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Monday, 11 March 2013

Deirdre O’Sullivan, Cork College of Commerce, Cork, Ireland.

"The financial crisis will be over in a matter of weeks," snarled Ms O'Sullivan aggressively
O'Sullivan's principal, Helen Ryan.
In September 2008 I expressed the widely held opinion to Deirdre O’Sullivan that the Irish economy was going to take years to return to anything nearing normality.  
Considering that the IMF and ECB had just bailed out the country; and Current Affairs programmes and newspapers ran continual articles on the State’s finances it didn’t take Einsteinic astuteness to know this.
O’Sullivan’s – who’s a teacher that holds the position of Business/Applied Business Department Head in above college – response was to aggressively snarl: ‘it’ll be over in a few months.’
I kid-you-not: this teacher and "Business /Applied Business Department Head", who had obviously never watched any Current Affairs on TV or read a newspaper, could snap like a petulant child about everything being : ‘alright in a few months’.
This isn’t O’Sullivan’s colleague, Ian Spillane.
There’s no doubt that this fucking idiot had no clue as to the seriousness of Ireland’s financial situation; and the aggressiveness she showed in her response is a trait common to south-west Ireland – I’ve also experienced this moronism from a colleague of O'Sullivan whose name is Nick O'Callaghan.
If you bring up something or ask a question that these morons know nothing about, or have no answer for, their usual reaction is to get aggressive.
The reason for this unwarranted aggression is because the natives are naturally childlike and moronic: they’re quick to lash out with their tongues or hands when they perceive an annoyance or trespass – they’d rather show themselves as coarse morons than admit ignorance of a subject.
It's a puerile way of deflecting an offending statement or question: feigning to the interlocutor that such talk is beneath them. Basically it’s a way that Cork and Kerry arseholes have evolved of hiding their ignorance.
I have no doubt that if Deirdre O’Sullivan, and others in Cork College of Commerce, were assessed by an Educational Authority outside of Ireland a lot of them would be found totally unfit for any type of teaching work.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Gerry, I need to ask you a question regarding H. Ryan. Is there any way I could contact you? It is very urgent. Thanks

    ReplyDelete