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Sure the ping pong is fun, but IT staff also want to do good work

Survey says IT workers now prefer startups to big tech companies so they get to do interesting projects.

BIG TECH COMPANIES are falling out of favour with Irish IT workers who say they would rather ply their trade with startups and small businesses.

A survey of IT professionals found 45% of employees in the sector were keen to jump ship to a SME (Small or Medium Enterprise) or a startup, but only 15% would rather work for a multinational.

The lastest poll, from Brightwater Recruitment, reversed the trend from last year, when 35% of people surveyed favoured a big business move.

But those surveyed were a restless bunch – over 59% said they were already looking for a new job or planned to go on the hunt within 12 months.

Salary and benefit packages was the biggest driver of IT workers’ job decisions, closely followed by the chance to work on interesting projects and in a challenging work environment.

Apparently Dublin is no California

Brightwater IT division manager High McCarthy said the overall message from the survey was positive and most workers thought both job opportunities and pay packets were improving.

“While salaries in IT in Ireland are not yet at the levels being paid in California or London for example, there may be a danger as rates push upwards we may become less competitive and therefore more likely to lose potential jobs to other countries,” he said.

“Companies are faced with the challenge of attracting and retaining the people they need in the organisation, while adhering to tight budgets.”

In a bid to build staff loyalty, some multinationals like Google have built workplace cultures around perks like free haircuts, lounges, ping-pong tables and swimming pools.

Office Design Ideas / YouTube

Meanwhile, Central Statistics Office figures released this week showed workers in the information and communication sectors had the biggest average earnings rises of any group over the last four years.

Software developers’ comments revealed many weren’t worried about taking a risk on a startup company as they thought their skills meant they could easily shift to another job if things didn’t work out.

McCarthy said the draw towards startups for developers came from the companies’ perceived flexibility and innovation.

“In contrast, the majority of project managers, creative and infrastructure professionals had a preference for employment in a multinational organisation,” he said.

“This may relate to a perception of security or more international opportunity for advancement.”

READ: Google adds death benefits to list of ‘perks’ … what else do employees get?

READ: 11 examples of people really, really enjoying their job

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

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28 Comments
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    Mute danielplainview
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:43 PM

    It’s a tragedy that despite all the years learning Irish in this country that the majority of people can’t speak the language. Ultimately I feel like it’s a failure by the education department. Instead of learning to actually speak the language we get caught up in grammar and poetry. Learn to speak it first then look at that stuff if you’re interested. We need to rethink the entire way it’s taught or recognise the fact that right now it is not our national language

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    Mute Padraic Reid
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:07 PM

    Stop blaming others for your lack of knowledge. You have two ears and a mouth, go and learn how to speak it now.

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    Mute Mary Fitzsimons
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:37 PM

    i spent 3 months learning german(working in bavaria) and 5 years learning french and 12 years learning irish and i speak both french and german better than i speak irish. My daughter can speak german more confidently and at a better level than she can irish and shes been learning german for 3 years and irish for 8. Why is irish taught so incompetently?

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    Mute jason bourne
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:38 PM

    He’s not blaming others. He’s making a valid point that we are thought Irish for 10 years in school as part of our curriculum and despite that rarely anyone speaks the language upon leaving. That’s pretty disgraceful and it must come down to how it is taught.

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    Mute ktsiwot
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:40 PM

    Padraic you come across as one of those Irish speaking zealots, who claim to have a superior moral and nationalistic claim because you can speak Irish, It is the Zealots who have had control of the language and destroyed it. school thought me to hate Irish, since the foundation of the state the teaching and promotion of Irish has been a spectacular failure driven by fanatics, I concur with everything Daniel said. The way we were taught French and Irish were complete opposites Learning more French in a few years than Irish in 14 years.

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    Mute Dave O'Mahony
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:49 PM

    Well said Padraic! Too many people willing to blame the government or Dept of Education for their own shortcomings. Everyone got a similar level of schooling in this country, but most people find that, after the leaving cert, there are very few places where any knowledge of Irish is needed. So just like calculus, Shakespeare, and the effects of glacial erosion; most people forget everything that they learned & no longer have a requirement for. The problem is people… Not the system!

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    Mute Macchu Pitiú
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:55 PM

    Thats a bad comment Padraic ….Hes actually making a good point in favour of Irish

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    Mute Dave O'Mahony
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:57 PM

    ktsiwot: either you don’t understand what a zealot really is, or you’ve made some pretty dramatic assumptions about Padraic. All he said was that yer one could easily go & learn irish instead of moaning about it. That’s hardly a fanatical statement. (Wait, am I an English speaking zealot now that I’ve demonstrated a better understanding of the language than you???)

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    Mute Micheal S. O' Ceilleachair
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:58 PM

    It hasn’t to do with the teaching of Irish per se. It has to do with the perceived possibility of using the language in the spoken arena, in a natural conversational setting. People learning French or German perceive the possibility of speaking the language in the natural setting. It is a shame that the pub owners don’t see the positive side of having willing Irish speakers. I’m sure if the bar had a French speaking member of staff speaking French to a French tourist then that member would not be told to not speak French because English is the business language of the pub. Anyway speaking one’s Irish language is a basic right. Imagine if an English speaking bar man in a Gaeltacht pub was instructed not to use English! Certainly if I spoke to a bar man as Gaeilge and he spoke back in Irish I would be very pleased.

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    Mute John Martin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:00 PM

    There’s more that story than meets the eye.
    Management was waiting for an opportunity to get rid of him.
    It speaks volumes about his employers. in fact says more about management
    than was originally intended.
    Manager showed his colours – unfortunately he is in majority – remember our financial collapse
    I agree with Dannielplainview

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:00 PM

    What I loved about learning Irish was that each year I had a different teacher. As they spoke different dialects with very strong accents I was constantly being told to pronounce words differently each year. Some teachers were extremely nasty about not speaking it their way and slagged off pupils for talking like a culchie or a jackenn

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    Mute danielplainview
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:19 PM

    I learnt irish in school for 12 years and right now i can hardly speak any of it. Only recently have i tried to take it up because I think every Irishman should be able to speak to eachother through the language. But when you consider how much money is spent on promoting the language through education and TG4 etc. We are getting very poor value for money

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    Mute Donal Desmond
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:21 PM

    I am ashamed as an Irishman I am unable to communicate in my native language. Due to the circumstances of the time I attend an left national school at an early age. My education was brought about by love of reading and getting involved in current issues. I resent your use of the word Zealot as it is my belief that the Irish language was deliberately destroyed by successive government policy of marginalizing the Irish language. Shame on us all for allowing this to happen

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    Mute Padraic Reid
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:22 PM

    Thank you Dave.

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    Mute onebox
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:33 PM

    síos leis an saghas rud

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    Mute Niall O Neill
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:34 PM

    @ Jason Bourne : were you even “thought” (sic) English?

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    Mute James Darcy
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:42 PM

    Serious question – but is this breaking the constitution with Irish being our first national language?

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    Mute Boeing Lover
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:51 PM

    Not sure James Darcy, in my place of employment there are people from all over the world working there, there are signs up everywhere telling everyone ‘English is the spoken language of this company’, disciplinary procedures happen if you’re caught speaking your native tongue.

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    Mute baz newham
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:05 PM

    If you went to Wales , do you hear Welsh spoken that much in pubs or Scottish in Scotland?? Just saying like!! Guaranteed most people that come into the flying enterprise can’t speak Irish anyway !!!

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:24 PM

    In retail and on the shop floor staff must speak English but the fact that they were speaking our own language ( whether we can speak it or not ) means that they or he shouldn’t have been pulled up on it . The owners are treating this like its a foreign language , which is just so wrong …

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    Mute M Bowe
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:25 PM

    If you went to Wales, Scotland or any other foreign country would you complain about staff conversing in their native language???

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    Mute Brent Weaver
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:26 PM

    @Dave O’Mahony

    My daughter started school last week. My Irish is extremely poor and was looking forward to the journey of working with her so that I could improve my own proficiency.

    Enter the snobby Irish educational system.

    To my shock, I discovered her junior infants book is completely in Irish! No english translations. No phonetic conversion to help us on our way. Nope. Just snobby Irish, and you must learn it their way or the highway!

    I can speak two foreign languages. Self thought I might add. All adult learning books tend to have:

    1. the target language (the new one you are trying to learn)
    2. a translation in your own language (so your brain can relate it to something it already knows)
    3. a phonetic spelling of the new word and/or phrase (so anyone can take a stab at speaking it, as some learn better that way)

    But no, not Irish. Unless you’re at school teacher level, forget about
    it! It’s become a language for snobs and zealots. Such a pity really as most Irish people have a yearning to learn it.

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    Mute TheWalkingBread
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:34 PM

    No it isint. The constitutional guarantee only applies to public bodies and your interaction with the state and its organs, nor do the language acts as they again only apply to the public bodies. English only policies are legal and were upheld recently in the equality court.

    The journal did a piece on it where polish workers in McDonalds sued because they had to speak English. No case to answer no discrimination and thus policy was upheld. If you give good reasons you can mandate a business language policy within an organisation.

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    Mute baz newham
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:35 PM

    But if the customers can’t understand you why use the language? You are no good to the employer !

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    Mute Hismet Himbsel
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:40 PM

    As a German who is learning Irish, I ask you: Would I be a zealot, if I expect people to learn German in my country? Probably not, because German is our national language. Same should apply to Irish. It is the FIRST official language according to the constitution.

    I agree with you that especially at the time of the Free State the Irish language was taught by religious fanatics who created a mess instead of helping to reintroduce Irish. On the other hand many people in Ireland seem to forget that it’s English who is the foreign language.

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    Mute Padraic Reid
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:41 PM

    Brent, did you mean to write self-taught? Reading and speaking a language without translations is probably one of the most efficient methods of learning.

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    Mute Brent Weaver
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:52 PM

    Yes. Thinking faster than i type here. Self-taught.

    The point i’m trying to make is that there are different modes of learning. More ways, and often better ways than the rigid one way of the Irish Educational system.

    I have only encountered a handful of people that have learned well without translations. If you are in the environment such as a new country, yes, that way is better. If some one can pick up a cup and tell you the word in the new language, your brain can associate the image of the cup, to hearing the new word, to english version already stored in your brain. It’s a good method of learning. However, this method is not really practical in a classroom setting. Or for sending kids home to parents to help when the parents dont know themselves!

    If you are learning a language, almost entirely, from a book, you need translations and pronunciations to make up for the lack of a “real environment”. Irish, in the main, is learned from a book. A teacher may run through the pronunciation in class, but what happens when the child comes home? “Daddy, what does that say?” “Sorry, do not know” Or “Daddy, how do I pronounce that word?”…..

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    Mute C
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:10 PM

    Longshanks would be proud . Irishman with connection to the country and ancestral history of his birthplace and habitat gets chastised by man with Irish accent with ancestral connection to an invading imperial force . Up the pale . They know where them from around those parts.

    22
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    Mute C
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:13 PM

    Name any other country where you get berated for speaking your national language and turn down 13 billion euro in one week. The Republic of Serfdom. Great place for mice. Aww insulted. Truth hurts.

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    Mute Elizabeth Davenport
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:29 PM

    Interestingly, my daughter did French and German all through school and pursued both at university – Joint Honours, with Distinction in Spoken French.

    Whilst travelling in South America she attended Spanish lessons and, although only lasting a few months, she was competent enough to speak and understand it more than adequately.

    She seems to be a natural linguist but . . .

    She says she prefers the grammar-based approach to mastering any new language.

    21
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    Mute Cez Miname
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:37 PM

    Language Nazi.

    12
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    Mute Eugene Comaskey
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:47 PM

    Some students are brilliant at Irish, of course the all Irish schools are a great help. It certainly is an inditement on the system that the mainstream students, at least very many of them , are unable co converse after spending from 5 years to about 18 years at it, I believe if they concentrated on just speaking it and later get the grammar correct it would be successful.

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:16 PM

    In our school the teacher sends home a translation for us ..

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    Mute Brent Weaver
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:19 PM

    Thats brilliant Suzie. A start at least.

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    Mute Grotmaster
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:53 PM

    I remember the calculus, a bit of Shakespeare and also the effects of glacial erosion. I also remember, in national school (1980s), that we were physically punished for making mistakes in Irish and only in Irish. Punishment for other transgressions was not prima facie physical, we got extra Irish homework! I hated that language for years, and feel cheated out of a part of our birthright. Watching the Nuacht now and not a notion what’s being said.

    22
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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:54 PM

    Brent .. it does help a fair bit .. a few of the parents got together and mentioned it to her .

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    Mute Jeremy DeChad
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    Sep 9th 2016, 7:04 PM

    When you think how much money is spent on teaching English….. all that Shakespeare rubbish … etc .. and the amounts spent on the English language service of RTE …. all thst Tubridy, Finnucane, Pat Kenny stuff …. what a waste of money. I say let’s spend more better on our own language and culture. We can get English language TV from England perhaps

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 8:40 PM

    The man in question was interviewed on radio today. I believe he was using it only with those who understood it and could, or wished to, converse with him in it. One assumes he used English with those who spoke to him in that language.

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    Mute Mike Kelly
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    Sep 9th 2016, 9:18 PM

    Excellent comment . Imagine going to a evening course to learn french and the teacher said.

    1. Most of the course will be dealing with french poetry and prose.
    2. from next week , i will be speaking to you in french
    3. as you will see, your textbook is in French
    4. if we get some time, we will speak some french but most of our time will be taking up with grammar

    I believe the teaching of irish should be privatized , with a basic fee and a bonus fee for each fluent student. For sure, they would not be teaching Irish as it is now been taught

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:45 PM

    Hey, danielplainview, you could make it relevant by speaking it outside school. Like in pubs.
    Unless they are racist and ban you from speaking your own language in your own country. Nobody is that stupid or bigoted these these of course. Right, The Flying Enterprise? I mean that would be nuts. A pub where people are go to talk, like visitors to Cork from other countries who won’t be allowed to speak anything except English.
    Mad.
    The No Foreigners or Natives Pub
    Dheara, deireann dul isteach ann, le uisce amháin a cheannach is Gaeilge amháin a labhairt. iad ag iarraidh Gaeilge a choinneáil amach? Tóg isteach í. Go láidir le bród.

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:58 PM

    Immersion is great.
    Try it.
    Tum isteach.
    Fiú sa phub.

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    Mute John Moylan
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:09 AM

    Sehr Heehrter Hismet – but that’s the problem. The only place Irish is ‘first’ is in the constitution. In real life, even historically, English is (literally) our mother tongue. Mit freundlichen grussen, ….

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    Mute Fergal McDonagh
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:47 AM

    The Padraics and Daves are the ones who ruin it.
    Most attempts to speak Irish by non-natives is met with derision by the over possessive native speakers.
    Probably something to do with the ludicrous amount of gaelgóirí jobs invented by successive governments to buy votes. The translation of EU documentation being a prime example

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    Mute Allan Williams
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:53 AM

    The whole point here is that English is the spoken language in this place of work, I say fair play to the manager. Sounds like a bit of a gob shite to me , he had to be told the second day. It’s not fair on other staff that don’t speak the lingo, as anything could be said . It’s quiet Rude.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:54 AM

    If it helps, Brent, focloir.ie has pronunciations as well as an English to Irish searchbox. And Potafocal.com is a good website for learners.

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    Mute gus sheridan
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:07 AM

    Irish is not used outside the classroom, just like Latin. If you want a language to live it has to be spoken by a large number of people, emigration has ensured that it will only be used in the Dail or on roadsigns. It was a waste of school time grappling with it for years.

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    Mute Declan Kelly
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:00 AM

    I have learnt more Irish off the duo lingo app then I did in 12 years at school.

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    Mute Derrick Ó Súilleabháin
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    Sep 10th 2016, 5:47 AM

    I had taught that 2 that we can speak English or Irish as they are the official language of the country

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    Mute Micheál De Bhaldraithe
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    Sep 10th 2016, 7:49 AM

    Go learn it now then and stop being a victim! Man up Mary!

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    Mute Dara O Rourke
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    Sep 10th 2016, 11:43 AM

    Of course. Unless one is learning through immersion there must always be some glossary with translations and a basic pronunciation guide. Certainly at infant level. Most people cannot send kids to Irish medium schools.Therefore they are learning a target language. As in French , German etc. But not , alas , in Irish. Hence the grind schools….

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    Mute Dara O Rourke
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    Sep 10th 2016, 11:50 AM

    It is quiet rude Alan Williams? Is English your first language?

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    Mute Sharon Ní Choileáin
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:58 PM

    Read the article before you comment

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    Mute Sharon Ní Choileáin
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:00 PM

    Well said Hismet

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    Mute Helen Leahy
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    Sep 10th 2016, 5:18 PM

    Indeed, I learnt French for 5 years but I have forgotten it due to lack of use. Who do I blame? No one but myself. Use it or lose it.. Take responsibility for your own laziness.

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    Mute Dave O'Mahony
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    Sep 12th 2016, 10:00 AM

    I’m curious Fergal McDonagh, how are Padraic & I “the ones who ruin it”? I’ve re-read all the posts from both of us (a few times now) & the only things we’re ruining is people’s illusions that their lack of effort is automatically someone else’s fault.

    The bottom line of what we both said was that the responsibility of speaking the Irish language outside of school lies with people, not the school. Neither of us said a bad word about the Irish language, more about the laziness of people who need to blame others for their own shortcomings. I personally lament my own inability to speak Irish as fluently as I did when I was 12, but I am the only person to blame for that. When entering secondary school, my focus shifted to learning new subjects (e.g. French & science) from the ground up. Irish took a back seat, as I thought I my level of fluency wouldn’t decrease so it wouldn’t need as much attention. By the time the Leaving cert came around, I had to drop down from Higher level because I hadn’t been putting in the work.

    Incidentally, my fluency in French has dropped dramatically since I did the leaving (I used to be quite good) so now it’s on par with my level of Irish. I rarely have need for either language so I rarely practice. Obviously it would be fantastic if every Irish person were bilingual, but the reality is that we’re not. My point (and I think Padraic’s point as well) is that anyone who wants to be able to re-learn Irish needs to get off their backside and do it, instead of just moaning about it.

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    Mute Simon
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:45 PM

    What sort of Irish person would be offended by his own native language , in Ireland. We are in Ireland. Irish gets a pass. It’s up to him in the end but it only makes the place look ridiculous.

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    Mute Brent Weaver
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:36 PM

    “What sort of Irish person would be offended?” A “new Irish” person who has been told that the businesses policy is English only. Some Eastern Europeans, for example (not intending to ‘pick’ on them only), got themselves a bad reputation by speaking in their own tongue disparagingly about customers and other staff members. Having the english only rule put a stop to that.

    Although, an Irish exemption should be allowed :D

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    Mute Juan Venegas
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    Sep 9th 2016, 8:45 PM

    I am a “New Irish” and I probably know more Irish history than many, I can even sign Amhrán na bhFiann a capella. I’m not Eastern European, but I think its just wrong to start blaming others for the failures which has been here long before there were “New Irish” I don’t know about the rest but I think its unacceptable that a young Irish man is told not to speak Irish to his co-worker. If it would be another language I would be supportive of it, because there has to be integration, but Irish doesn’t even need a pass because its an official Language. I’m not offended if someone is allowed to speak Irish and I’m not allowed to speak Spanish at work. Irish is an official language, Spanish isn’t and I am sure Polish people and other groups would understand it and even embrace it since I personally think that We should do everything in our power to preserve the Irish Language.

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:46 PM

    Go díreach.
    Is bheadh siad iomlán as bealach.
    Ná glac le ciníochas aon áit.

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:48 PM

    Míle maith agat, Juan.
    Ayuda mucho ♥ é sin a chloisteáil.

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    Mute gus sheridan
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:14 AM

    What?

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    Mute Piotrek Król
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:47 PM

    Fair play to Cormac for going public with this. This is the Irish language – not Polish, French, Chinese or anything else.

    Maybe our culture and heritage would be in a better position than it is today, were it not for anglophiles like O’Shea in various positions of authority over the years.

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    Mute Deborah Behan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:52 PM

    There are many work places with an English only rules because of the different nationalities working there. People would feel a bit paranoid if two Polish workers were having a conversation in Polish in a fastfood place. It’s nothing to do with the language. But I do lament that I can’t speak it better though.

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    Mute Phil Blanc
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:53 PM

    Why would it matter if it was Polish, French, Chinese or anything else?

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    Mute Alan Farrell
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:22 PM

    @ Phil Polish, French and Chinese are native languages of other countries, not Ireland, where this has happened. Irish is the native language of Ireland.

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    Mute Piotrek Król
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:33 PM

    It’s bemusing that you had to explain that to him Alan.

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    Mute prouesse f
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:00 PM

    Maybe you want to have a look at Deborah’s comment…

    Phil is right to ask the question because it’s covering deeper matters: is a company expected to tell us how to speak now? why would people feel paranoid only by hearing a different language? what’s that need for homogeneous people wearing the same thing, saying the same thing, feeling the same thing, etc.?

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    Mute Phil Blanc
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:00 PM

    “Polish, French and Chinese are native languages of other countries, not Ireland, where this has happened. Irish is the native language of Ireland.”

    Yes, Alan, I am aware of that. But it doesn’t address the reason given by the bar, they state that it is not about the Irish Language, but about communication with customers who were uncomfortable with others speaking in a language they couldn’t understand – which woudl also presumably be the case with Polish, French and Chinese.

    “It’s bemusing that you had to explain that to him Alan.”

    It is unsurprising you didn’t understand why I was asking.

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    Mute Brent Weaver
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:02 PM

    You’re in for it now Piotrek.

    Prouesse f, “the perpetually offended”, has just joined the conversation.

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:50 PM

    It has everything to do with the language and exceptionalism and racism and paranoia that is wrong and dangerous. Ní haon ionadh gur vótáil daoine ► Brimeacht má tá siad chomh xenophobic sin. Monolingualism can be cured. Start teaching British history right including the crimes of Empire and the exceptionalism may crumble.

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    Mute Beachmaster
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:40 PM

    If anyone saw how Cork fawned all over Queen Elizabeth then this shouldn’t come as a surprise, IMO.

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    Mute Lad
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:18 PM

    Tá sé á labhairt an chuid is mó i gCorcaigh agus i gCiarraí .

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    Mute canuckandgo
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:20 PM

    Michael Collins split the country and changed the face lrish and British relations and politics. One could see how he could be termed a traitor.

    Roy Keane didn’t play a few football matches. Only a muppet or whatever the collective term is for a group or muppets would see that as an act of a traitor.

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    Mute Lad
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:27 PM

    Jesus Christ (-_-)

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    Mute Poole Hyde
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:14 PM

    Beachmaster.. anyone who dared voice opposition was called a “shinner” and told to move on from the past.

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    Mute canuckandgo
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:21 PM

    Ah, the comments I was responding to were deleted. Well done Journal for deleting juvenile drivel

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    Mute James Costello
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    Sep 9th 2016, 8:52 PM

    What about other Europeans speaking their languages while working in Ireland, always happens and nothing ever done !

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    Mute John O'Shaughnessy
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:32 AM

    Cork people did not get to dine with her as did her old enemy Martin McGuinness; then again, she pays him and SF well in her own lovely shillings! Cork people are naturally generous and welcoming- and the Queen did not have to pay them for their kindness,

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    Mute Fear Uisce
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:48 PM

    Boycott the place

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    Mute Patrick Agnew
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:52 PM

    That would soon soften his sh!te

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    Mute Ruadhán MacEoin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:03 PM

    + 1

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    Mute Val
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:20 PM

    The Flying Enterprise is a despicable establishment, my sister worked there for a few months and was bullied out of the place because the other staff members and managers were utterly nasty to her, It’s a family owned business.

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:40 PM

    I think boycotting is a futile exercise because people who like to drink in a particular pub will continue to do so in any case, as is their right. It’s also people’s right to hate the Irish language if they wish, whatever one might think of that as a strange attitude towards a major and important part of our National heritage.
    As far as “having the sh*te beaten out of him at school”, I had this delightful experience myself on a couple of occasions. Nor for Irish though – it was for English and Maths.
    But I am a bit puzzled; Irish is an official language (in fact, constitutionally, it’s still the premier official language) of Ireland. So, are customers in this place permitted to speak in Irish – as is their constitutional right, like it or not? Would a customer be refused service for ordering a pint (for example) in Irish – as is their right?
    At the end of the day, it would have been interesting, if not indeed useful, to have this man’s case argued before the Employment Appeals Tribunal, just to have a pint established (sorry, “point”)

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    Mute BlueSkyThinking
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:44 PM

    I’ve had friends work in the Flying Enterprise over the years and they all got on fine. However as you said it’s a family owned and run business. I’ve worked for a few such businesses over the years and I’m glad I don’t any more. Family run business are weird to work for as you have to deal with all the family politics on top of all the work politics. As a staff member you always be an “outsider” to the family and they’ll never fully trust you.

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    Mute onebox
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:42 PM

    Order you tipple in Irish just to get a message across.

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    Mute TehJurolan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:20 PM

    I would have thought that everyone in the Flying Enterprise was equipped with universal translators.

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:59 PM

    Cliste.
    Aistear na Réalt abú.

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    Mute rory
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:54 PM

    Boycott this pub

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    Mute TheWalkingBread
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:56 PM

    Why because the owner wants his staff to speak the language of 99% of the population ?

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    Mute David
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:59 PM

    He doesn’t allow the official language of the country. It’s like banning a French man from speaking French in a Paris office.

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    Mute Mike O'sullivan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:03 PM

    No, because he’s a gowl.

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    Mute dar.i.am
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:06 PM

    It’s not really like that at all as the majority of the population can’t understand the slightest bit of Irish (unfortunately). Put yourself in the position of a new member of staff whom may be from abroad. They come in hear 2 other members of staff speaking Irish and is not able to integrate by joining in the conversation. It could lead also lead to paranoia (are they talking about me etc. ) It’s a sensible policy to insist that English is the only language used in the place of work. I wish it was different and more people spoke Irish but that’s not happening any time soon.

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    Mute TheWalkingBread
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:11 PM

    Correction he requested staff speak in the native tongue of Ireland i.e English.

    Irish language has not been native in the majority of this country in hundreds of years.

    The only mention of it is a constitutional protection that has very limited legal affect and is mostly confined to the justice system and converting massive amounts of documents to Irish.

    From the states point of view “Irish” is a native language in a “constitutional sense” however to a private business holder they can do what ever the hell they want and so should it be.

    Liberty over state interventionism I say. If he doesn’t like it (which he clearly doesn’t) he can leave his job ( which he clearly did) and he can work in a bar that facilitates a language spoken by less people than polish nationals.

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    Mute Jindrich Marz
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:42 PM

    dar.iam: as a member of staff (different establishment) who is from abroad I would like it very much if workforce at my place used Irish. At the end, it is the original language of this country, and it would help me when my little one reaches the age of doing Irish at school.

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    Mute Ben McArthur
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:06 PM

    It isn’t the original language either. There were people in Ireland for about 6500 years before the johnny-come-lately Celts got here.

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    Mute Jindrich Marz
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:53 PM

    Of course there were languages before Irish, but I think we all got the point I was making. Maybe all population of Europe used to speak some sort of proto-Bask, but that’s a question for prehistory.

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    Mute Ben McArthur
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:03 PM

    The point of people saying that it is the “original language” is that it has some sort of special place. But I don’t buy that. It wasn’t handed down to the nation on Croagh Patrick on tablets of stone. It’s just that it was part of the furniture for a while. If people want to speak it, they’re welcome to go for it, but they’re not going to tell me that it’s somehow my language or that I’m a traitor for wanting nothing to do with it. That is BS.

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:55 PM

    Don’t excuse the paranoia. Xenophobia is unhealthy. Racism is plain wrong.
    Ní bheidh Gaeilge aon áit má tá cosc uirthi.
    Seo ciníochas.
    Glaoigh amach é.

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    Mute gus sheridan
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:25 AM

    David unlike France where everyone speaks the language, Irish is only spoken in school.
    The fanatics that tried to force it down kids throats and a government whose policy was to
    fail candidate doing their Leaving Cert unless they passed Irish made sure it was hated by
    most kids. For me it was a waste of 12 years, never spoke a word of it. Would have been better
    to have studied French or German.

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    Mute Get Lost Eircodes
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:12 PM

    If a native gaelic speaker came to work for me I’d probably try to use it as an opportunity to relearn and speak a bit of the native tongue myself.

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    Mute Karen Delaney
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:15 PM

    And use it to target another area of the population

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    Mute Proinsias Ó Foghlú
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:53 PM

    Maith an fear Cormac, bhí tú ceart agus bhí an úinéir bodalán!

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    Mute John Moylan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:06 PM

    Translate please…

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    Mute Boeing Lover
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:05 PM

    Good man Corman, you were right and the owner is a wänker

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:07 PM

    @John Moylan:
    With all due respect to Proinsias Ó Foghlú, I have never come across “bodalán” until now, and I of course looked it up:
    <>
    Maybe it’s Donegal Irish.
    An approximate translation might be: “Good man, Cormac, you were right and the owner was a big ungainly person (or, indeed, sea slug)”
    I myself would have written “bodach ab ea an únaér” , being more familiar with “bodach” which means “an ignoramus” and preferring the conventional Irish language formation which places the description before the subject.
    Hope this helps

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:09 PM

    Oops, missed link in last comment:
    http://www.teanglann.ie/en/fgb/bodalach

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    Mute Proinsias O Foghlú
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:14 PM

    Bodalán = arsehole.

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    Mute Críostóir Ó Faoláin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:18 PM

    Dé chúis? Nach bhfuil cead againn Gaeilge a úsáid gan aistrúcháin a chur ar fáil duit?

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:31 PM

    @Proinsias
    Míle bhuiochais!

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:53 PM

    An-deas a fheiceáil go bhfuil daoine ag foghlaim teanga úsáideach nár mhúin siad dúinn ar scoil anseo. Anois, ar aghaidh linn go dtí an pub leis na focail nua seo a chleachtadh.

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    Mute gus sheridan
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:18 AM

    Yes translate

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:11 AM

    Yep. Ní chuireann siad aistriúcháin ar an mBéarla ann dúinn.

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    Mute Noirin Kavanagh
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:01 PM

    Go raibh math agat, Tuskar, bhí mé ag lorg an focal sin tar éis an méid atá scríobhta anseo ….

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 11th 2016, 2:18 PM

    Iontach! Sár-fhocal!! Ceann eile go bhfuil gean ar leith agam dó: “magairle” (boll*x).

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:45 PM

    The owner probably had seven shades of sh**e beaten out of him at school for not being able to demonstrate correct use of the modh choníollach, so has a permanent chip on his shoulder about use of our first language.

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    Mute Mick Jenkins
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:53 PM

    You spelt Mo Kinnelack wrong there

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:58 PM

    First language my arse. English is the first language if the vast majority of people on this island.

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    Mute Jamie McCormack
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:21 PM

    *of

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:27 PM

    Of.*

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    Mute Sarah Clifford
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:40 PM

    I agree thomas it’s the truth that a lot of people don’t want to hear

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:44 PM

    I had this experience myself, but not for Irish which I was fairly good at – it was for English and Maths. Pupils were regularly whacked for getting sums wrong for instance.

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:45 PM

    Th Constitution says otherwise, like it or not.

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    Mute ktsiwot
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:55 PM

    In the real world, English is by far the most common spoken language in this country, it may not be in a constitutional sense however in reality it is, this tread is in English anyone who disagrees with this fact does not live in the real world.

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    Mute Ben McArthur
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:00 PM

    That must be parody, right?

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:09 PM

    Defo Sarah, just stating the plain facts. I think Irish is a beautiful, unique language , but I’m not into this whole deluding ourselves thing that it’s our first language or that anyone other than a small percentage of the population can actually speak it with any degree of proficiency. It’s a farce that distracts from the real problem; how the language is taught and promoted.

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:34 PM

    Thomas, whether people like it or not, the first language of our state is Irish, as stated in the constitution.

    AIRTEAGAL 8
    1 Ós í an Ghaeilge an teanga náisiúnta is í an phríomhtheanga oifigiúil í.
    2 Glactar leis an Sacs-Bhéarla mar theanga oifigiúil eile.

    ARTICLE 8
    1 The Irish language as the national language is the first official language.
    2 The English language is recognised as a second official language.

    I agree it has been taught atrociously, however, hence most people prefer to speak English on a day to day basis.

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:35 PM

    Hopefully apps such as Duolingo might change how people view learning it.

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:40 AM

    I dont care what the constitution says, English is the first language of the vast majority of irish people in practical terms and you’re deluded if you think otherwise. Also most people don’t “prefer” to speak English, lol, they can’t speak Irish properly so they have no choice. Get real.

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 10th 2016, 10:04 AM

    Duh, I know most people speak English. You’re missing the point, which is that Irish is our official first language and if zealots like yourself had their way, we would lose our cultural identity altogether.

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    Mute Little Diddy No
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:29 PM

    Who is stopping anybody learning or speaking Irish? It seems to me that many of the people who go on about it don’t actually speak Irish and can’t be bothered to learn it!

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 10th 2016, 3:17 PM

    You’re missing the point moron, calling Irish our first language is farcical when only a small proportion of the country can actually speak it with any fluency. You’re the zealot as you wish to continue with your moronic delusion in spite of the plain truth.

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 10th 2016, 7:32 PM

    No delusion here mate, simply a statement of fact that our official first state language is Irish, as defined by Bunreacht na hÉireann (that’s “Constitution of Ireland” for the West Brits among you who would rather see our language die just because they don’t speak it, despite plenty of interest in preserving it.)

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 10th 2016, 7:34 PM

    And as for ad hominem attacks? Name calling? Really?

    (Ad hominem is a Latin phrase by the way – another language that was killed off.)

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 10th 2016, 8:24 PM

    And in practical terms Irish being our first official language means absolutely jack sh!t and they should amend the constitution to reflect that. Oh God, you used the term West Brit, I see what class of muck savage I’m dealing with now.

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 10th 2016, 11:53 PM

    You don’t know Jack, mate. Good luck killing our heritage…

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 11th 2016, 12:40 PM

    You’re an idiot. I never once said Irish shouldn’t be preserved and promoted ya stupid turf muncher.

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    Mute Tom the Bomb
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    Sep 11th 2016, 10:48 PM

    Wow, more name calling. You like to have the last word, don’t you? And you lack class with that sort of behaviour. You’re also making a lot of assumptions about me too – as if I give two hoots.

    I never said that you said it shouldn’t be preserved and promoted. The alacrity with which you dismiss Irish as our official first language says it for you.

    ps
    Grow up, and cut out the name calling. It makes you look silly.

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    Mute Steve
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:41 PM

    Can’t see the issue here. One rule for everyone be it Polish, Irish or whoever.

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    Mute David
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:57 PM

    It’s the official language of the state. Every legal document has to be supplied in both Irish and English. The manager is an idiot.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:04 PM

    The manager may be an idiot David, but it is his call afterall. The Kerry lad needs to cop himself on…..

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    Mute David
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:18 PM

    If people start boycotting the place, the owner of the building wouldn’t be long clearing the manager…

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    Mute TheWalkingBread
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:20 PM

    Every Legal document originating from the state must come in either the Irish language or English. That does not apply to private parties.

    Seriously read a book.

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    Mute Patrick James Walsh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:01 PM

    I don`t think most fair minded people would agree that Polish be given the same status as Irish, unless that is, you want to hand the place over to them entirely.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:22 PM

    I wonder did the manager do the job interview in Irish……. Unlikely!

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    Mute Eugene Comaskey
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:43 PM

    I cannot understand that this man did not take action for harassment or constructive dismissal. He probably would have got on very well at an unfair dismissal hearing. Think about it lad.

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    Mute Kenny O Reilly
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:53 PM

    Compo culture alive and well!!

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    Mute Bunny
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:59 PM

    He chose to leave, he wasn’t asked to leave.

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    Mute Eugene Comaskey
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:10 PM

    No, nothing to do with compo. It appears that this guy was bullied, a pity that he didn’t stand his ground, speak Gaeilge if he wished and if people wanted to speak it to him. Owners of business as well as management must show respect. Gaeilge is a language , he was not abusing anyone, he is perfectly entitled to speak it if he so wished. He was hardly talking to himself, there were people in and out of there that was willing to speak our native language.

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    Mute Tweed Cap
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:13 PM

    He walked out with a snot on – or in a “huffa mór”. Trouble maker most business’s have one.

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    Mute Kenny O Reilly
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:19 PM

    Eugene personally I would like if our national language was spoken and understood all over the country. The fact of the matter is that it is not and if the owner felt that this was having a negative effect on his business well then he is perfectly entitled to address the issue. If this clown chose to disobey a request from the man that pays his wages well then one of them had to go.

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    Mute Eugene Comaskey
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:25 PM

    If that case had got to an Enquiry , then I think the pub would loose out. Anyway, that young man has done some good by speaking out even at this stage. I’m sure he is doing far better for himself now.

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:30 PM

    Eugene> There is absolutely no indication of bullying. People of all nationalities and languages are often told to only speak one language in work. Normal working practice for millions of people. One of the reasons is precisely to prevent bullying and people saying nasty things about each other with only some people knowing what is said. Staff must show respect to other members of staff.

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    Mute Proinsias Ó Maolchalain
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:36 PM

    It’s called constructive dismissal

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    Mute Mary Fitzsimons
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:40 PM

    He still could, constructive dismissal. Look it up.

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    Mute Kenny O Reilly
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:42 PM

    It’s a shame that in cases like this that the first things people think about is compo dollar signs but unfortunately Ireland is a world leader for this. The owner made a statement saying this guys behaviour was making other staff members uncomfortable so he decided to take action as he obliged to do. So quite the opposite Eugene maybe an enquiry would applaud a responsible manager for looking after the welfare of all his employees.

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    Mute brian magee
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:42 PM

    Kenny, it’s not compo but a penalty that people are calling for . A penalty to a business is a financial pay out

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:15 PM

    True; often found in a position more senior to one’s own.

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    Mute Anne Marie Devlin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:27 PM

    Unless it was in the terms and conditions of employment – and that may not be legal due to the fact that Irish is an official language of this country – it seems as if he would have a good case for constructive dismissal.

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    Mute Brent Weaver
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:23 PM

    Kenny, Eugene is Fianna Fail man. His party is responsible for a lot, including the teaching of Irish in schools since the foundation of the State, which has been a disaster. Ironic given the amount of school teachers that are members of Fianna Fail. They even decided that Irish history would no longer be taught as a subject to Irish kids, unless the opted for history during the leaving cert back in the 1970′s.

    No surprise that the first thing the Fianna Fail man thought of in this case, was the money!

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    Mute Eugene Comaskey
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:39 PM

    Politics has nothing to do with an employee being bullied over his use of Gaeilge. What kind of a Clawhopper are ya, coming up with that cock and bull story about Irish history?.

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    Mute John Collins
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    May 11th 2017, 1:04 PM

    @Kenny O Reilly:
    If the manager told him not to serve itinerants should he obey him.

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    Mute John Kelly
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:41 PM

    Guy gets told what to do in work by boss … remarkable

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    Mute Rob Mac Giollarnáth
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:02 PM

    Compulsory Irish engenders hatred perhaps antipathy and apathy. Then again I loved it so what do I know. The weird thing is I’ve yet to meet a tourist in Ireland who doesn’t like to hear a cúpla focal. If anything I would have thought that a couple of ‘cainteoir’ would have added a bit of colour around the place. Often Irish people complain that they can’t speak Irish after leaving school, this is a terrible shame and was my experience as well. I decided that I would study though and go to the adult summer classes in the Gaeltacht (or what’s left of it that is). I encountered many tourists there who did struggle with the language but Irish people seemed to thrive as in fairness despite what many think they do actually have a great basis in it. So many choices there, ignore it, embrace it, support if, let it flourish.

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    Mute TehJurolan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:05 PM

    No, being unable to speak the language in any sort of fluent manner, after “learning” it for 12+ years, engenders feelings of inadequacy which then leads to a misplaced hostility towards the language itself. The vast, vast majority of people simply cannot learn a language from books and blackboards, they have to conversationally speak it every day for sustained periods in order to attain fluency.

    People who go to Gaelscoils attain fluency and even if they rarely speak it after they leave school they can still understand the language on TV and radio. With practice, such people will always regain fluency fairly quickly, even after years of hardly speaking the Language.

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    Mute Paula Doran
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:54 PM

    I love the Irish language but I think the manager was totally in the right in this case. In retail one language has to be spoken and that’s the one understood by most. I worked with a lot of polish people and they got in serious trouble for using their own language all the time even though they were just talking amongst themselves. The issue is it makes others feel excluded. Doesn’t matter what the language, if it’s not widely understood then it’s rude to use it in company. I know there will be loads of nationalists on saying it’s our national language but the fact of the matter is it’s not any longer. It’s not widely spoken and therefore not the national language.

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    Mute Mary Murphy
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:10 PM

    Paula well said. I’ve just listened to that chap and if he wants to speak Irish on his own time that’s fine. But really he’s not very convincing in his argument. It seems he wasn’t available for work so he left the company with no choice but to let him go. Feck sake he has little to be worrying about.

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    Mute Gary Rowe
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:16 PM

    I’m not sure where your argument is coming from either …

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    Mute Margie Murph
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:49 PM

    Maybe he was just annoying. Like the gaelgoir teachers we had at school. The ones who used to call me mhaighriadhd or something like that.

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    Mute Joe Doyle
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:03 PM

    Good point Margie. Maybe he was like the guy in the Colin Farrell movie ” Intermission” who kept addressing his therapy teacher as ” Muinteoir ” until the Deirdre O’Kane carachter told him to “Shut up you owl eejit”

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:47 PM

    It probably was something like that.

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    Mute Tom Harpur
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:30 PM

    Anybody ever been in Lidl or Aldi when the foreign workers meet one of there own at the till they speak there own language and do so between work colleagues also therefore this guy should have been allowed also.

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    Mute Little Diddy No
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:21 PM

    It’s OK to speak to your colleagues in any language you like – I am sure Irish people working abroad will do that too. If he was speaking to customers in Irish and only switching to English when they did not respond, that would be an entirely different matter. We don’t really know the realities of this case. I cannot imagine any Irish person objecting to a barman sharing a few words of Irish with his colleague, so I wonder if there is not something more to this.

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    Mute dar.i.am
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:48 PM

    The owners released a statement this afternoon clarifying their position. This employee needs to climb down off his high horse.

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    Mute Gerard Doherty
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:16 PM

    Bit of a joke, especially when you go into most shops and foreign staff are speaking their own language! Why can’t people who speak Irish do so with out this crap! I’m not good at Irish before you give me the red thumbs…

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    Mute George Brown
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:42 PM

    I don’t agree with the owner’s decision but it’s their decision to make.

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    Mute aboutallthethings
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:22 PM

    It’s a shame to read something like this. I recently started to learn Irish again. I have done so because I work in an environment where my colleagues speak multiple languages, each, including there natives languages. I am often asked why don’t more Irish people speak Irish?! It is such a beautiful language and we should be proud of it. It’s up to each and everyone of us to keep the language alive, but I do believe the government need to do a lot more to help. Right now it seems that there needs to be a serious incentive attached to Irish in order for people to want to learn it (although preventing our language from dying should be enough). Perhaps extra points in the leaving and junior certs for higher level Irish and extra points based on the amount of time spent in the Gealtacht, and a grant from the government subsiding the cost. If such incentives were introduced now, in 20 years I think the Irish language would be in a far better condition. As the saying goes, you don’t miss something until it’s gone.

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    Mute TehJurolan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:28 PM

    It’s really quite simple, most Irish people don’t speak Irish because they haven’t ever been taught to speak it to any degree of fluency.

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    Mute Proinsias O Foghlú
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:55 PM

    Duolingo Irish is a fantastic resource if you want to relearn Irish.

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    Mute aboutallthethings
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:11 PM

    I completely agree with you TehJurolan. I think it was more or less hammered into us in school with no real teaching involved!

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    Mute aboutallthethings
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:13 PM

    Duolingo is a great little app.

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    Mute Little Diddy No
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:26 PM

    It seems as if you are saying people need to be forced and cajoled, or rewarded, to speak the language – if that is the case, then it is already dead. The way I see it is that there is a percentage of people who speak Irish as their first language, or speak English and Irish interchangeably, and that is brilliant, but it is also a choice.

    I would vigorously oppose even more forcing of young adults at secondary level when it comes to compulsory Irish as a school subject. It is hugely counter-productive. Also, rewarding those who happen to be good at languages by giving extra points to a subject that many see as pointless would be going against the will of the majority of Irish people who do not choose to speak Irish on a regular basis – and it IS a choice – since it’s not really hard to learn for anybody who is committed to learning to speak it. The Government would do better to support free conversational language groups in the community so that those who want to learn to speak it can do so. When it comes down to it, there is nothing to stop speakers getting together for conversational evenings and inviting along those who want to learn.

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    Mute aboutallthethings
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    Sep 10th 2016, 3:00 PM

    I respect your opinion. But I do not like people speaking about Irish as a dead language. It’s only dead if we want it to be. If that is the case, then it will die out and there is nothing to be done about it. But if we just stand by and allow it to die, without trying to save it, then shame on us all. As regards forcing people to learn it. That is not at all what I meant. It’s that very thing that has the language the way it is. It’s all about choice, and yes, a certain amount of cajoling/rewarding involved. It is human nature to pursue something for the possibility of reward. I don’t think some children are born with the ability to learn a language faster/easier over other children. I think it’s all down to the attitude of the parents, school and society. Language groups in towns would be nice, but why just confine it to groups that meet occasionally? Would it not be nice to hear young people speaking Irish around or villages, towns and cities?! But again, everyone is entitled to their opinion on the matter, what might be nice for one person may be horrid for another.

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    Mute Niamh Kenneally
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:26 PM

    “(The manager) spoke to you as a result of a number of complaints received from people who felt uncomfortable at the bar because you were communicating in Irish.”

    Sounds like total BS to me. Why would any customer feel uncomfortable to hear 2 lads chatting as gaeilge in a gaelic country?! If the barman was also fluent in Spanish and had a few spanish customers would he not be allowed to greet them in Spanish and chat a little? Weird.

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    Mute Little Diddy No
    Favourite Little Diddy No
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:16 PM

    I suppose it’s hard to know the real situation without being there – if he was speaking Irish to customers in general, and only switching to English when they couldn’t understand, then that might not be OK in a country where the majority of citizens are not fluent in Irish. When we are being paid to do a job, being asked to address customers in English does not seem to be wrong. If he was just speaking a few words of Irish to an Irish-speaking colleague, and this was not interfering with his work, that should be OK.

    You do have to wonder why people complained if he was just chatting to his Irish-speaking colleague – I don’t think anybody would complain about that.

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    Mute Lauren Masterson
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:41 PM

    An bhuil cead agam dul go dti an Leithris

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    Mute Niall O D
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:46 PM

    Tá cead, agus fág do shîte unoriginal jokes ann chomh maith.

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    Mute Rebecca De Stanleigh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:52 PM

    Tá do Ghaeilge uafásach!!!!

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    Mute Thomas Delaney
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:56 PM

    Lmao, classic.

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    Mute Lauren Masterson
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:01 PM

    Sorry Niall that’s the only Irish I remember from school and as far as I’m aware it isn’t actually a joke … no need to be so mean. Who dunked their buscuit in yiur coffee ? such a pity they don’t get the kids to ask can they go to the loo in Irish these days … it’s the only bit of Irish that stuck in my head !

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    Mute Lauren Masterson
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:04 PM

    I know! I had to use Google translate to even see what you were saying !

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    Mute Rebecca De Stanleigh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:07 PM

    Ah it’s a good try Lauren.. I love Irish!

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    Mute Lauren Masterson
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:09 PM

    I love hearing people talk irish ! It’s such a shame we don’t all have good irish!! I’m actually ashamed of myself for knowing so little!

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    Mute Rebecca De Stanleigh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:23 PM

    I would be a big advocate for it. I went to a gaelscoil and I’m adamant when I have kids they will be following suit. Grá do theanga x

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:14 PM

    You need not be ashamed! Anyhow I suppose you know the Irish for “Please”, “Thanks” and “Excuse me” – you could try using them if a suitable occasion presents. Others usually react positively (not always though!).

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    Mute Colette Mullins
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:59 PM

    What a non story! I find it annoying when I go to any premises and the employees are having a conversation in a different language when they are supposed to be working and looking after customers. Well done to the owners!

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:51 PM

    That rules out most countries in the world, and very probably most parts of most English-speaking countries as well.

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    Mute Tuesday Paddy
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:59 PM

    When I go into Lidl and the checkout staff are talking to their fellow countrymen and women in their own native language (Polish, Russian etc), it doesn’t bother me one bit.
    In fact it’s kinda nice to hear.
    Why on earth this was an issue, I’ve no idea.

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    Mute Poole Hyde
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:20 PM

    Because the owner is paranoid.

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    Mute Myk_Oval_Balls_nRyt
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:45 PM

    I hate that i cant speak it & am to lazy to learn it, some day. The thing is its one fiercely beautiful language when you listen to 2 people speaking as gaeilge in full flow, tis music to my ignorant ears.

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    Mute Bhiniáimin Ó Beith
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:09 PM

    Irish is the first language of Ireland. Isn’t it his constitutional right to speak it regardless. There could be no challenge on behalf of the pub owner anyway.

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    Mute TheWalkingBread
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:53 PM

    I for one am not the languages biggest fan, the greatest works on this island have all been written in English, while Irish is deader than a coma patient 20 years on.

    However no harm no foul, but also its his business he cant tell his staff exactly what he wants them to do while they are working for him.

    Cormac clearly thinks being a GealGeoir is more important to actually having a job and choose willingly to leave his employment out of principle.

    Best of luck working ion the private sector with Irish, you will go so far in life.

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    Mute Daniel Murray
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:03 PM

    Sadly he’s right.. The language of the ‘company’ is the language that must be spoken. On his breaks he can speak whatever he likes though..

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    Mute John Collins
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    May 11th 2017, 1:16 PM

    @Daniel Murray:
    What if a native speaker from sayBallyferriter or Muskerry, who may know this bartender, comes in and asks for a drink and engages in a bit of comhra through Irish is this OK, because I doubt if a Polish bartender would be requested not to speak in Polish to other Poles

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    Mute Sean Wong
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:57 PM

    The boss should benefitted from this. He could ads something like “want to learn irish, come to us, we have good Irish speaking staff”. I believe a lot of people would be happy to come.

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    Mute Warren Mcdermott
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:31 PM

    Can’t see the problem with 2 people having a conversation in Irish sure if that’s the case u would have to ban all Polish people from speaking to each other in their native tongue or any other foreign national who talks their language

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    Mute Dain Flemming
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:35 PM

    The Empire Strikes Back!

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    Mute Martin Sheerin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:16 PM

    We live in Ireland and Irish is our national language if he wants to speak Irish then he can Irish in his own country

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    Mute Keith McDonagh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:50 PM

    I wouldn’t necessarily say it’s our national language because nearly everyone in Ireland has English as their first language & only very few can speak Irish.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:00 PM

    What kind of idiot would walk away from a job in this day and age because he doesn’t like the company rules……

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    Mute Vincent Wallace
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:11 PM

    In all fairness its bar work the pay is hardly out of this world and its one of the only jobs left you can literally walk into another.

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    Mute Noirin Kavanagh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:21 PM

    Maybe someone with principles Chris Kirk, if only we could employ people who actually value principles over greed and ego in the Dáil. That might be a nice one for him but I doubt he’d last long if he continued to stick to principles….. he’d do fine if he really was an idiot though

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:52 PM

    Many women, possibly?

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:07 PM

    Perhaps you are right Norin, but in over fifty years the principle of work and doing a good job never worried me. Perhaps things have changed…….

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    Mute Críostóir Ó Faoláin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:04 PM

    Tá post eile faighte aige cheana, bhí an cheart glan aige siúl on áit sin.

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    Mute Noirin Kavanagh
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:56 PM

    Chris Kirk, have you considered that it is possible to work in a manner that accords with the values you hold? Or that to do otherwise shows a high level of hypocrisy? Or are such considerations subservient to the requirement to work? If so, all the strikes that lead to things like workplace safety, fair and equal pay etc. were morally reprehensible. Your snide suggestion that this guy is work shy does nothing to strengthen your point either…..

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    Mute Seamus Corcoran
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:15 PM

    Strange how the article doesn’t once mention that the owner is also from the gaeltacht and is a fluent Irish speaker.

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    Mute Críostóir Ó Faoláin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:59 PM

    That would probably be because he is not from a Gaeltacht area and is not a fluent Irish speaker.

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    Mute Seamus Corcoran
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:58 PM

    I would suggest otherwise. Mr o shea is from the west cork gaeltacht parish of aoibh laoire.

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    Mute John O'Shaughnessy
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:41 AM

    Cath Chéim an Fhia country. Go bhFóire Dia orainn!!

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    Mute Poole Hyde
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:09 PM

    The owner has form. Outside of foreign workers or strangers to Cork nobody in the local bar trade would work for him. The pay is crap, the working conditions poor etc… The Kerryman is better well out of the way of that fecker.

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    Mute John Moloney
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:27 PM

    Is the owner not entitled to create the rules and then the employees follow the rules ??

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    Mute Treabhar Mac Oireabaird
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:00 PM

    But the warning was the first time the employee heard of this rule. It wasn’t part of any contractual arrangement. You can’t make these things up as you go long and then threaten someone’s employment due to a breach.

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:01 PM

    Subject to the legal rights of all parties, the requirements of Employment Law, of Health and Safety Regulations, of Fire Safety Regulations, Planning Conditions, Environmental Regulations, etc etc, all being observed.

    God help your naïveté.

    Sorry, forgot all about Taxation Regs.

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    Mute Hismet Himbsel
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:44 PM

    Every Irish school should be a Gaelscoil. Irish has to be completely reintroduced and finally get its spot as First National Language of the Republic. Also for me, as a foreigner, learning Irish is really hard but I do it out of respect for my second home.

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    Mute Little Diddy No
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:35 PM

    That would be a fascist dictatorship that would be resisted by many Irish people. There is NOTHING stopping any Irish person who wants to learn and speak Irish. It is taught as a compulsory subject already (which it should not be at secondary level). You cannot force people to do something or they will end up hating it – as many young people already do.

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    Mute Dallan O'Reilly
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    Sep 9th 2016, 7:41 PM

    As a non Irish speaker I’m horrified at this story. It’s almost harks back to the penal code. This wouldn’t be a Witherspoons pub by any chance?

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    Mute Liam Dunne
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:53 PM

    Employee loses job due to failure to comply with rules of employer…..sorry…..where’s the problem here? Why is this a story? If you don’t like the job….get another one that allows you to speak in whichever tongue you like. These stories with the “poor me” drive me mad, or should I say “Mise bocht”

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    Mute Treabhar Mac Oireabaird
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:01 PM

    And what if the employer changes the rules have way through your employment?

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    Mute Treabhar Mac Oireabaird
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:01 PM

    *half

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    Mute Paddy Beere
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:05 PM

    I have said this so many times I am becoming bored. Irish is not only a dead language, it is worse; it is a dead, pointless language. Latin is a dead language, but there is still a reason to learn it, because so much of our Western historical record was originally written in Latin. Same for Attic Greek. Irish a) has no corpus of literature b) for the last 400 or so years was only spoken by illiterate peasants and c) has absolutely no reason to continue to exist. You can dispute the last point, which is the result of my patent disgust with its very existence, but not the first two. And, yes, people can ramble on about the beauty of bardic poetry or the majesty of the Ulster or Connaught Cycles, but they were never originally written in Irish. They were written in Latin, from Irish oral tradition, and then retranslated into Irish. Name me one important person person in the last 1000 years whose primary language of commerce was Irish, and I will yield the argument. But there isn’t, so I won’t

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 8:15 PM

    Irish has one of the oldest native literatures in western Europe after Greek and Latin. The earliest recorded Irish writing dates from the seventh century in both Latin AND Early Irish, and there is in fact a very large corpus of literature in Old, Middle, Early Modern and Modern Irish.
    The oldest surviving literatures written in Old English dates from about. 450AD, in the earliest stage of the German language only from the second half of the 8th century, in French from the ninth century, and the earliest literature in Spanish is Mediaeval.
    I expect you know, and it’s no exaggeration to say, that Ireland was more or less eviscerated – culturally, socially, demographically, economically, and of course linguistically – over the period you mention. Such are the wages of malevolence. I suspect the famous Irish Inferiority Complex arises in this period; clearly, we don’t seem to have shaken it off fully yet.
    You aren’t the first to be disgusted by the existence of the Irish language, and a lot of other things about Ireland too. Those of us who care for our heritage and are determined to preserve all of it in the teeth of such malice will soldier on, though.

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    Mute Paddy Beere
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    Sep 9th 2016, 10:13 PM

    I appreciate the argument. It’s incorrect, but I appreciate it. I also appreciate the phrase ‘the wages of malevolence,’ English is such a beautiful and expressive language. By the way, I admire the manner in which the British, as you say, ‘eviscerated’ the Irish culture. One should embrace such thoroughness

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:33 AM

    Of course I could have equally well have written my reply in Irish, which as you doubtless are aware is no less beautifully expressive. Did you know for example that the name for English in the Gaelic languages is “Béarla/Beurla/Baarle” – which means literally “argot” or “cant”? Interesting.
    You are utterly and I fear, pathologically, wrong on all counts, of course; including the supposed “thoroughness” of the British administration which, although accompanied by a truly horrifying body count (as much as 25% of the entire population on one occasion), was, from their point of view, incompetent because incomplete.
    No, one has to look to other related peoples for greater thoroughness of the kind you claim to so admire – all of which have also been failures; unsurprisingly, I suspect, because all have been based on unsustainable and ultimately corrosive hatred and injustice.

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    Mute Macchu Pitiú
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:01 PM

    My firm opinion is that an English only policy is a bit narrow minded. People should be allowed speak whatever language they like. I would be just as annoyed if this was about someone who was speaking Polish, Spanish or whatever language they want to speak. Obviously to customers try speak the language they are most comfortable with.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:09 PM

    You wouldn’t last long in Tesco’s then…..

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    Mute Macchu Pitiú
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:01 PM

    explain ?? Just to confirm I am pro speaking any language you want. Tesco to my knowledge allow this ….ive been there and heard workers speak other langages to one another.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:27 PM

    Not on the checkouts you haven’t, Tesco applies rules when dealing with customers that general communication must be in English.

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    Mute John Collins
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    May 11th 2017, 1:24 PM

    @Chris Kirk:
    To be quite honest with Chris I would not worry about Tesco. When you check the prices, especially so called ‘offers’ on the shelves, you often find they charge different prices at the check out. I have not stood in any of their stores for years.

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    Mute Lazlo Saint Pierre
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:24 PM

    Nevermind Cormac, it’s just closed mindedness, you are better off rid, someone else will be happy to take on a man of principal and being a gaeilgeoir is a USP in my opinion. Bring the other lad with you too.

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    Mute Colin Price
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:35 PM

    So this very philanthropic establishment employs people of other nationalities, bully for them. Shame they didn’t have a better grasp of geography. The man from Kerry is in his OWN country and MUST be allowed to speak his own language. Shame on the owners.

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    Mute karl
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:24 PM

    Massive drama queen full stop ! At least there is a job to be filled by someone who needs the money ! ..

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    Mute Poole Hyde
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:51 PM

    You mean the below minimum wage topped up by food on the job whether you want to be paid that way or not….

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    Mute Ger Buckley
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    Sep 10th 2016, 8:07 AM

    Evidence? ?

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    Mute David Moran
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:41 PM

    Sad to see a business owner not encourage a multi-cultural workplace. Overseas, in other European countries they can speak multiple languages to each other, it’s great in the service industry for a customer to be able to communicate in their own language with their waiter/bartender. Sounds like the owner drew a line in the sand and wasn’t backing down.

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    Mute Jarrett moon
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:00 PM

    He was on Joe Duffy. That tells you all you need to know about him. A bollix. He was employed for 8 months. Good luck with that.

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    Mute Keith McDonagh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:41 PM

    If he met someone in the pub who could speak Irish, then by all means they could’ve spoken to each other in Irish for hours. But for the rest of us who can’t speak 2 words of Irish, you speak English. It’s not really a good reason to walk out on your job.

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    Mute Little Diddy No
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:36 PM

    Indeed, I suspect people would not be complaining if it was just a case of his speaking a few words of Irish to his colleague.

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    Mute John Collins
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    May 11th 2017, 1:29 PM

    @Keith McDonagh:
    But was that the kernal of the question here. Was he actually speaking in Irish to people who only understood English.

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    Mute Niall O Neill
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:37 PM

    Many years ago l used to exchange cúpla focail with a Scottish barman in the heart of the Cotswolds. Never a problem (although we did take the piss out of the Sassenachs)

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    Mute Crocodylus Pontifex
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:40 PM

    Worst pub in Cork

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:37 PM

    The original Flying Enterprise sank in a storm off the cost of Cork in January 1952 – without loss of life thankfully. Very dramatic at the time.

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    Mute mrmeade
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:45 PM

    What does it say if you can’t speak irish in your own country. Go to lidl or aldi and their all speaking Polish. Doesn’t effect me in the slightest. Fair play to him for walking out and highlighting this employers behaviour

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    Mute Karen Delaney
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:13 PM

    Wonder would they stop a Romanian or Polish person from speaking their languages I somehow don’t think so

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    Mute John Collins
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    May 11th 2017, 1:31 PM

    @Karen Delaney:
    Yes.He probably be accused of racism in the spot.

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    Mute Eamon Mac Gowan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 5:04 PM

    The Irish constitution sets out that Irish and not English is the first official language of Ireland. English is second.
    I hope he sues them.

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    Mute jamiec
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:41 PM

    Yes he should sue them for walking out on his job…jesus wept

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    Mute Eamon Mac Gowan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 7:17 PM

    @jamiec,
    You’re obviously ignorant of the concept of constructive dismissal.

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    Mute Anna King
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:34 PM

    Sue the douchebags absolutely disgraceful

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    Mute John O'Shaughnessy
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:20 AM

    Chuir Gaeilge a ar ‘douchebags?’

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    Mute John O'Shaughnessy
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:22 AM

    Ba chóir liom a rá ‘Cuir.’

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    Mute An Croí Ait
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    Sep 10th 2016, 2:17 AM
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    Mute Killian O'Leary
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    Sep 9th 2016, 8:12 PM

    The irony of it all is that this pub is on the grounds of Sullys quay national school where Irish wud have been thought for yrs n yrs. If I were to hazard a guess, I would say the ‘all-controlling’ management cudnt handle not knowing what their staff were talking abt.

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    Mute jill coogan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:32 PM

    Flying Enterprise is a great spot in any language . Owner, staff and management are very friendly and courteous . And NO I don’t work there or am related to the O Shea family . I am a loyal customer . Hate these crusaders , hope the cupla focail will be on some benefit to him on the Dole

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    Mute Pádraig Ó Braonáin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 7:29 PM

    It should be renamed ‘The Flying Bottle’….it’s an awful place.

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    Mute Killian O'Leary
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    Sep 9th 2016, 8:34 PM

    Friendly and courteous staff how are ya!!

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    Mute Críostóir Ó Faoláin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:12 PM

    He’s not on the dole, he’s got a new job in a place that does not try to tell him not to speak Irish.

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 11th 2016, 2:29 PM

    The Flying Enterprise = An Fhiontair Eitilte.
    Or, “Eitleogach” if you like, which conveys a sense of volatility, airiness even.
    Or, “An Fhiontair ar eitilt” which literally means “The Enterprise (which is) in the act of flying”,

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    Mute Roger Turner
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    Sep 9th 2016, 7:20 PM

    You would think the bar was owned by the Brits the way they carried on

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    Mute Desmodromic
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:44 PM

    Feic DPM, you’ve put Richie Kavanagh’s song on a loop in my head.

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    Mute t
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:26 PM

    Why won’t people wake up to the fact that greedy business owners despise Western European culture. All they want to employ is cheap non indigenous employees that are subservient and that don’t mind being treated like a feudal slave.
    I hope the customers of this pub vote with those feet.

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    Mute Neal not Neil
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:26 PM

    Identity is far more important than being able to understand what you’re saying. We should have a different language for each county.

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    Mute William Ruane
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:07 PM

    This pub is quite near where I live, I know the owner I’ve worked for him, he’s a decent man, I don’t know the employee in question.
    If the employee O’Bruic was conversing in Irish with Irish speaking fellow employees and customers known to enjoy ‘a cupla focal’ then he has a genuine grievance, if however he was generally engaging with all his customers ‘as gaeilge’ that is another matter. I grew up under shadow of intimidating violence and abuse throughout my primary and secondary education to ‘love’ Irish, and was pummelled many a time for not ‘getting it’. I resent being spoken to ‘as gaeilge’ in a non gaeltacht region, I resent having ‘gaeilge’ pushed on me.
    It seems to me that despite the many decades that have passed since I finished school there is still this cloying insistence on us to ‘caint as gaeilge’.
    ‘Gaeilge’ was spoiled for me by the bullies that taught it and devised the curriculum and 30 years later it seems the same types are still pushing it in the same way, why are Irish children finding French and German easier to learn, love and excel in than Irish.
    I’d love to love Irish but I don’t.

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    Mute Críostóir Ó Faoláin
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:15 PM

    The only bully insisting on a language being spoken was the owner trying to force a native Irish speaking employee to speak English at all times, yet somehow it is English speakers that are the victems. The mind boggles.

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    Mute Jim Dunne
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    Sep 9th 2016, 7:36 PM

    People should boycott that pub! This anti Irish bias has no place in Ireland ! When people died for freedom in 1916 it also included freedom to speak our language! The owner has got to be brain dead !

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 11th 2016, 2:31 PM

    I think they’ve had as much publicity from this deplorable incident as they might expect to be entitled to.

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    Mute Shannon Cassidy
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    Sep 9th 2016, 6:20 PM

    I work in a restaurant and its communication in english only to all staff, you could be talking about other staff roght in front of them in another language. All leads to very uncomfortable situations. They were totally right.

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    Mute Daisy Chainsaw
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    Sep 9th 2016, 4:09 PM

    Sure, the dark hair and the beard on him and he speaking gobbledygook… He could be mistaken for one of them Isis fellahs. People have been thrown off planes for less! . . /sarcasm

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    Mute Patrick James Walsh
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:15 PM

    `Bìonn dhà insint ar scèal agus dhà leagan dèag ar amhran.`. whatever the merits of this particular case it doesn`t excuse the elitist`s who try own the language and try to create `gaeltacht reservations`excluding non speakers etc , they are usually from a cultural, academic and artistic background.

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    Mute Fiach Mac Aodha
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:16 PM

    Súileann fear isteach i dteach tabhairne…. and orders a pint?

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    Mute Niall O Neill
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:41 PM

    Maybe those who were uncomfortable thought he was speaking Arabic. So here’s a quiz for you Irish speakers: what phrase in Irish most sounds like Allahu Akbar, or even Inshallah?

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    Mute Tony Hartigan
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:51 PM

    What an opportunity missed

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    Mute Liam Murray
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:05 PM

    Cead cainte, cead cainte.

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    Mute gus sheridan
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    Sep 10th 2016, 1:04 AM

    Hardly anybody understands or bothers to speak it, it will never be revived.

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    Mute Johnnie Sexton
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    Sep 10th 2016, 12:15 AM

    Fair play to cormac. Árd fhear

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    Mute ️
    Favourite ️
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:42 PM

    Now thats a bit irish…………

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    Mute Charles Williams
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    Sep 9th 2016, 11:07 PM

    Und kann man auf Deutsch sprechen, wenn im die Irishe pub hat besucht.( can you speak German when you visit this Irish pub.)

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    Mute Tuskar Rock
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    Sep 11th 2016, 2:35 PM

    Mein Freund, es gibt Polen die dort arbeiten. Umsicht ratsam ist.

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    Mute Kev Creed
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    Sep 10th 2016, 7:55 AM

    Peig Sayers turned me right off it..and getting the duster thrown off the back of my head by teacher did not help either…

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    Mute Art O'Malley
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    Sep 13th 2016, 1:28 AM

    I would invite the management of the Flying Enterprise to take a flying f*ck on a galloping goose.

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    Mute Michael Kerr
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    Sep 9th 2016, 2:20 PM

    “being”

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    Mute Stephen Bender
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    Sep 9th 2016, 3:36 PM

    Unacceptable!! Irish is our native language and should be celebrated!!

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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    Sep 9th 2016, 1:44 PM

    A person can’t speak our national language in his place of work? Mad. The Flying Enterprise hasn’t a leg to stand on. Personally I am not going back into that pub until I hear them apologising.

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