Book description
In this important book, historians, lawyers, economists and writers
come together to put a coherent case: that although the Irish economic
collapse has resulted in national humiliation, renewed emigration and
a decline in living standards for the majority of the population,
there is still hope that the country can be reformed and renewed.
Irish politicians offered the now notorious blanket guarantee to all
the banks which had got in over their heads during the great property
bubble - including one that had become little more than a criminal
enterprise. A different set of politicians grimly enforces the
consequences of that guarantee, locking an entire generation of Irish
men and women into paying for the mistakes of greedy bankers and their
corrupt friends in government. The energy of hope has to come from
elsewhere. These essays demonstrate how simple measures and different
economic and social policies could release that energy and fulfil the
promise of an educated, literate and culturally vibrant people.
Fintan O'Toole is one of Ireland's most respected and
controversial political and cultural commentators, and an acclaimed
biographer and critic. His books include White Savage, A Traitor's
Kiss, Meanwhile Back at the Ranch, the number one bestseller Ship of
Fools, which Terry Eagleton called 'a brilliant polemic', and its
sequel Enough is Enough. He lives in Dublin and is a columnist for the
Irish Times.