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Gardaí Seek Witnesses Following Serious Road Traffic Collision In Cashel, Tipperary.

Gardaí are appealing for witnesses after a male pedestrian was seriously injured in a road traffic incident in Cashel, Co. Tipperary.

The collision happened shortly after 11.00pm on the Clonmel Road (R692) on Sunday night. The injured man, who is in his 20s, was taken to Cork University Hospital, where he is receiving treatment for serious injuries. No other injuries were reported.

A technical examination of the scene was carried out by Garda Forensic Collision Investigators, and the roadway has since reopened to traffic.

Investigating gardaí are particularly anxious to speak with three motorists who travelled along the route and passed the pedestrian before the collision occurred.

Any road users who were travelling on the Clonmel Road in Cashel between 10.30pm and 11.00pm, and who may have camera footage, including dash-cam recordings, are asked to make it available to gardaí.

Anyone with information is asked to contact Cahir Garda Station on Tel: 052 744 5630, the Garda Confidential Line on Tel: 1800 666 111, or indeed any Garda Station.

Death Of Irish Folk Singer Dolores Keane.

A great hush has fallen over Irish music with the passing yesterday of Ms Dolores Keane, one of the most cherished and soul-stirring voices this country has ever known.

Dolores Keane died peacefully in her sleep at her home in Caherlistrane, Co Galway, aged 72 years, leaving behind not only a body of music of rare beauty, but a deep sense of gratitude among all who were moved by her singing. Current reporting remembers her as one of the defining voices of Irish folk and traditional music.

Late Ms Dolores Keane (26th September 1953 – 16th March 2026) R.I.P.

For decades, Dolores sang as though she were carrying the memory of a people. In her voice lived the tenderness of home, the ache of longing, the strength of women, and the old unbroken thread of song handed down through family and place. She did not merely perform music; she inhabited it, and in doing so gave something timeless to Irish culture.

Born into the renowned Keane family, Dolores was shaped by a house full of songs, stories and visiting musicians. From those early roots in Galway grew an artist of extraordinary grace, first known for singing with her aunts Rita and Sarah Keane, and later celebrated through her work with De Dannan, her collaborations with John Faulkner, and a solo career that brought her voice far beyond these shores.

There was a haunting honesty in Dolores Keane’s singing that could stop people in their tracks. Whether singing a sean-nós air, a love song, or a modern folk ballad, she seemed to reach beyond performance and touch something more intimate and enduring. Her beloved interpretation of “Caledonia” remains one of the songs most closely associated with her; a recording carried for years in the hearts of listeners who found comfort, beauty and home in her voice.

To speak of Dolores Keane is to speak of more than acclaim, recordings or applause. It is to speak of feeling. Of truth. Of a voice that seemed to rise not just from the singer, but from the soil, the hearth, and the generations who sang before her. She gave the old songs new life, and gave contemporary songs an ancient depth. In every phrase, there was humanity.

In ár gcroíthe go deo.

Death Of Larry Buckley, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with a great sadness that we learned of the death, yesterday Sunday 15th March 2026, of Mr Larry Buckley, Gortataggart, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Pre-deceased by his parents Larry and Peggy; Mr Buckley sadly passed away unexpectedly.

His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving daughters Susan and Angel, their partners T.J. and Mark, grandchildren Shannon and Patrick, his brother Oliver and partner Julie, extended relatives, neighbours and friends and beloved dog Jessie.

May He Rest In Peace.

Funeral Arrangements.

Funeral Arrangements will be published later as soon as final arrangements are confirmed.

The extended Buckley family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Socrates – St Patrick’s Day Politics & The Politics Of Pretence.

What Socrates Might See In Today’s Modern Irish Politics.

Ancient Greek philosopher Socrates, who lived in Athens from 469 to 399 BCE, was one of the most famous thinkers in human history. People call him the ‘Father of Philosophy’. He is remembered as the man who asked uncomfortable questions and forced everyone around him to think much deeper.

But here is the shocking part; Socrates hated and feared democracy.
He thought democracy was actually one of the fastest ways a society could destroy itself. It is about photographs, handshakes, receptions, speeches, media clips, and symbolic moments.
A bowl of shamrock handed over in Washington is not just a diplomatic ritual; it is a political image. A Government Minister appearing abroad under the banner of St Patrick’s Day is not only representing the Irish State; they are also being seen to represent the Irish State and that suttle distinction matters greatly.

Socrates never saw an Irish modern day parliament, a press conference, or a St Patrick’s Day diplomatic tour. But he did understand something timeless about politics; public life is rarely driven by wisdom alone. It is often driven by appearances, persuasion, and performance. That is why his criticism of democracy still feels uncomfortably relevant.

Socrates worried that political systems often reward the people who can present themselves best, not necessarily the people most fit to lead. He feared that politics could become less about truth and judgment, and more about selling an image to the public. In his eyes, the danger was not just bad leadership. The deeper danger was a culture in which style begins to replace substance.

That concern feels familiar when we look at present-day politics, including in Ireland.
Every year, St Patrick’s Day becomes far more than a national celebration. It also becomes a major political and diplomatic season. In 2026, the Government announced its largest St Patrick’s Day outreach programme yet, with senior representatives travelling to more than 50 countries. The official purpose is clear enough: promote Irish interests, strengthen ties, support trade, and connect with the global Irish community. That is the stated case, and in fairness, there is real diplomacy in it.

But politics is never only about the official case.
It is also about optics. It is about photographs, handshakes, receptions, speeches, media clips, and symbolic moments. A bowl of shamrock handed over in Washington is not just a diplomatic ritual. It is a political image.

And that is exactly the kind of thing Socrates would have noticed.
He would likely have asked whether these moments are primarily exercises in good governance, or whether they are also examples of politics as theatre. He would have asked whether voters are being shown serious leadership, or a carefully managed performance of leadership. He would have asked whether the public is meant to judge outcomes, or simply absorb impressions.

The St Patrick’s Day Problem: Diplomacy or Political Theatre?
To be clear, this is not an argument that politicians should never travel abroad, or that St Patrick’s Day diplomacy is meaningless. In fact, current coverage stresses that the Washington visit in particular can carry genuine strategic importance for Ireland, especially in trade, foreign relations, and maintaining access at the highest level of US politics. The Government’s own language around the programme is explicitly about economic diplomacy and international partnerships, not just ceremony.

But Socrates would probably insist that this is precisely why the public should look harder, not softer.
His concern was always that democratic politics makes it too easy to confuse visibility with value. A politician travelling abroad looks active. A politician standing beside world leaders looks important. A politician wrapped in national symbolism looks patriotic. Yet none of those things automatically tells us whether they are governing well.

That is the real point of the comparison.
In modern Irish politics, St Patrick’s Day can serve two purposes at once. It can be genuine diplomacy, and it can be domestic political branding. Those two things are not mutually exclusive. In fact, they often reinforce each other. A successful foreign visit can strengthen Ireland’s position abroad, while also strengthening a politician’s image at home. The public sees confidence, access, prestige and relevance. And once again, Socrates’ old worry returns; are citizens judging leadership by wisdom and results, or by appearances and emotional effect?

He would likely have been especially suspicious of the pageantry. Not because symbols are worthless, but because symbols can make shallow politics look profound. They can turn scrutiny into applause. They can make carefully staged public life feel like evidence of competence, when it may only be evidence of presentation.

That does not mean every ministerial trip is empty. It means democratic citizens should be careful not to stop thinking the moment politics becomes ceremonial.

And perhaps that is where the Irish comparison becomes sharpest.
A modern voter can easily be encouraged to see St Patrick’s Day travel as proof of leadership in itself. Ministers are abroad. Photos are everywhere. Meetings are announced. Statements are issued. Flags, shamrock, receptions and speeches create the sense of national importance. Yet Socrates would ask the most irritating questions of all; what, exactly, was achieved? What changed? What was secured? What problem was solved? What outcome, beyond publicity, can actually be measured?

These are very Socratic questions. They cut through image and force politics back onto the ground of reality.

So if we bring Socrates into present-day Irish politics, the lesson is not that International St Patrick’s Day visits are automatically dishonest. It is that democracy always carries the risk of mistaking spectacle for substance. Politicians may travel abroad in the name of Ireland; in the spirit of St Patrick, and in pursuit of real diplomatic goals, but they also travel in full awareness that public symbolism is politically powerful.

Socrates would have warned us not to be hypnotised by that power.
He would have reminded us that democracy weakens when citizens stop examining what they are shown. The problem is not that politics contains ceremony. The problem begins when ceremony becomes a substitute for judgment.

Socrates did not say this as a theory. He watched political instability and democratic conflict in Athens during his own lifetime, and he was later condemned to death by an Athenian jury in 399 BCE.

And the most tragic part is that Socrates himself became a victim of democracy. He was put on trial by a jury of ordinary citizens. They were not philosophers. They were not trained judges. They were simply a crowd. And that crowd voted to execute him. He died by forced suicide; consuming a poisonous mixture containing hemlock, so in the end, democracy seemed to prove Socrates’ point, in the most brutal way possible.

And in that sense, his criticism still stands, not just in ancient Athens, but also in our modern Ireland. too.

Death Of David T. Green Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with a great sadness that we learned of the death, yesterday Sunday 15th March 2026, of Mr David T. Green, The Old Post Office, Dovea, Killahara, Thurles, Co. Tipperary and formerly of Whitegate, Cork; Shannon, Co. Clare and Kilkenny City, Co. Kilkenny.

Pre-deceased by his beloved daughter Bethrose, father Ivor, mother-in-law Valerie Tait (Ballyvoloon House, Whitegate, Co. Cork); Mr Green passed away peacefully, surrounded by his loving family, following a long illness most bravely borne, and while in the care of staff at the Community Hospital of the Assumption, Thurles, Co. Tipperary and University Hospital Limerick City (UHL).

His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; devoted and loving wife Rachel (née Tait), sons David-óg, Finn and Sam, mother Joan Green (née Lennon, Ayrefield, Kilkenny City), sisters Fiona White and Orla Black, father-in-law Jim Tait, nephews, nieces, sisters-in-law, brothers-in-law, life-long friend John O’Neill, extended relatives, neighbours and a wide circle of friends.

May He Rest In Peace.

The earthly remains of Mr Green will repose in Hugh Ryan’s Funeral Home, Slievenamon Road, Thurles (E41 CP59) on tomorrow afternoon, Wednesday March 18th from 5:00pm until 7:00pm same evening. Requiem Mass on Thursday 19th March at the Church of St. Michael and All Angels, Corkbeg, Whitegate, Co. Cork at 2:00pm, followed by interment in the adjoining graveyard.

The extended Green and Tait families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Note Please: Donations in lieu of flowers to Irish Cancer Society in memory of Mr David T. Green.