enough of the sh1te

3.8K posts

enough of the sh1te

enough of the sh1te

@prawnsface

Ireland Katılım Eylül 2012
798 Takip Edilen120 Takipçiler
enough of the sh1te retweetledi
Efrat Fenigson
Efrat Fenigson@efenigson·
🧵 Ireland: EU's First Testing Ground for Digital ID & Wallet 1/9 🇮🇪 Ireland just launched a pilot for its Government Digital Wallet: a state-run app to store ID, birth certificate, driving license, and more. They're calling it "optional." For now. Here's why you should pay close attention 👇 (Please share!) gov.ie/en/department-…
Efrat Fenigson tweet media
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Michael Patrón
Michael Patrón@michaelpatron0·
@Teooooos I get that he doesn't install heaters or refinish pools but handling the filter didn't seem crazy. Ppl act like I asked him to paint my house.
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Michael Patrón
Michael Patrón@michaelpatron0·
My house is kinda small but I hate doing stuff so I pay a pool guy and lawn guy. My pool guy just does chemicals. He texts me the other day and says I need a new filter and vacuum. I told him I'm busy and to just tell me what he wants to handle it. He texted me back...
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conspiracybot
conspiracybot@conspiracyb0t·
The Digital Prison
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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@conspiracyb0t Horse shite, do light beams also shut down missile silos with nuclear warheads? Giggling while saying “human experimentation” has bill gates autistic vibes.
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conspiracybot
conspiracybot@conspiracyb0t·
Most of you aren't ready for Project Blue Beam
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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@davidicke Dude you’ve been harping on about reptilians with no evidence for 50yrs. In this world anything is possible so I’m not gonna say you’re wrong either but if evidence is what you need then it’s a two way street.
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David Icke
David Icke@davidicke·
Why do people believe all this in alleged biblical detail on the back of so little evidence and so much that points the other way? It's called 'faith' which means acceptance despite the lack of evidence. That's fine but the contradictory texts on which the story is told were written long after the 'event' by who knows who in who knows what circumstances? What I don't get is why a 'loving God' would insist that his 'only begotten son' had to suffer horrendously on a Roman cross before he would 'forgive the sins' of humanity. It doesn't seem to have made any difference to how the world has unfolded and warmonger psychopath Donald Trump is supposed to have been 'sent by God' and 'saved by God' in Butler according to the more extreme Christian Trumpers. The events of Easter (mirrored in pre-Christian pagan beliefs) are biblically claimed to have happened in the ancient Middle East. If only belief in Jesus gets you into heaven what chance have all the other regions of the world had when they could never have heard of Jesus? People should believe what they choose and good luck to them, but it makes no sense to me.
Russell Brand@rustyrockets

The King of England won’t say “Happy Easter”? Here’s why.

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enough of the sh1te
enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@Jansant She is off her head… if she can’t see that the best way to deal with a “drug problem” is stopping it at source, then I don’t know what else she’s happy to spew.
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jansant
jansant@Jansant·
This Sky Australia interview didn't go to plan
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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@thewriterme I don’t own or have never owned a bible, I want to get one. Any recommendations for a novice? I believe there are variations of the translation.
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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@FinanceLancelot If Iran hates the US so much (death to America) etc. why wouldnt they do a deal with Europe after they (Europe) refused to get involved with the war and refuse trump, the use of bases. Wouldn’t it be smart of Iran to cosy up to Europe while trump is chastising them.
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Financelot
Financelot@FinanceLancelot·
Lockdowns, CBDC and rationing are coming. Are you ready? "There are no further shipments 'of kerosene' arriving in the UK" "Is Europe going to go first and collapse? Is Southeast Asia going to go first and collapse? The global economy, it is a certainty"
Financelot@FinanceLancelot

People are starting to realize how large of a crisis this oil, fertilizer & helium shock is to the global economy It's basically 2020 lockdowns, 2008 credit bubble, 2001 tech bubble, 1970s oil shock all wrapped into one. The only comparable period is the great depression of 1929

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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@paddymacc1 I know how she’ll do it… “Citizens of Eyeland, remember to not buy EASTER eggs for Muslims as this may cause offence”.
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Paddy McKenna
Paddy McKenna@paddymacc1·
Can't wait to hear Catherine Connolly's Easter address to the nation. How will she get around using the word Easter 😉
Paddy McKenna tweet media
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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@MickOKeeffe @gerheffernan23 I’d imagine that when people get short of fuel..food etc the first port of call would be the relevant politicians oil tank or press. People would be more inclined to listen if they acted in favour of the public by reducing taxes until there’s a proper shortage.
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MichaeloKeeffe
MichaeloKeeffe@Mick_O_Keeffe·
Minister of State Sean Canney: "Maybe you could cycle to work, maybe you could walk." The Irish government is telling people what to do and how to behave, this is beginning to feel like covid all over again.
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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@front_ukrainian This country needs to be shut down and brought to its knees until we get a fair and balanced system that supports its people and not fakugees and politicians bank accounts.
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🪖MilitaryNewsUA🇺🇦
🪖MilitaryNewsUA🇺🇦@front_ukrainian·
❗️Ireland has announced a new €40 million aid package for Ukraine, — Irish Foreign Minister Helen McEntee “This means that the total support for the humanitarian sector will now amount to €65 million,” she noted. According to her, Ireland will continue to fund important projects, particularly in the field of medicine, and will also support Ukrainian refugees — currently, about 120,000 Ukrainians are in the country.
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Kachi
Kachi@Kamunachi·
Ladies, How deep are your Vag!nas Let's join Dr Janet and find out.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Study shows COVID vaccines decreased heart attacks and strokes. A sweeping analysis of nearly 46 million adult health records has delivered a clear verdict: COVID-19 vaccination sharply lowers the risk of heart attacks and strokes, directly refuting persistent claims to the contrary. Published in Nature Communications, the study followed people across England from December 2020 through January 2022. It documented a 10% drop in serious arterial blood clots (including heart attacks and strokes) after the first dose alone. Protection strengthened further with subsequent doses: a 20% reduction among those fully vaccinated with Pfizer/BioNTech and a striking 27% reduction for AstraZeneca recipients. The researchers were upfront about rare side effects—myocarditis and certain clotting disorders—that can occur shortly after vaccination, but stressed these remain exceptionally uncommon. By comparison, catching COVID-19 itself dramatically raised the odds of major cardiovascular events. Lead co-author Dr. Samantha Ip described the results as some of the strongest evidence yet that the vaccines do more than prevent severe infection: they also confer lasting protection against two of the world’s leading killers. [Ip, S., North, TL., Torabi, F. et al. Cohort study of cardiovascular safety of different COVID-19 vaccination doses among 46 million adults in England. Nat Commun 15, 6085 (2024). doi. org /10.1038/s41467-024-49634-x]
Massimo tweet media
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Mukhtar
Mukhtar@I_amMukhtar·
He racially abused a taxi driver over €0.60. I've just looked at Transport for Ireland's website, and it says that the initial charge on Sunday is €5.40.
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enough of the sh1te@prawnsface·
@keira_con You have verified what I already thought. Well put together. They will not tell us about shortages until it’s too late, prepare accordingly.
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Keira Connolly
Keira Connolly@keira_con·
I don't understand how there are claims of fuel shortages In Ireland. The Main Sources for Refined Products (Petrol and Diesel) Are the United Kingdom which is by far the largest source making up 30–50% plus of refined imports followed by the Netherlands which is second biggest in recent years, with a significant and growing share. Ireland also imports from Belgium, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates (UAE), and sometimes others like Sweden or the USA though the latter is more for crude. The UK is a net importer of both crude oil and many refined petroleum products (like diesel), even though it still produces some oil from the North Sea which output has been declining for years and hit a record low in 2024 producing around 31 million tonnes of primary oil. A large portion of what the UK does produce is exported often because UK refineries are better suited to process other types of crude, and because of trading patterns with European hubs. Most of the crude oil that ends up as petrol and diesel in the UK (after refining) comes from imports. United States is the largest single source, at about 16 million tonnes (over a third of total crude imports). Norway is the second biggest, around 13 million tonnes which about for 31% of imports, Norway has long been a key supplier due to proximity via pipelines and tankers. Other notable sources: Libya, Algeria, Kazakhstan, and smaller volumes from OPEC countries which made up of less that 20% of imports in 2025. The Netherlands is one of Europe's major oil refining and trading hubs via the Port of Rotterdam. It has significant refinery capacity, but it produces very little crude oil domestically. It imports large volumes of crude oil, refines it into petrol (gasoline), diesel, and other products, and also imports finished refined products for its own use or re-export. In 2024 (latest detailed data), the top sources of crude oil imported into the Netherlands were: United States was by far the largest supplier which accounted for 24–25% of total crude imports by value. The US has become increasingly dominant since the mid-2010s. Norway second biggest supplying around 10%. Kazakhstan third supplying around 9–10%. Iraq and Brazil supply around 8% and 8% respectively. Though Ireland is uniquely vulnerable among European countries because it is an island with 100% import dependence for refined products and limited domestic storage beyond the strategic reserves. Irving Oil operates the Whitegate Refinery, located near Whitegate in County Cork, Whitegate only covers about 40% of Irlelands demand the remaining 60% sometimes more, is supplied as already-refined products from the UK, Netherlands, and elsewhere. I would say unless Ireland Oil partners renege on the exiting deals theoretically supply should be constant unless there is a higher bidder else where to where the supply is diverted. The talk of a lockdown will have more to do with the environmental cult leaders in my opinion and those wanting to enforce control than the lack of fuel in my opinion. The facts are the USA, The UK, Norway, Brazil, and the Netherlands are not shut down. The may have ramped up the price but they are still producing the product. Oh and Ireland Gas comes from the Corrib gas field and from Scotland via the Moffat interconnector pipelines under the Irish Sea. In recent years from 2024–2026 data, this accounts for roughly 80–90% of Ireland’s total gas supply, with the rest coming from the declining Corrib field off Ireland’s west coast and a small amount of biomethane. Scotland itself does not produce most of the gas that flows to Ireland. The gas entering the Moffat entry point in southern Scotland comes from the UK’s integrated National Transmission System. Here’s the breakdown of where the UK (including Scotland) sources its natural gas (latest 2025–early 2026 figures): Norway is the single biggest source supplying 45–50% of total UK gas supply. Gas is supplied via direct pipelines from Norwegian North Sea fields. This is very reliable and makes up the largest share of imports. UK domestic production from the North Sea accounts for 30%. Most of this is extracted from the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS), with a large portion landing at terminals in Scotland and contributes heavily to this domestic output. LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) imports accounts for 15% (and growing). These arrive by ship at UK terminals mostly in England and Wales from:United States. The rest of the gas is imported from Qatar 1.2%, Algeria 1.2%, Trinidad 1% and Tobago 1%. Our rulers like to tell us that all the prices are gone up firstly because of the Russian / Ukraine war, but there is one problem with that story, when the UK was taking Russian gas it accounted for around 3–4% of total UK gas supply and interestingly enough mostly as LNG shipped by tanker, not via pipeline. In summary lots of porkies being told. The MSM version. The current energy crisis is worse than the last three oil and gas crises combined and is “worsening by the day”, Tánaiste Simon Harris has warned. While insisting that “no country will be immune” from the impacts of the ongoing war on Iran, the finance minister insisted that implementing rationing or travel restrictions are not under consideration. The Government cut excise duties on petrol and diesel last week by 15c and 20c, respectively. Reductions to the NORA levy will see these cuts increased to 17c and 22c. These cuts are being negated, however, by higher prices caused by strikes between Israel and Iran targeting energy infrastructure. Speaking in Nenagh, Co Tipperary, Mr Harris confirmed the Government is keeping further measures under review. However, he ruled out the prospect of travel restrictions or rationing fuel by sending the Defence Forces to garage forecourts, arguing Ireland is “not in that space”. However, the finance minister also warned that a briefing from the International Energy Agency (IEA) in Brussels last week confirmed that the current difficulties caused by the war in the Middle East will get worse the longer the conflict continues. The group said the “current energy crisis globally is larger” than the previous oil crises in 1973 and 1976 and the gas crisis of 2022 “combined and is ongoing and worsening by the day”. “We're in a world now where the scale of the energy crisis is greater than the world has ever seen, and that's just a statement of fact, and is ongoing,” Mr Harris explained. “If the conflict ends today […] the damage done to [energy] infrastructure would still take the best part of a year to repair, is the best estimate made available to us by the IEA. “No matter what happens here, is going to be a challenge. It's only a matter of how grave and significant that challenge is. “Obviously, all Governments around the world will, in the time ahead, have to prepare for a variety of scenarios. There are no supply concerns in Ireland today. There's no supply concerns in Europe today.” The Tánaiste said that while people are “trying to scenario play different situations”, the country is “nowhere near the point” of limiting people’s access to petrol and diesel. He continued: “I'm not talking about today, I'm not talking about tomorrow, and I'm not talking about the next couple of weeks, but if this goes on and on and on, and bear in mind, it's a war that is seeing energy supplies destroyed, that does have real consequences in terms of global supplies. “No country is immune from that.” Mr Harris once again ruled out changing rules around people working from home. He said employers “generally exercise a fair degree of common sense” on the matter. When asked if public transport could be made free to cushion people from rising fuel costs, Mr Harris said it would be “foolish” to rule any measure in or out.
Keira Connolly tweet media
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Dr. Eoin Lenihan
Dr. Eoin Lenihan@EoinLenihan·
The response to my speech at the EU has been terrific. It's gone viral across several platforms with several hundred thousands views. Comments are overwhelmingly positive & if the Irish government were smart, they'd read them & take note. People have had enough.
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