Blog

by Michael Park 28 October 2024
What can Ireland learn?
by Michael Park 24 May 2024
I can explain this newsletter in one sentence: Islam is coming to Ireland with the single intent of taking over this island. Is that plain enough for you?
Why bona fide immigration is a DISTRACTION
by Michael Park 19 January 2024
Why bona fide immigration is a DISTRACTION
by Michael Park 2 January 2024
Why Ireland must prepare NOW for the assault on our land.
by Michael Park 3 December 2023
Climate change means massive population movements. If you live in Tullyhoge (Tulach Óc), or Ballymacarret, or Ennistymon, or Slievenamon, this will be of interest to you. We're going to talk about climate... People like us like moderate temperatures. We're used to it. We live in a temperate zone. And when we jet off on our holidays to Frigiliana or Ibiza we like it to be around 70 or 75 Fahrenheit. A little sea breeze, and you're off in your tee shirt for a leisurely walk. Very nice. More than that, too hot for the white man. But in recent years, things have changed. We all know about it; warmer this, wetter that. hottest day since records began, that sort of thing. And whether you put it down to Global Warming, it is clear that things have changed. Forest fires, melting ice, animals confused about the seasons, decline of Species. In the town of Lytton, British Columbia, Western Canada, for example, on 29th of June 2021, temperatures reached 49.6° centigrade - that's 121° Fahrenheit! In that part of the world, houses are mostly made out of timber, and the TV news showed local people running down the main street trying to keep ahead of the fire as house after house spontaneously combusted. And yes, they did try to fry an egg on the pavement. Reports are it stayed runny. ~~~~~~~~~~~ The average temperature in the interior of British Columbia isn't a lot different to Ireland; a bit hotter in Summer, colder in Winter. More snow. Now, if you look at a climate map of the Mediterranean, you will see an unwelcome development. A 2020 study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) stated that - 'Although global climate models vary in many ways, they agree on this: The Mediterranean region will be significantly drier in coming decades, potentially seeing 40 percent less precipitation during the winter rainy season.' The link to this study - https://news.mit.edu/2020/why-mediterranean-climate-change-hotspot-0617 This radical change in Mediterranean climate may be attributed mainly to a marked decrease in rainfall in an already-parched area, and a report by the IPCC* that temperatures in the Med. are rising about 20% faster than the global average. In fact, the target of restraining global warming since the beginning of the Industrial Era to 1.5° c. has already been reached, and passed, by the Med region. See - https://news.mit.edu/2022/europe-heat-waves-climate-change-1011 * Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). What this means, in practical terms, is an expansion of the Sahara desert. The Sahara is creeping North, effecting not only the countries south of the Med. vis Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and The Levant - but also our favourite holiday destinations - Turkey, Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal. With a population set to reach 657 million by 2050 in Mediterranean areas vulnerable to extreme events, more people are likely to be affected in the future. So, if you live in Portrush or Waterford, what has this to do with you? Given the pressures on basic existence, it is not surprising that millions of people in the Med/Sahara region are looking north with envy at the pleasant temperate zones of Germany, France, Netherlands, Britain, and Ireland, and thinking "What a nice little piece of Real Estate!" You will have already seen the boats swamping the Italian island of Lampedusa; a million migrants in Germany; thousands of young men lost at sea off the coast of Tunisia, race riots in that bastion of equality and easy living, Sweden! Tent cities in Stradbally...
Ireland United & Undivided. Irish Patriots.
by Michael Park 21 November 2023
Being Irish is a privilege; it does not come cheap.
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