2012-04-26

Why is Ireland reducing the Police and increasing the Military?

Vatic Note:  I will tell you why!  Its the same all over the globe.  In the US, we have Fusia Centers funded and controlled by the Federal Government that are making policy for local and state police and then equipping them and changing their colors from what ever they were into black as we noticed in the various protests.   Its an in progress thing, but its happening and notice Homeland Security has SUV's and uniforms that are SS Storm trooper black and they have militarized our local law enforcement, but its not complete yet.

Many of us have written about it.  And yes, there is a war going on, by the Foreign controlled US government against the American people and the same is going on as we published on here, in Britain and now in Ireland.   These are foundational actions toward a global one world police force.  They don 't say that but that is what it is. In fact, I believe there will no longer be any law enforcement, rather it will all be military.   My Poor Irish.  They have the British to content with again after all the many centuries of fighting them, they are back at it with Britain leaders determining what satanic kind of system all our countries will have.  Its in the works.

I would not be surprised if the actions to genocide some of the Natives of Canada, by the British, will also visit Ireland, since they have the same DNA make up.  It was the British that did that here through their minions in this country.  With these psychos,  nothing ever changes, its always the same.  Genocide, racism, fear on their part of our power, and their illlusion of their superiority as a result of eugenics.  We ain't seen nothin yet.  Are the Irish armed???  I know Britian is not, but I do not know about the Irish.  You can assume nothing,  these internationalist satanists are truly insane.

Why is Ireland reducing the Police and increasing the Military?
http://members.beforeitsnews.com/story/2059/450/Ireland:_Why_Is_It_Being_Quietly_Militarized.html
by Kimmy, reporter,  Before Its News,  April 22, 2012

Justice Minister Alan Shatter has warned rank-and-file garda leaders against damaging relations with the Army in a row over recruits.

In a deepening fall-out, Mr Shatter called on the Garda Representative Association (GRA) to reflect on "unfortunate" remarks made during its annual conference. He said:

"I'm very conscious there's a very good and close relationship between An Garda Siochana and the Defence Forces. I wouldn't like to see that relationship damaged.

"The association representing about 8,000 soldiers, sailors and aircrew of the Defence Forces, PDforra, has expressed its surprise at comments on the military from the Garda Representative Association (GRA) earlier in the week.

The comments by outgoing GRA president Damien McCarthy in effect questioned Minister for Justice and Defence Alan Shatter as to why Defence Forces personnel were still being recruited at a time when gardaí were not, because of the public-sector recruitment moratorium. PDforra general secretary Gerry Rooney said he was surprised at the comments.

 He said that while the Government had recently decided to recruit 1500 Defence Forces personnel, this was “long overdue” and came at a time when numbers were 700 below the agreed strength for the Army, Naval Service and Air Corps combined.In his address to Mr Shatter at the GRA’s annual conference in Athlone, Co Westmeath, on Tuesday, Mr McCarthy referred to the lack of Garda recruitment, saying: “Minister, it is remarkable that you continued to recruit members for the permanent Defence Forces.

Is Ireland under attack? Is there a war we are about to join? Because we are under attack in the war on crime at home, right here in Ireland.”McCarthy itemised reduced garda numbers, budget cuts and station closures as hitting the service. Delivery of service to the public has continued to be reduced, he added, and the minister's appointment had so far failed to have any significant impact on policing.

Further, the members of the GRA "are rightly angered and feel betrayed by your shortcomings". It was a hell of a broadside, coming as it did at the annual conference of the GRA, and the minister's reply was predictably and sharply offended: the comments were "alarmist and irresponsible", and devalued the work of McCarthy's own members.

 McCarthy, for those of us old enough to remember, nicked the phrase about soft on crime from Tony Blair, whose initial prime ministerial broadside in Britain was that New Labour would be tough on the three elements.

Leaving aside the fact that being tough on crime or otherwise is a fairly subjective concept, legislation is a slow process, and legislation is the only element of crime-fighting which a minister has within his jurisdiction, so maybe it was less than fair of Damien McCarthy to get so tough on Alan Shatter, who has been in office for only a year.

There is only one way the minister could have made a significant inroad on the crime figures in such a short period of time: the enactment of a policy of "zero tolerance". And that has ostensibly been tried before, notably when John O'Donoghue was Minister for Justice, and he memorably said when the figures showed no noticeable improvement that it depended how you define "zero".

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