The truth? Ireland simply does not care about children

This article appeared in The Mayo News on Tuesday, October 15, 2024.

Back in the economically dark days of 2012, Ireland passed the Children’s Rights Referendum, ostensibly committing to place children’s welfare at the heart of the Constitution, enshrining the protection of children, and legally prioritising their best interests. The referendum, while hailed as a milestone for children’s rights, did not inspire voters, with a measly 33.5 per cent turnout.

This apathy should have confirmed to us what Ireland has long since demonstrated. Despite this legislative milestone and what we might like to tell ourselves,, outside of our own four walls – and sometimes, not even within them – the majority of people in Ireland simply do not care about children. 

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Teach, Don’t Preach: Religious Discrimination in Irish Schools

This article appeared in The Mayo News on Tuesday, July 30, 2024.

Picture this. You’re nervously waiting in the corridor for an interview at a finance company. You really want this leadership role. The door opens, and you’re called in. You take your seat in front of the panel. Handshakes and introductions follow; someone cracks a joke to put you at ease. You fervently hope you’ve made a good first impression. The chief executive thanks you for attending and gets the ball rolling with the first question.

“So tell us. How do you plan to uphold the Catholic ethos of this company?”

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Putting lethal weapons in children’s hands

This article appeared in The Mayo News on Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Connection is a mark of modernity apparently, and in the digitally driven world of the 2020s, mobile phones are clearly ubiquitous. Seamlessly integrated into the fabric of daily life, their omnipresence offers a world of convenience and amusement at our literal fingertips, 24 hours a day.

But what about the children?

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Things I wish I’d been taught in school

This article appeared in The Mayo News on Tuesday, April 24, 2024.

“School days are the best days of our lives” is a mantra with which so many of us grew up. Opinions will differ; this writer has fond memories for sure, but sadly they are more of the craic-in-the-corridors type rather than the intricacies of the modh coinníollach or how to solve for X when Y is … well, unfathomable. But there is little doubt that our school years set the tone for the path we create in life, and the knowledge we glean from those few years should equip us to deal with at least some of the challenges we will face.

But not all.

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