 PILLARS OF SOCIETY : MICHAEL O' LEARY .......  From 'Phoenix' magazine , April 1986 . Michael O' Leary's credibility problem
PILLARS OF SOCIETY : MICHAEL O' LEARY .......  From 'Phoenix' magazine , April 1986 . Michael O' Leary's credibility problem  would , of course linger on , even in 
  the PD's.    But what are his options?  Recent opinion polls have confirmed the message of last year's local elections - that there is no longer a 
  Fine Gael seat in Dublin South West -   and he has long since worn out the guarded welcome he received from the local 
  Fine Gael Party   organisation .
Unless he gambles on another double departure , the seventh and final age of 
  Michael O' Leary  could well be , as one colleague in the bar library put it -  
  "...second childishness and mere oblivion.."   :  sans  teeth , 
  sans  balls , and , worst of all , 
  sans  a seat in 
  Leinster House ! [END of  ' PILLARS OF SOCIETY : MICHAEL O' LEARY'] (Next- 'The Seeds Of A Police State' : from 1983) (Martin McGuinness , left , with Henry Kissinger , as usual , on the right ...)  DISARMING MARTIN ....... All (P)Sinn Fein leaders have a series of mantras and mini-speeches which they seek to get into every interview , regardless of the question . The task of the journalist is to avoid setting off these reflex responses : the problem with Martin McGuinness is that he does it so pleasantly that it seems impolite to interrupt him . From 'MAGILL' magazine , March 1999 . By John Waters .Martin McGuinness
(Martin McGuinness , left , with Henry Kissinger , as usual , on the right ...)  DISARMING MARTIN ....... All (P)Sinn Fein leaders have a series of mantras and mini-speeches which they seek to get into every interview , regardless of the question . The task of the journalist is to avoid setting off these reflex responses : the problem with Martin McGuinness is that he does it so pleasantly that it seems impolite to interrupt him . From 'MAGILL' magazine , March 1999 . By John Waters .Martin McGuinness   stated re 
  Bertie Ahern's    interview in a British newspaper 
 -  " Some people put his Sunday Times interview down to the fact that a vote on the determination was being taken and David Trimble was in difficulty and the feeling was that some of his people were going to jump ship . And some people believe that it was all part of Bertie's way of doing things .  It certainly confused a lot of people . But I have spoken to the Taoiseach* , and he has told me - and I have no reason to disbelieve him - that he is rock solid behind the Good Friday Agreement and is not interested in rewriting it or renegotiating it ." (* '1169...' Comment :  Wow!  Martin can get an audience with  'the Taoiseach' !  One knows one has 'arrived' when that happens...)All of which is perfectly sweet and reasonable .  But later in the interview , in response to a different question , when 
 McGuinness   poses questions about what he perceives as the renewed opposition to 
  (P) Sinn Fein   from various quarters in 
  Dublin ,   there is no sense that he is excluding from his criticisms the present leadership of 
 Fianna Fail .  Place that beside the fact that he never mentions 
  the former Fianna Fail leader , Albert Reynolds ,    without pressing his 
  'most-courageous-Taoiseach-since-the-foundation-of-the-State'  button , and you have at least an interesting question about the subtext to present relationships within the 'pan-nationalist alliance' . 
('1169...' Comment : such an  'alliance' was always on offer to Republicans - what was asked in return was that they abandon Republicanism and place their faith in constitutionalism . de Valera did so , as did MacGiolla and Adams . But not all can be bought. )....... (MORE LATER). GUNS TO BREAD AND BUTTER .EDDIE ROONEY looks at the transformation of the Official Republican movement from a revolutionary organisation run by its military wing to a social democratic electoral party . From  'Fortnight'  magazine , 1983 .
GUNS TO BREAD AND BUTTER .EDDIE ROONEY looks at the transformation of the Official Republican movement from a revolutionary organisation run by its military wing to a social democratic electoral party . From  'Fortnight'  magazine , 1983 .In the heart of 
  Belfast's Lower Falls , the Cyprus Street club   is one of the few remaining buildings in a redevelopment wasteland : it used to be 
  the Headquarters of the Official IRA's Northern Command   and of its 
  political wing , the 'Republican Clubs'.    It now houses 
  the Lower Falls branch of the Workers Party -   the club is one of the last relics of 
  the Official Republican Movement ,   which has 'evolved' , through intermediate name changes , into 
  'The Workers Party' .   On the wall beside the door to the main hall there is a mural portraying 
  an armed man in silhouette flanked by the words   ' Army Of The People'   . On the far wall , an image of 
  James Connolly   overlooks a quote 
 :   '  The cause of Ireland is the cause of Labour ; the cause of Labour is the cause of Ireland'.   Such 
  nationalist and militarist sentiments   are a long way from the public image currently being projected by 
  the leaders of The Workers Party . Yet it is from nationalist working-class areas such as 
  the Lower Falls   that 
  'The Workers Party'   draws most of its membership - many have been associated with  
  the 'Officials'   for more than a decade , and many have seen 
  the inside of prisons as a result of their political activities .   These members are truly the party faithful , remaining loyal* through a period which has seen significant changes in the character of their movement's aims and strategy  
( '1169...'  Comment - * In other words , they followed  [ "remained loyal "] to the man , not the Cause) .......(MORE LATER).