Close your eyes and picture Ireland and you’ll probably picture lush green fields, charming villages and thatched cottages. Now open your eyes and accept the reality.
Nearly one in five people living in Ireland I wasn’t born thereIn Galway, a stone’s throw from where I grew up, Recently exceeded Michael and Martin are the most common names given to boys. Yes, it’s Muhammad, a name synonymous with Islamic tradition. This isn’t the Ireland you know or thought you knew. It’s radical conversion.
Cases like Mohamed Mohamed Mohamed, a migrant who destroyed his passport, came to Ireland after being refused asylum in several EU countries and sexually assaulted a woman in a Dublin toilet, only confirm the entirely legitimate concerns people have about mass immigration to Europe, where 70% are male.
Ireland is rapidly descending into hell and our elected leaders are complicit in that degradation.
Clash of civilizations
What is happening in Ireland is a harsh reminder of the impact of uncontrolled immigration and incompetent leadership. A once united and orderly country is now struggling with strained services, dwindling resources and rising tensions.
This is not just a clash of values. It is a clash of civilizations. It is not just a question of how many people are coming, but what kind of people are coming.
Immigration, if properly managed, can strengthen a nation. More doctors, dentists and engineers are welcome. But Ireland is plagued by a lack of slackers and slackers on unemployment benefits. RapistCommunities were devastated and Irish women It has been violatedcultural traditions are being eroded.
Record of Collapse
The Ireland of today is not the Ireland of 20 years ago, and to understand why, it helps to turn to someone who has studied the issue closely: Ciaran O’Regan, an essayist who knows decline well.
Over the past few years, O’Regan, along with my family and childhood friends back home, have kept me informed of the turmoil plaguing the country. But unlike my family and close friends, O’Regan has chosen Amazing insight and eloquenceO’Regan, who is as Irish as he is Guinness-drinking, cares passionately about the direction the country is heading.
He told Align magazine pointedly: “On paper, Ireland is one of the richest countries in the EU, and when you talk to the well-educated, highly paid bourgeoisie living sheltered lives in leafy suburbs, things may be pretty good – especially if their media consumption is solely on the establishment side.”
On the other hand, O’Regan says:
If you ask those who were forced into mass migration, the situation is not much better. Mohammed Mohammed MohammedThe passport-busting migrant, who was denied asylum in several EU countries and came to Ireland before sexually assaulting a woman in a Dublin toilet, has warned that mass migration to Europe is Male: 70%.
Unholy Alliance
O’Regan said, Lifestyle Left and Not nationalized The globalist right-wing Catholic author from Cork, who would rather talk Tolkien and Nietzsche than discuss the decline of this once-great country, argues that this unholy alliance is at the root of the country’s downfall.
O’Regan suggests that the globalist right wants to flood the labor market with cheap foreign labor in order to weaken the domestic working class and make life easier for protected elites and big capital, a strategy born not out of any consideration for the nation, but out of a desire to maximise profits and maintain the status quo.
But this “all-out assault on the national interest” needs a moral pretense, and that’s where the lifestyle left comes in. These ultra-moralists are less interested in traditional class politics and more focused on promoting what he calls “gay racial communism,” an extreme ideology that claims “all white people are racist” and “trans women are women,” and dismisses dissenting voices as far-right extremism.
The close relationship between transnational capital and virtue signaling even has a nickname: virtue signaling. “Globohomo” It’s a conflation of the words “global” (or “globalist”) and “gay.” And if there is any truth in this starting point, O’Regan provocatively suggests, reckless immigration policies may not just be about economic exploitation. Rather, they may be a deliberate strategy to import a very particular type of voting population, one that helps the globo-homo regime suppress local political dissent.
Waiting for rock bottom
When it comes to Ireland’s response to the crisis, O’Regan vacillates between cautious hope and fear that this hope may be merely delusional.
O’Regan initially saw the coalition’s defeat in the March 2024 referendum as a hopeful sign that Ireland might join the “common-sense populist revolt” of its European neighbours. The crushing defeat, which he dismissed as regime nonsense, seemed to signal that Irish voters were waking up to the harsh reality around them.
The referendum itself, in line with the aforementioned “Globohomo” agenda, sought to expand the definition of family to include “non-traditional” relationships outside of marriage, a move that could also be seen as a concerted effort to dismantle traditional social structures.
But O’Regan’s optimism has since faded. He worries that Ireland has not yet gone far enough in depravity to shake the necessary numbers of voters, and especially potential counter-elites, from their “sedated apathy.” He likens the situation to that of an addict who must hit rock bottom before they can make life-changing changes.
A stark example of this political lethargy is the June re-election of Abul Kalam Azad Talukder, who was Limerick’s Muslim Fianna Fáil MP last November. He openly called out anti-immigrant rioters in Dublin. “Shot in the head”
Condemning the “far right”
O’Regan likens France to the “jihad capital of Europe.” In France, there have been nearly 100 Islamist attacks, leaving 350 people dead, yet Marine Le Pen’s party, an outspoken critic of Islamism, won just 38% of the vote in the recent election. Such events suggest that despite the escalating violence, a significant portion of the electorate remains apathetic or unwilling to support meaningful change.
This indifference is due to the Irish establishment Redirecting public concerns The suspected stabbing of an Irish Catholic army chaplain by a Muslim has led to a return to the elusive specter of the “far right” – a term so vague that even the Justice Minister, Helen McEntee, herself acknowledges. There is no clear definition.
Given this bleak outlook, O’Regan advocates a broader approach that includes meaningful community action aimed at enriching and strengthening the social fabric of Irish life.
As Ireland falls apart, O’Regan’s message is clear: the struggle is far from over, and the people of this island must look beyond conventional politics to find the strength to endure, overcome and, if possible, save what’s left.
