The 2024 general election sees Ireland’s highways and byways adored with the strained faux smiles of the replacement migration regime politicians trying to hold on to their seats, while independent usurpers rise to the occasion.
Political postering in Ireland is not exclusively reserved for elections. Often times local public representatives poster their constituency to signal public meetings or to raise awareness about a local and even international issue.
The first big poster controversy saw Roderic O’Gorman postering seemingly illegally before the polls had been called – (video) Irish Inquiry and a few posters have been reported as controversial the most recent being reported by the government funded media lapdog The journal, that reported Gardaí are in investigating the appearance of one such poster that contains the words “No More Immigrants”, the article uses a photograph credited to the recently elected to Dublin City Councillor Feljin Jose, a member of the Anti-Irish Globalist Green Party, which under Roderic O’Gorman has spearheaded the invasion of Ireland and the IPAS invasion, overwhelming the social stability of the Irish Nation, causing fear and trepidation across the land.
Coppinger’s Poster and the Nkencho Riot
Sometimes, it is important to try take a wider view of political postering, not just around acute election campaigns, to get a better view and understanding of what the voting Irish might be in for down the line.
Imagine you had been a local victim of the 2020 Nkencho riot in Dublin 15, and one day some years later, you approach your local shops, the scene of the original trauma and found you were once again surrounded.
We have one such example that occurred in Dublin 15 circa October of 2023, a socialist party poster, with a mobile phone number (blanked) and the social media account seemingly of an Aoife Coppinger was heavily postered on multiple lamp posts and poles around scene of the original Nkencho riot and mob violence.
What was Coppinger thinking when erecting these posters at the scene of the Nkencho riot where locals where surrounded and attacked by a baying mob as the Garda appeared to stand down and leave the scene when things got to hot to handle?
If we put on the newspeak hat to decode the message in this context, “far-right” looks like a kind of othering, the kind required that lays the ground work to justify later violent and bloody ethnic cleansing, and since the Irish have been thoroughly re-educated by their media to understand that any Irish person who objects to invasion levels of migration into the country is “far-right”, then erecting a poster depicting an African lady with her hand held high in a defiant STOP gesture with the slogan that can then essentially be read as posing the question as to how can “we” STOP the IRISH, the implication in the visual is the “we” are Africans and we need to stop their objection to our increasing numbers, surely this level of potential visual communication or interpretation was not lost on the creators of the poster or else we have to consider them to be entirely inept (a useful indicator of the value of the value proposition).
Then it must be considered, why would you as “others” want to stop the Irish in their own land, really, it is a entirely valid question or is someone using your highly identifiable ehtinciity for political power and gain set against the native Irish, yet another valid question, especially since the last time ethnic cleansing was inflicted on Ireland it was at the hands of a British colonial power, and millions if Irish died or fled ethnic cleansing of Ireland where to this day Ireland has never recovered the lost generations and ensuing population growth.
Who was there to shout STOP during the Nkencho Riot?
If you are unfamiliar with the Nkencho story and follow on riot, then see how the mainstream media reported events, here is one example and also click here to view a video compilation of the 2020 violent Nkencho riot in Dublin 15, culminating in Hartstown shopping complex and local petrol station there is also a video of George Nkencho during the events the day before that lead to his shooting and death by a female armed Garda.
Perhaps, as evidenced by some of the video’s in teh compilation, a few more balanced souls, less intoxicated in the spirit of the moment, pulled some of their more hyped and frenzied pals back at the very last second (but not always) limiting the ultimate extent of the violence and injury to others that day, and we can be thankful for some cooler heads in the madness, but certainly none appeared to come from official Ireland or even the local police tasked with keeping people safe in their community asked for calm as a menacing mob rampaged around Dublin 15 surrounds, or at least that is how many of the video portray the days events.
DUBLIN WEST
This STOP poster appeared in the Dublin West constituency back in 2023, in multiple locations around the Hartstown shopping complex where the Eurospar is located, it is salient to note that this is the same constituency where Ruth Coppinger has regularly campaigned and been elected in the past and is now presently campaigning for a seat in Dáil Éireann.
Local voters may do well to study the history of their local candidates posters and associated posters to get a better handle into what they may be voting into government, but the similarly daft sloganeering on some of the Dublin West General election candidate posters also gives you a good measure of what you might be in for, but a little visual hindsight can go a long way too.