There are a great many unsolved mysteries in this world, such as why cornflakes taste better with a soup spoon and why the phrase “soft underbelly of a Ford Transit” never made is past the editors of Homer’s second novel, The Little Lad. Such things trouble me deeply and keep me awake all day.
Why do people voluntarily participate in opinion polls only to click “Don’t know / No opinion”? Why did I say “click”, not “tick”, “answer” or “respond”?
All children, and some of the more inquisitive household pets, ask “why is the sky blue?” Why do so few parents or dog owners respond by outlining John Tyndall’s work on nephelometry. Is it because “Tyndall” is difficult to spell or nephelometry sounds rude or 19th century Carlow-born scientists just aren’t hip or they simply never heard of him?
Was George Boole the father of computer science? Or was it Alan Turing? Or Charles Babbage? Konrad Zuse? Howard Aiken? Herman Hollerith? Why is Vincent Atanasoff called the forgotten father of computer science if I remember his name?
Was Ada Lovelace or Admiral Grace Hopper the mother? How did they get time to write programs or find bugs with all those fathers milling around? Why is Hedy Lamarr more famous as a movie star than an inventor?
Why was Nice I rejected? Why was Nice II ratified? Why was Nice important? Why will the Lisbon Treaty be good for Ireland? Be bad for Ireland? Be good for Europe? Be bad for Europe? Why do we need a referendum at all?
I’m not asking for your answers. As readers, even if only of blogs, you have them. Or at least opinions. If you haven’t asked yourself the above questions, you’ve asked similar. The vast majority don’t.
Why is diesel suddenly more expensive than petrol? Why have property prices slowed? Why do we have such a poor health service? Why is Irish-made whiskey cheaper in France than here?
These are the questions asked by the majority. The road haulier; the house-seller; the ingrown toenail sufferer; the holidaying drinker. These are what matter now. Right now.
Holding a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty is a pointless exercise because most people just don’t care. It doesn’t effect them right now. The use of scare tactics by both the Yes and No camps makes great fodder for the media, but that’s about all. It won’t prompt them to investigate further. People are just so used to hyperbole that they ignore it. Both camps might as well run off posters warning “if you don’t vote Yes/No your knob/tits will fall off”.







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