'CUSTOMS POST BOMBED/COMRADES/CRISIS....' 'IMPERIAL CUSTOMS BOMBED'   From 'The United Irishman' newspaper,  January 1958 .On December 6 , 1957 , the Imperial Customs Post at Belleek , County Fermanagh, was demolished by Irish freedom fighters
'IMPERIAL CUSTOMS BOMBED'   From 'The United Irishman' newspaper,  January 1958 .On December 6 , 1957 , the Imperial Customs Post at Belleek , County Fermanagh, was demolished by Irish freedom fighters   and the occupants removed to safety .  An 
  RUC-inspired statement  that two young girls were removed from the danger area by the warning shouts of the Customs officials is untrue . The girls were in no danger at any time and were out of the danger-zone completely when the blast took place .
 The Havies Bridge  ,  about seven miles from Enniskillen on the Derrylin side , was also destroyed on December 6 , 1957 . [END of  'Imperial Customs Bombed'](Next : 'Are These Charges True?' - from the same source) SOUNDING OFF-COMRADES AND CALCULATORS.......  From 'Gralton' magazine, August/September 1983. By Gene Kerrigan.
SOUNDING OFF-COMRADES AND CALCULATORS.......  From 'Gralton' magazine, August/September 1983. By Gene Kerrigan. All of the marking of registers and forms that goes on at polling stations and count centres has little to do with the current election - it is being done for the 
 next  election and the one after that .  It is possible for parties to get a fairly accurate picture of who voted for them , who voted against them , whose vote 'swings' , where these people live and what has to be done to keep or win their vote next time .
That is : a  "fairly accurate" picture - in some constituencies the geniuses are so good that they get a 
  precise  picture , house by house . A poll a few years ago showed that about half of the electorate make their choice on the basis of constituency service 
  (ie 'clientelism') - things such as policy , 
the 'talent' on offer (...with apologises to the creature pictured!)  or the extent of 
crookedness of the party leader are subordinate . 
The parties have for each constituency a precise profile of their strengths and weaknesses , of favours owed , of problems stroked and promises made . They have the resources of 
  Leinster House ,   which is routinely used as part of the election machine . The extent to which the major parties are able to 
  manipulate the electorate   cannot be overestimated , but it's no good moaning about this - it is a fact of political life everywhere
....... (MORE LATER). CRISIS - WHICH CRISIS.......?This election is not about the 'economy' . It's about the survival of sectional interests , clearly divided in a broader , simpler way than for many a long day . This election is not about the survival of the country (sic) : it's about choosing who will bear the cost of that survival.From 'IN DUBLIN' magazine, 'Election Special' , 1987. By David McKenna.  But...
CRISIS - WHICH CRISIS.......?This election is not about the 'economy' . It's about the survival of sectional interests , clearly divided in a broader , simpler way than for many a long day . This election is not about the survival of the country (sic) : it's about choosing who will bear the cost of that survival.From 'IN DUBLIN' magazine, 'Election Special' , 1987. By David McKenna.  But...  the entrepreneur is a shy person who will only emerge to multiply if what the business parties refer to as  'the economic climate' is encouraging : in other words if it doesn't cost the entrepreneur a great deal to borrow the money he or she needs , and if there's a good chance of making a lot of money . In short - low interest rates and low taxes . 
The government borrows approximately sixty per cent of its requirements at home , so if public spending was cut that money would , in theory , be available for the entrepreneurs . 
 Alas ,  the business of interest rates is not something over which the government can exercise much control . Still it 
  can  lower taxes , which will make the entrepreneur happy , making sure that he or she gets a fair reward for 'courage in the marketplace' .  It would also mean that ordinary taxpayers will have more money to spend on the goods produced by these entrepreneurs and their 'grateful workers' - 
 alas ,   in these days of 'free trade' , it cannot be guaranteed that the taxpayers will spend their money on home-produced goods .
So what about producing goods to sell abroad ?  Well , for some reason your average Irish entrepreneur doesn't seem to be terribly good at this . Even if he or she is 'cute' , the tendency will be to set up or acquire enterprises abroad rather than developing the buiness at home - like 
  Michael Smurfit,   for example
.......(MORE LATER).