Thursday, May 23, 2013

Martin Prince and Alan Shatter: Never seen in the same room together...

It’s not as though it wasn’t bound to happen. The cleverest kid in the class (not my words, the Indo’s yesterday) can take different forms – some have the smarts to succeed in their field. Some know they’re smart and don’t take action about it. Some, criminally, know they're smart and do everything in their power to demonstrate they are, only to end up demonstrating that they’re also prize numpties. I know, cause I’m such a numpty. How horrified was I then, when I realised that Alan Shatter and I were stuck in the same intellectual lift together. That is not an image I can claim to prize.

Minister Shatter in better times
I've never been sure about Alan Shatter. Despite my love of national politicians dealing with national politics, which he has done, often with great aplomb, when he lost his seat in the bloodbath of 2002, I felt a wry smile creep across my 23 year old face, as another blowhard blueshirt failed to a land a single punch on a FF government begging to be kicked in the swingometers. Shatter found himself back to trading in his beloved two letters for the less desirable four: CLLR - it sounds like a local radio station, or an acronym for a highly unpleasant yet thoroughly unlifethreatening disease.

A similarly unpleasant feeling can be sensed eleven years later, when looking for an appropriate analogy for Alan Shatter’s career as a minister in this current crop of Dad’s Army rejects – all wanting to be as youthful as Ian Lavender, all actually as old as Arthur Lowe, all as capable as Clive Dunne.
Shatter’s approach to his highly sensitive (and I would argue highly contentious) double portfolio has appeared to be thus: never answer a question or complete a pressing task when you can attempt to take the moral high ground on something. And recently, this desire to prove his superiority to the opposition rabble has been to be at the very least woefully indiscreet. He is, not to put too fine a point on it, bloody awful at his job.

Whatever about Mick Wallace or his cringe inducing sidekick Ming Flanagan (I remember by the way when he had street cred, and that was when John Bruton was Taoiseach) being in the headlines over traffic offenses, Alan Shatter has displayed an alarming inability to disengage from parliamentary sideshows that present themselves in the course of daily politics.  
Robert Plant about to beat that annoying antique dealing kid
from the 80's in a game of rock paper scissors

Of all the things offensive about this period of non-news is the traffic of thoroughly irrelevant, prurient and tedious tit-for-tat leaks and tale telling that has hallmarked a time when abortion (another retro 80's distraction) education, the state’s finances, though higher on the playlist of the government iPod, constantly get lost in the shuffle, like the rogue Richie Kavanagh tune on an otherwise Indie-only music collection.

Worse still is that Shatter, rather than accept that Flanagan and Wallace are political lightweights, engages them. When he screwed up this week on TV, which he did, his subsequent apology was anything but gracious. Then again, can you be gracious when you make a balls of something, despite knowing you are so smart, so potentially able and have fallen so low. Can you possibly have humility, when your ego screams for you to prove you’re the smartest at all times, despite evidence that your ability is not matched by wisdom?

The answer, Alan, is no.

I’ve been there, frequently and even as recently as this afternoon - and I feel for him. Some reticence, however, can go a long way. For a man who possesses his razor sharp intellect, surely his judgement should usher him towards dealing with crime and state security in a sober and sensible way.
 
But no. Not Al. If Real Madrid decided to prove their greatness by choosing to play Finn Harps of a Saturday, then there's only one team gaining in stature: Minister, welcome to Ballybofey!

      

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Some things just can't be spoken

Watch "Hugh Laurie & Stephen Fry - Where is the Lid?" on YouTube

When you click the link above,  you'll understand. Some things defy prose and need to be sung. Like a spot of bloody sunshine.

It just so happens that in a world filled up with banalities, our little country seems a much more wonderful place when sun makes its overdue return, though is nonetheless less likely to stay for a week like Billy Connolly and even less likely to give out to  photographers.

In a week where carbon dioxide levels reached 400ppm, when the earth's climate is projected to be at prehistoric heights by the end of the century, Ireland remains damper the dampy dampington, the dampest fish on the dampest fishtank in the parish of St. Fluich.

I'll happily take any inkling of this and burst into song when the  weather's like today.