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Don't Let the Door Hit You in the Shamrocks: Irish Prime Minister Varadkar Suddenly Resigns

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For as much and as long as I have been hammering away at the fascist lunatics in Scotland, I have also been watching my other ancestral homeland in abject horror, descending into what can only be described as an authoritarian hellscape.
Again, orchestrated by people voted into power by citizens, yes. 
Again – as with Scottish First Minister Yousaf – the son of an immigrant (Varadkar’s father is Indian) who became a politician of globalist aspirations and vision who was elevated to the premier office in his small country. 
Varadkar has spent the past years of his time in office as Taoiseach trying to dismantle the Ireland he grew up in, leaving economic and social disasters in his wake.
From unfettered, ruinous immigration policies, draconian laws any dictator would be proud to enforce, attempts to rewrite the Irish constitution to remove offensive words like „motherhood“ and literally redefine what a „family“ is – even whining about the amount of food served at restaurants – Leo Varadkar drove Ireland right to the very brink, while pleasing the hell out of his Davos mentors.
…And now the government is signaling they’re going after the food on Irish plates, since no one has paid any attention to their previous growlings about holding to the U.N.’s benchmarks for food waste reduction.
Full plates grate, and doggie bags make him very angry.
The last straw, and literally Ireland’s last chance to claw back some of its former independence, was the two-question referendum on the constitutional changes held last Friday.
Praise be to God the IRISH came out with a resounding NO, in what was supposed to be Varadkar’s crowning moment.
Ireland went to the polls last Friday to vote on a slate of Constitutional amendments that sought to modernise the document, including revising the meaning of family and removing references to women’s importance in domestic life. The polls had been predicting a comfortable victory, but the stench of death began to surround the campaign during the last few weeks. 
The end result was a historic rejection by around 70 per cent nationally, with only one constituency in the whole country voting Yes on any individual measure. The Irish cultural establishment, spooked by recent upheavals on immigration, will be wondering if this result is as bad as it gets, or if it’s a tremor of something worse to come?
The signs are ominous. Government-aligned activist groups have been an essential tool in steering this type of social change in the recent past, yet the reputation of these organisations is perhaps the biggest casualties from this referendum cycle.

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