/2024/05/17/attitudes-on-immigration-toughest-among-sinn-fein-supporters/

Only God knows.