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Nick Leeson On Mick Wallace and his 'false economy'

The Wexford TD is symptomatic of the move from delayed gratification to credit consumerism which we are still struggling to shake off, writes Nick Leeson.

EURO 2012 HAS provided a useful distraction over the last couple of weeks. As the Irish football fans receive awards for being the best fans in Poland, the largest in number, the most approachable and certainly those most likely to have a laugh, they are all now going to have to confront the elephant in the campsite; life at home.

The Euros have thrown up some strange metaphors. From the beginning of the competition I was struck by the fact that all of the financially beleaguered European nations were present – Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and of course Ireland. Rather a strange coincidence considering the mess that each nation finds themselves in, further proof that the world of football exists on a different plane to the majority of us.

The Irish team themselves lacked direction, were pushed around and ultimately were unable to change in the time required to prosper; not dissimilar to the current government. Now the country that has everything, Germany (political clout, finance etc) has played the country Greece, that comparatively has nothing.

So whilst the Wexford TD Mick Wallace may have come home to more questions than most, the enormity of the stark contrast between life in Poland and the reality of life back home in Ireland will start to hit home for pretty much everybody. Not much has changed since they left for the campsites and hotels of Poland. One referendum has been and gone but now politicians are talking of a further one. There is much talk of amendments to the bailout package but it is nothing more than talk. Receivers continue to be appointed to companies that have either given up or can longer continue the fight, goods are being seized and jobs lost.

It strikes me that we all deal with tough times and adversity very differently. More specifically we all deal with our financial indebtedness very differently. I grew up in very different times to those that we have experienced over the last couple of decades. I lived on a council estate in a very working-class suburb of Watford. There was never much money around but at the same time I cannot really remember going without anything.

“The idea that you save and delay the purchase is one that has long passed us by”

Very possibly my expectations were very different – I certainly wasn’t one of the first kids to have the latest trainers or computer game but it usually wasn’t too long after that we managed to catch up. But we certainly weren’t able to click our fingers and get the latest gadget on credit: delayed gratification was the norm. The idea that you save and delay the purchase until such time as you have saved sufficient money is one that has long passed us by.

One of my earliest memories is hiding behind the kitchen door as the ‘telly man’ knocked on the front of the house. We huddled in the corner, had to keep quiet and wait until he had gone. My mum had obviously been looking up and down the street waiting for his arrival. As far as my younger siblings were concerned we were playing an impromptu game of hide-and-seek.

It sounds strange in this day and age but we didn’t own a television, it was rented, operated on a meter and there was a slot in the back to feed fifty pence pieces into. We had a key to open the back of the television, retrieve the coins and either feed them back in or buy food. The same coins would be used two or three times before the week was out. I don’t know how it happened but we always managed to see the week out.

“Some people have become very blasé with how they deal with debt”

So the false economy of the Wexford TD is nothing new. Parking illegally at the airport, swanning off to the Euros to watch a football match does however show an audacity and blatant disregard for your responsibilities that is difficult to rival. There is no association with reality.

The move from delayed gratification to credit consumerism over the last twenty five years has obviously changed the way that we deal with debt and clearly not for the better. Some people have become very blasé about their financial affairs. I hear some very worrying anecdotes of how people are choosing to deal with their obligations.

I’m told that it is still virtually impossible to book certain restaurants at short notice in Dublin. Mortgages are not being paid but restaurants are being booked. The game, as it is called by a career professional in Dublin, is to see how long you can go without paying your mortgage. When you receive a couple of threatening letters from the bank, make a payment or two to get them off your back for a while and then revert back to fine dining. With negative equity more the norm than the exception, a selection of people are accepting that they will likely lose their house but they will see how long they can stay in the family home rent-free and continue with the trappings of their former life, it seems.

Yet there are many people in this country who, like my mother years ago, cannot make the money stretch as far as it is needed. There is a constant struggle and battle each week between buying food, paying the bills and either making a mortgage payment or paying the rent. The sums don’t add up and it means there are few luxuries. It is, however, dealing with reality – a polar opposite to Mick Wallace and his ilk.

Read previous columns by Nick Leeson>

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    Mute Etheric Projection
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:05 AM

    I don’t and I’m Irish. Don’t remember being asked my opinion… (A system that gives suspended sentences to criminals but puts honest folk in prison for standing up for the truth)

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    Mute Randle P McMurphy
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:43 AM

    A closeted, cliquey, deluded group of overpaid, borderline-honest, chancers. Recent criminal case I have knowledge of had a barrister ‘afraid’ to introduce a line of questioning for fear he’d ‘annoy’ the judge, and also didn’t want to ‘bushwhack’ his opposite no. in prosecution as “he and his wife were at my wedding”!! Funnily enough, the statement of professional fees I believe had no such hesitancy in boasting of their adroitness though!!

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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:55 AM

    Why do people here respect and trust the legal system here?

    The legal system is as bent as the political landscape. They are co-joined twins.

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    Mute Brandon Steers
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:58 AM

    Well holy god seanie, you’re certainly changing your tune about the whole political landscape over the last few weeks. Have you had a political awakening?

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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 21st 2014, 12:06 PM

    I suppose when you start to reject one central aspect of your political discourse that everything else that flows from that will be questioned as well.

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    Mute bandido
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:19 AM

    What f’ing planet was this report carried out on?
    Not a day goes by in this country where the general population aren’t appalled by weak sentences handed down to repeat offenders.

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    Mute thetruth
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:14 AM

    When a rapist walks free with a fine and a suspended sentence…how can you trust them

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    Mute Dara O'Brien
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:45 PM

    The 20 Ched Evans fans just disagreed with you ;)

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    Mute Dawes30
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    Dec 2nd 2014, 9:35 PM

    Which case are you taking about where someone convicted of rape was fined, given a suspended sentence and walked away? And did you actually attend court for any of this? Or are you just making assumptions based on reading tabloids.

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    Mute Harry Price
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    Jan 13th 2015, 10:30 PM

    The corruption within is covertly covered up behind closed doors in secret and held to be just by judges that hold to be independent in their duty wrong or right .,. how more corrupt can it be then this …………………………………………………

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    Mute Tom Red
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:12 AM

    Like Irish judges???…
    Do Irish judges realise they can impose double digit year sentences on violent criminals???

    230
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    Mute Martin Byrne
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:11 AM

    Another deluded ivory tower dweller. Talking complete and utter gibberish about us trusting the judicial system.

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    Mute Derek Durkin
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:11 AM

    All the top judges are politically appointed so they’re just an extension of the government and to take them on in the courts costs an arm and a leg….Justice system has been bought and paid for a long time ago……it’s a big fat NO from me.

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    Mute jason bourne
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:32 AM

    Exactly Derek. To be a judge you have to be politically connected. The way they are appointed is ridiculous. Check out the JAAB.

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    Mute The Throwaway
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:46 AM

    ALL judges are political signed off on. Not just the higher ones. All of them. Same for Superintendents and above in AGS, are all politically signed off on (an argument can be made that politics also affects sgt and inspector ranks as well, but that’s another day).

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    Mute Tammylee Murphy
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:19 AM

    Old boys club who live under a big rock

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    Mute Jack Cass
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:05 AM

    I do not trust you.

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    Mute Brandon Steers
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:08 AM

    This is another prime example of somebody with a heightened sense of importance living on a completely different planet than the rest of us.

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    Mute Scarr
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:18 AM

    I wouldn’t consider the judiciary corrupt, out of touch is another matter, though.

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    Mute Liz Potts
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:24 AM

    Or perhaps just having an opinion that differs from yours- oh no!

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    Mute Jonathan Bambury
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    Nov 21st 2014, 2:52 PM

    The only citizens who have any faith in the irish judiciary are ones that ain’t been in court in over a decade or the deluded ones that still have blind faith in the rest of our joke of a system

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    Mute john kinsella
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    Nov 21st 2014, 6:53 PM

    Tatler did that report just after they gave Joan her women of the year award.

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    Mute E
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    Nov 21st 2014, 10:07 PM

    I don’t trust them.

    3
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    Mute E
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    Nov 21st 2014, 10:08 PM

    Any chance of an auld journal poll to see if this “trust” reflects in journal readers?

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    Mute Darren Treacy
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:12 AM

    I don’t. Judges are corrupt dirtbirds.

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    Mute Mark Malone
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:24 AM

    I’ll start trusting them when they lock up the charlatans in the DAIL.

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    Mute Hevin Bear Kiggins
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:20 AM

    Having spent 2 years in court over 3 grams of cannabis which cost the state 10,000. No I am not very confidence in that system, although I legislation change would fix that.

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    Mute George Orwell
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:41 AM

    So the revolving door prison system, laughable police force, and criminal tourists aren’t of concern? Only in Ireland.

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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Nov 21st 2014, 12:00 PM

    This is a Eu body report.

    By EU standards it is upstanding, fair and trustworthy.

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    Mute Stephen Doyle
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:29 AM

    Lol more comedy

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    Mute Angel Gleeson
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:32 AM

    Say what? I trust no one not even my shadow that’s a sneaky little thing following you around all day. No faith in justice, courts, police, TD’s, not even in the president.

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    Mute Brendan Julian
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:52 AM

    I guess thats a normal comment coming from a non national

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    Mute Martin Hayes
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    Nov 21st 2014, 12:08 PM

    Where did these guys get their information, from the Beano?
    Low levels of political corruption, competence and fairness in the legal system? I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.

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    Mute James Bergin
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:36 AM

    Seriousy deluded finding. I wouldnt be of their opinion what so ever. Mind boggling

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    Mute Cupid Stunt
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:46 AM

    How come they’ve sided with the govt on water charges and not looked at the legality of forcing contracts on people. It’s insane really.

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    Mute dearg doom
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:40 AM

    Are they f*cking joking?

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    Mute Johnny Downes
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    Nov 21st 2014, 12:02 PM

    ” Seem to trust” ? What does that mean or imply? Judges seem to be overpaid? Are they? They seem to make inconsistent , and contradictory judgments. . They seem to be independent, but as political appointees are they. ? I wonder what Louise O’ Keeffe thinks about them.?

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    Mute Lisa McMahon Keenan
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    Nov 21st 2014, 12:38 PM

    Another delusional report. There really wacking them out these days.

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    Mute dearg doom
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    Nov 21st 2014, 11:45 AM

    It’s actually hard to make out what the report says to be honest.

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    Mute Gaius Gracchus
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    Nov 21st 2014, 12:57 PM

    This case of an ex-judge is all you need to know about our ‘judges’ http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Curtin

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    Mute Snorre Sturleson
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    Nov 21st 2014, 3:10 PM

    The judiciary are owned by the government, all appointed by politicians and know their masters. Were the government to lift the embargo on banks calling in judicial debts, there would be many a defrocked judge and SC. So manners and doing masters bidding is a given. No garlic on my patch, white collar to the back bone old boy!

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    Mute skoda
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    Nov 21st 2014, 5:23 PM

    Justice Denham I’m sure that you don’t have the right to speak for the majority of Irish people. Its not fare that just because you are a judge in the courts that you think people are treated fairly. I had a case in the High Court and I could never say that there was any fairness there. If anything it was because of corruption that I lost my case.

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    Mute Spiderman
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    Nov 21st 2014, 1:54 PM

    Even I have to question those findings.

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    Mute Vic
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    Nov 22nd 2014, 2:44 AM

    Really? I don’t agree. They’re all part of the elite 1%. With money, comes greed and power, with power comes back handers.

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    Mute Michael Reilly
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    Nov 21st 2014, 6:50 PM

    “It is also noted that the reduction of public salaries due to the financial crisis may have compromised the constitutional safeguarding of judges independent and professional standards”.
    I was taking the article seriously until I read the last paragraph. Who was surveyed – the Judges and barristers?

    4
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    Mute Kevin Beakey
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    Nov 21st 2014, 6:16 PM

    Is it me or is Susan deneham a doppelganger of Tony sopranos mother

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    Mute gus sheridan
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    Apr 19th 2016, 9:32 PM

    Politically appointed judges hardly ever actually jailing criminals, what planet are these muppets on? Judges are a joke in Ireland and not trusted.

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