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Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.
Fraud and mismanagement at University College Cork Thu Aug 28, 2025 18:30 | Calli Morganite
UCC has paid huge sums to a criminal professor
This story is not for republication. I bear responsibility for the things I write. I have read the guidelines and understand that I must not write anything untrue, and I won't.
This is a public interest story about a complete failure of governance and management at UCC.
Deliberate Design Flaw In ChatGPT-5 Sun Aug 17, 2025 08:04 | Mind Agent
Socratic Dialog Between ChatGPT-5 and Mind Agent Reveals Fatal and Deliberate 'Design by Construction' Flaw
This design flaw in ChatGPT-5's default epistemic mode subverts what the much touted ChatGPT-5 can do... so long as the flaw is not tickled, any usage should be fine---The epistemological question is: how would anyone in the public, includes you reading this (since no one is all knowing), in an unfamiliar domain know whether or not the flaw has been tickled when seeking information or understanding of a domain without prior knowledge of that domain???!
This analysis is a pretty unique and significant contribution to the space of empirical evaluation of LLMs that exist in AI public world... at least thus far, as far as I am aware! For what it's worth--as if anyone in the ChatGPT universe cares as they pile up on using the "PhD level scholar in your pocket".
According to GPT-5, and according to my tests, this flaw exists in all LLMs... What is revealing is the deduction GPT-5 made: Why ?design choice? starts looking like ?deliberate flaw?.
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We have all known it for over 2 years that it is a genocide in Gaza
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Western governments like the USA are complicit in it as they have been supplying the huge bombs and missiles used by Israel and dropped on innocent civilians in Gaza. One phone call from the USA regime could have ended it at any point. However many other countries are complicity with their tacit approval and neighboring Arab countries have been pretty spinless too in their support
With the release of this report titled: Our Genocide -there is a good chance this will make it okay for more people within Israel itself to speak out and do something about it despite the fact that many there are actually in support of the Gaza
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This story is unverified but it is very instructive of what will happen when cash is removed
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The Saker >>
News Round-Up Tue Oct 07, 2025 01:15 | Richard Eldred
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
The post News Round-Up appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
Does Trump Not Realise How Globally Toxic Tony Blair Is? Mon Oct 06, 2025 19:30 | Ramesh Thakur
Trump's peace plan for Gaza might yet succeed, but why on earth does Tony Blair feature, asks Professor Ramesh Thakur. Does Trump not realise how globally toxic the Blair brand is?
The post Does Trump Not Realise How Globally Toxic Tony Blair Is? appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
Stupidologiology Mon Oct 06, 2025 18:15 | James Alexander
William Davies has written an article titled 'Stupidology' which Prof James Alexander summarises as: 'Trump is stupid. Brexit was stupid. I am not stupid. Neither are my friends. Why do stupid people have power?'
The post Stupidologiology appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
Backlash as Nando?s Limits Customers to One Coke per Visit Under New ?Nanny State? Rules Mon Oct 06, 2025 15:11 | Will Jones
Nando's has sparked a backlash after restricting customers to a single glass of Coca-Cola Classic under new 'nanny state' Government rules aimed at cutting sugar consumption.
The post Backlash as Nando’s Limits Customers to One Coke per Visit Under New ‘Nanny State’ Rules appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
?Nudge? Has a New Evil Twin: ?Stochastic Terror? Mon Oct 06, 2025 13:30 | Nick Rendell
'Nudge' has a new evil twin, says Nick Rendell: 'stochastic terror'. When all else fails, the Left foments the conditions for random political violence and then sits back and waits for someone to pick off Trump or Farage.
The post ‘Nudge’ Has a New Evil Twin: ‘Stochastic Terror’ appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
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Comments (23 of 23)
Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23That sounds promising. I can't imagine that the SWP would stand someone against Joe Higgins in the European elections.
Maybe a joint campaign on the next Lisbon referendum would be a good testing ground for how well the two parties can work together.
I think it's a good proposal, and a slate on these lines would be useful. We'll have to wait and see how the other organisations involved respond though. An alliance consisting only of ourselves wouldn't be much of an alliance after all. So far nobody has made a public response, that I'm aware of, although there have been discussions.
I agree and disagree to a lot of the points Michael has made. I think the idea of left slate is a good idea, and hopefully it will come about. But can Michael clarify a few things for me. What constitutes a credible candidate on the slate? Do they have to be a member of a party/movement ? Can a person with a record of community activity be put forward ? I agree that putting two Socialist candidates in the Euro elections would be a joke, but nobody should have a monopoly in going forward for the seat. I certainly hope that their is unity on the left in the coming period, otherwise we'll all loose out.
There are three seats in the Dublin constituency for the European Parliament elections. The first two will pretty certainly go to Fine Gael and Fianna Fail, in that order. The last will probably be taken by Proinsias De Rossa of the Labour Party.
So the three seats will go to Pro Lisbon Treaty candidates.
The only credible risk to De Rossa is May Lou McDonald of Sinn Féin. A defeat of De Rossa by McDonald would be another serious blow to the treaty, and the prospects of the FF/Green govenment holding a second referendum.
Running candidates who will take votes away from McDonald will help the pro-Lisbon parties. However worthy those candidates are, and however interesting it is to ponder the future of the left, it would seem more important to retain a voice against the treaty.
Hi Gino,
Firstly, please don't take this as an official response from the Socialist Party. This response only reflects my own understanding of the proposals and I could be wrong on some of the details.
"What constitutes a credible candidate on the slate? Do they have to be a member of a party/movement ? Can a person with a record of community activity be put forward ?"
There are three aspects to this.
1) A candidate should agree to the common political platform of the slate (obviously).
2) They should have a serious record of involvement in working class campaigns or struggles, whether that be in the workplace, in the communities or wherever else.
3) They shouldn't have undermined that record with a history of support for coalitions with right wing parties or bin charges or anything similar.
None of these things would inherently be an obstacle to an independent with a campaigning record who wanted to stand on a socialist slate. Such people would have to be evaluated on a case by case basis, just as people put forward by any of the groups involved would have to be evaluated. In 2004 the issue that led to the breakdown of discussions around a common anti-bin tax slate wasn't independents but candidates put forward by your own organisation who had no record of involvement in the campaign the slate was supposedly based on.
"I agree that putting two Socialist candidates in the Euro elections would be a joke, but nobody should have a monopoly in going forward for the seat."
I'm glad to see that we are in agreement that putting forward two candidates would be a joke. Unfortunately, that seems to be what the SWP are threatening to do at the moment. You are better placed to take that up with your organisation than I am.
As for anyone having a monopoly, I would also agree that the support of the left in going for the seat isn't any individual's private property. Instead these things have to be assessed on the basis of what the prospective candidate represents. In this case Joe Higgins got nearly 6% of the vote across Dublin last time and is clearly the best known and most credible left wing candidate. If other groups on the left want to be involved in helping his campaign that would be very welcome, but standing against him would be crassly sectarian. I think it would undermine the possibility of a good socialist vote and I don't see how a joint slate could be credible in the local elections in those circumstances.
"I agree and disagree to a lot of the points Michael has made."
Perhaps you could outline your agreements and disagreements? It would help clarify where there are potential problems and where there are none.
The discussions are ongoing. Any chance of letting the reps for your respective groups get on with it? Does it really need to be cyber-debated? If it's a case that the reps in your groups don't bring the discussions back for internal debate well then I can understand it and you might comment on that.
I'm well aware that there have been discussions and that those discussions are ongoing. However there is no reason for all discussion to go on behind closed doors. This will effect the wider left in Ireland, including people who aren't in the organisations currently involved and who won't therefore be getting internal reports from anyone.
The Socialist Party has made it clear in this article what precisely it is proposing. At the start of this process it made its proposals public in a more bare bones format. That's been our consistent approach. We'll talk with anybody, but we'll also explain what our bottom line is to anyone who is interested. I don't see any reason why all of this should be kept secret. It's not really an issue for backroom haggling alone. Let organisations and individuals make their views known if they so wish. If they'd rather stay silent, no doubt they'll do that.
What would be wrong with 2 left European candidates?
I disagree with the last comment. Let the debate on this very important issue be both public and private. Providing the trolls aren't allowed to ruin the debate it could be enlightening.
Nothing would be wrong with two left candidates in the European election if they were standing in different constituencies. Here however the SWP are threatening to stand in the same constituency as an established left candidate.
The consequences of such a move would be that we all look rather silly, particularly if we are allegedly part of the same alliance at a local election. A vote split between two candidates will not have the same impact. If a socialist candidate manages say 6 to 10% of the vote that would be impressive and would have a certain impact. Joe Higgins could potentially achieve that. Two left candidates managing say 3 percent of the vote each would fly entirely under the radar. A split vote would have a split impact. It would also result in confusion amongst any voters looking towards the left and a great deal of duplicated effort and expense. There is no serious argument in favour of running two left candidates against each other, and quite a few against it.
I certainly - and this is a personal view - would not be in favour of an alliance in the locals with people who are so insincere in their talk of unity that they would simultaneously be going out of their way to split the left vote in the Europeans.
I can only imagine that the socialist group have decided that the correct way to debate these issues is through indymedia. A logical choice for such important matters. No point meeting face to face when you can use the internet!
As for the content, I think the author should be a bit more honest,,,the socialist group has admitted that it will not itself be running credible candidates in some areas but members who will raise their profile. Why challenge other groups on this matter so?
The claim that Joe Higgins played a "crucial" role in the Lisbon Treaty is stretching it. A role yes but a similar role to every other opponent to Lisbon. Also, the claim that " all left groups benefited from the work of Joe in the Dail" is bordering on the "heres a whopper" scenario.
As I said, the left slate alliance debate is only strengthened by the use of indymedia to repeat all the old hatred of the SWP/PBP stuff, the "we are the only ones" dicktat and a few porkies to embellish a good old leftie article.
Well done comrade.....the future is ours!
Well that's a predictably cynical response from someone unwilling to provide his own organisational affiliations.
Nobody is suggesting that negotiations should be carried out through Indymedia. That's why the Socialist Party made it's proposals directly to the other groups concerned and why a series of discussions have been ongoing since before then. There is no contradiction between holding serious face to face negotiations and also being open about what you are proposing, what you are saying and what you are arguing. None of this is secret and really none of it should be.
The Socialist Party is not saying that there should be any bar on any group putting forward whatever candidates they want. Sometimes any group may decide to stand a candidate to raise their profile or to cohere local activists and solidify a branch or for any one of a load of reasons. The thing is though that if the Socialist Party does that - and we have done that in the past and may do so in the future - we take responsibility for the likely poor result and don't insist that a campaign or a broader alliance take responsibility for it instead. We did not for instance argue that one of our candidates who was standing for reasons like that should be on the proposed anti-bin tax slate during the last local elections in the South. We opposed putting our candidate in the North onto a broad anti-water tax slate there for similar reasons. We were standing those candidates for good reasons, but it would not have benefited the campaigns concerned to attach their name to candidates who were always going to get a very modest vote.
It seems that, for whatever reason, the SWP/PBPA are planning on nominating a bunch of candidates with little record or profile. It is entirely their right to do that. It is also our right to say that we aren't interested in taking responsibility for those campaigns or in forming some kind of joint slate composed of such candidates. If there is going to be a joint slate - and we are very serious about forming one - then it should be composed of people with an agreed political platform and who have a record of campaigning. It should not be an open invitation to the SWP to scrape up every paper candidate they can find and foist them on all of us.
As for the Joe Higgins remarks - I think that anyone who doesn't think that the left as a whole benefited from having a strong, coherent left wing voice in the Dail and in the media, not to mention the profile his position helped to give the GAMA and bin tax struggles, is myopic at best and more likely a blinkered sectarian.
I still don't see the SWP running someone against Joe Higgins in the European elections but I'm starting to wonder if it's such a big deal if they do. Fantastic TD as he was, Joe is unlikely to get elected to Brussels. Realistically, Mary Lou McDonald will be re-elected. The European elections come down to funding. Last time a virtual unknown, and former FF member, took Patricia McKenna's seat simply because the SF campaign had oodles of cash, was exceptionally PR-savvy and had an overly smiley poster on every pole from Dublin to Kinnegad. The same thing will happen again, and while SF still sound leftish maybe that's not such a big deal. I don't for a moment suggest that the SP and SWP should campaign for SF, but they should concentrate on the local elections and the second Lisbon referendum (October?) instead of wasting scarce resources. Running a token candidate(s) at least gives people someone to vote for to show their opposition to a neo-liberal EU (which SF are also currently opposed to, similarly to the Greens in the past). I still think it makes sense for the SWP to back Joe on this one, but I don't think it's the end of the world if they don't - neither will be elected MEP on this occasion.
Running credible candidates makes sense but beware the SP candidate who was once tabled to speak at a meeting on the Nice treaty and instead announced she would 'Sit in the audience and listen to the other speakers as [she was] just an ordinary person and [she] wouldn't know about these sorts of things'. The left needs to present credible candidates but working class people don't need to be presented with token women, or candidates who play dumb as this think this is what their voters seek. The SWP didn't have anyone of this calibre but presented an interesting host of the walking wounded of capitalism from various pockets of Ireland. However, Gino Kenny (posts above) is a good example of someone who probably would not have been deemed ''credible' by the Socialist Party, but who bucked the trend, attracting a very large vote and probably encouraging many who would not normally have voted to turn out. The left needs more credible candidates of his calibre.
I'm sure building an alliance is easier said than done, especially since there is so much mistrust on both sides, but if it can be done it would be a great move for the left in Ireland. Good luck;)
The SWP (PBPA) have informed the Socialist Party that they have rejected the above proposals for a socialist alliance in the Local Elections..
As far as the European Elections are concerned, it remains to be seen if they will take the sectarian and destructive step of standing a candidate against Joe Higgins. We'll find out soon enough, I suppose.
Jen,
You say "Running a token candidate(s) at least gives people someone to vote for to show their opposition to a neo-liberal EU (which SF are also currently opposed to, similarly to the Greens in the past)"
you kind of answer yourself there. THat the Greens "used" to oppose a neo-liberal Europe is the essense of the situation. What is the point to supporting someone who presently, opportunistically opposes or has a passing opposition to a neo-liberal Europe. The central argument of Sinn Fein during the Lisbon treaty was that it should be re-negociated - i.e. a nicer europe, something they could swallow. That, in my opinion is not a principled opposition and leaves the door open to do exactly what the greens did, dump it overboard when something meatier comes along (coalition, anyone?).
In that context, it is not about running token candidates, but running a credible campaign that registers a serious, genuine and principled result, but in doing also, and most importantly, builds a serious opposition - a platform from which something bigger can be built.
ALso, if i'm not mistaken, wasn't Gino Kenny included on the slate for the bin tax that the SP supported. I could be wrong but its probably recorded on the annals of indymedia somewhere.
Running credible candidates makes sense but beware the SP candidate who was once tabled to speak at a meeting on the Nice treaty and instead announced she would 'Sit in the audience and listen to the other speakers as [she was] just an ordinary person and [she] wouldn't know about these sorts of things'.
Who was that?
Mark P said that the SWP have said no to the Socialist Partys proposal to have a election alliance, so its all over and done with. SWP and their puppets in PBPA not interested in democratic arrangements, they only want "unity" if it means they are in control - a disgrace, but not surprised look at what they did with Respect, they give opportunism a bad name!
Yes, if you are talking about the 2004 elections and the discussion around a possible anti-bin tax campaign slate, Gino Kenny was on the list of candidates the Socialist Party wanted included.
The following is a comment from an Indymedia thread of 8th March 2007 on the Northern election results:
'Mine is bigger than yours' reversed
author FG Thu Mar 08, 2007
Well done to all the left candidates for the effort.
SEA/SWP 2045 5.0%
PBP/SWP 774 2.3%
SP 248 0.8%
SP 225 0.8%
Now one thing this result must end ONCE AND FOR ALL, and it is this: no doubt the SWP will as usual talk up their result as a wondrous achievement BUT let us have NO MORE, on Indymedia or anywhere else, smug crowing from SP people, on the basis of election performances, on how much closer they are to the working class and how much their superior politics connects with people. NO MORE.
Let us all now be realistic and modest (and co-operate instead of competing):
South: SP tiny, SWP tinier (but only in elections);
North: SWP tiny; SP tinier (but only in elections).
No more silly nose thumbing. It's time to wake up and smell the coffee.
Actually, Returning Officer, you will find that the Socialist Party was opposed to including its own candidates on a slate based on the anti-water tax campaign in the North, on the grounds that candidates getting a very modest tally would damage the credibility of a movement which had much wider support than most candidates connected to it could hope to get at that point. The bills had not arrived, the mainstream parties including the DUP and Sinn Fein were still pretending to be opposed to the tax and therefore there was no prospect of anti-water tax campaign candidates getting a vote reflecting the strength of feeling on the issue. Credibility is important, and while the Socialist Party might want to stand its own candidates understanding that they would get a modest vote, we did not want the We Won't Pay Campaign to take responsibility for those modest votes.
Similarly, when there were discussions around an anti-bin tax campaign slate in the South in 2004, we did not seek to include one of our own candidates who we again knew would get a limited vote. We wanted to stand that candidate for good reasons, but we didn't want any wider slate to take responsibility for that decision or for the vote that would result.
The SWP/PBP are perfectly entitled to stand any candidates they want, to raise their profile, to cohere a local branch or whatever. We are of the view though that only candidates who agree to the common political platform, have a campaigning record and haven't undermined that record through support for things like coalition or the bin tax should be on a central slate. The Socialist Party, the other groups on the slate, the alliance itself, should not automatically take responsibility for people who will get 7 or 11 or 200 votes (as some SWP candidate last time out) just because the SWP say so. It isn't just the vote tallies however. We also shouldn't automatically take responsibility for people whose politics aren't socialist or who have a record of undermining struggle, through support for coalition or the bin tax or anything similar.
You should be able to remember that not very long ago the British SWP was involved in a slate of candidates in Tower Hamlets on London. That alliance was put together on a very low political level involving a number of candidates with little or no campaigning record and rather dubious political views. That alliance - the Respect Coalition - got a very good number of votes. But within a couple of years most of the elected councillors had left, defecting to New Labour, the Liberal Democrats and even the Tories. The defectors included two people who weren't just Respect members but were SWP members! We are not interested in a repeat of that debacle, and neither should anyone else be.
If we are going to endorse people and take responsibility for their campaigns then we - like every other group involved - are entitled to insist that they meet certain basic criteria in terms of their record and politics. The SWP announcing that they want to stand them is all very well, but it isn't enough. An alliance slate should consist of candidates that all of the groups involved are happy to support, who agree with the political programme of the alliance, who have a campaigning record and who haven't undermined that record with support for right wing policies.
That's not an unreasonable position.
As I understand it, the SWP oppose it for a couple of reasons. Firstly they are unfortunately already scraping together a few candidates with no records themselves and secondly they want to use the offer of an alliance to entice a candidate or two with non-socialist politics and poor records on things like the bin tax and coalition. Unfortunately no SWP members have come here, identifying themselves as such and openly defended their views, so I can't say what their reasoning is with any certainty until after I hear a report back from the Socialist Party delegates at the meeting.
Interesting remark on Cedar Lounge site:
"Perhaps it was a tactical error for the SP to market their proposal with such an attack on the SWP’s record. Unless the intention was to have it rejected."
Sounds likely
Are you suggesting that the SWP decided against an alliance because some rather mild criticism of their record in the Socialist Party document hurt their poor little feelings?
Come off it.
The SWP rejected the proposals because they aren't interested in an alliance a firm political and organisational basis and are planning on putting together an Irish Respect Coalition. Something that they control organisationally, but with watery soft left politics. All the stuff about left unity was just their usual guff. The desperation with which certain anonymous people, who don't reveal their organisational affiliations, are trying to come up with some kind of sympathetic explanation for the SWP's refusal is pretty amusing though.
I've written "unaffiliated, for obvious reasons" because it seems to me this "discussion", and the sequence of events giving rise to it, prove why any kind of constructive political affiliation on the left in this country remains a pipe-dream. This is a time of unprecedented crisis for global capitalism, and hence of unprecedented opportunity for a united left. Instead, we get the usual machinations, manipulations, and recriminations (I suppose this message comes under the latter category). Admittedly the right is a bit disunited too, thanks to the Ganley lad, but on the whole they get by just fine and will continue to rule the roost on this benighted island while the scattered cocks peck impotently at one another in the dust. Sad, sad stuff.