Tuesday 22 March 2016

Dear Sir,

Whatever the reader may be thinking these days about the dead of 1916 or, indeed, the insanity of World War I perpetrated by a handful of dysfunctional royal family cousins and their morally bankrupt military advisers, it is time to reflect again on Article 29 of our Constitution which, as the neutral country that we are, commits us, the people of Ireland, to the pursuit of peace and the ‘pacific settlement of international disputes’.
It is hard to believe that in 2016, our recalcitrant neighbour is allowed to have at least twelve weapons of mass destruction floating about the waters in nuclear-powered submarines.  Just as abominable is the fact that the Iraq and Afghan wars are set to cost the United States at least $4 trillion (sic ). Meanwhile, every country in the EU seems to be making a killing from the arms industry. They can barely keep up with the demand. Taking these facts into account, one could hardly expect much sincerity from the UK or the EU in international peace negotiations, whatever about our empire-making pals across the Atlantic!
A little country like ours, however, with a constitutional commitment to non-alignment and a majority in favour of neutrality, can be a beacon of hope with a passion for peace in a world going mad. The Shannon Airport disgrace aside (two and a half million American soldiers have been hosted there since 2003 on their way to the killing fields and dunes of the Middle East), it may come as a shock to some of your readers that at least ten multinational companies in Ireland, heavily funded by the IDA and availing of our 12.5% tax-haven status, are exporting arms components worth billions of euro that end up amongst the rubble and blood in the towns, villages, fields and sands of far-off countries, killing and maiming men, women and children and traumatising whole communities for generations in a never-ending toll of suffering and loss.  
Indeed, some readers may not be aware that software components for killer drones, Hellfire Missiles, Apache Attack Helicopters, etc. are all Made in Ireland.  In fact, Ireland is now a global player in the war industry, whose sole function is the facilitation of violent death and destruction.
Where does that leave our credibility in the pacific settlement of international disputes?  How can we sincerely and morally approach the negotiation table with a passion for peace, while simultaneously supporting the Masters of War?
Let us now, people of Ireland, demand an end to this Faustian pact, to the dark shadows cast by the diabolical presence of the arms industry in this country and set a shining example to our friends in Europe and throughout the world that you cannot broker peace if you profit from the instruments of war.


Sincerely,



Gregory Rosenstock

Thalassa
Seapoint Road
Bray
Co. Wicklow

086 6094027









You can be a leaf in the wind or
The leaf  and the wind – it’s your call

(from Be in Me by Gregory Rosenstock)


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