Friday 27 February 2015

Will [Ireland] … be dangerous for them? Is it really as backward as it[’s] said to be [in Cork and Galway]?

Be careful where you go because what’s good for the goose isn’t always good for the gander 
Despite 20 visits by health inspectors a dead human body lay in a Galway food supplier’s freezer for, at least, six years.

A concerned parent enquires about safe holiday destination on behalf of daughter.

If they come to Ireland I’d advise that they be very careful in choosing hostels (or B&Bs and hotels for that matter) in the west or south-west. These people don’t do hygiene to the same level as mainstream parts of the First World: it’s in their nature to be perfunctory about cleanliness and the Irish Food Safety Authority (IFSA) is extremely apathetic about enforcing regulations (a human cadaver lay in a food supplier’s freezer for five- or six-years – this supplier specialised in fish).
These natives don’t actually see anything wrong with, high levels of dirt whether it be in their kitchens, bars or any of the amenities they’d offer the public. And in a lot of cases where you will see cleanliness you have to remember that it’s a learned behaviour: they’ve figured out that high levels of dirt will cost them money; thus they keep the observable areas of their premises clean, but only for financial reward and not because they’re concerned about customer’s health. And with an attitude like this they won’t be concerned about the filth in kitchens and storerooms, and in other places that you won’t see – as I’ve said, the IFSA isn’t fit or interested in taking up the slack.
Take the human body in the freezer: how many times over the six years that it lay there did the electricity supply fail? Knowing Ireland, as I do, it probably failed numerous times. The food and the cadaver would thaw and, no doubt whatsoever, bodily fluids from the corpse would have been carried by insects and deposited on the food.
If you think the backward freezer owner in Galway, done the proper thing, and dumped the thawed food you’d be completely wrong; instead he would have illegally refrozen the food and supplied it to gastropubs, restaurants and hotels – if he had cleared out all the food and dumped it, as he was legally obliged to, he’d have found the body (it’s not the body of mouse we’re talking about, it was a human being). Remember that fish goes off pretty quickly, even without a dead human body leaking all over it.
Just one of the many thousands of comments the Galway body-in-the-freezer generated.

Lots of tourist and natives in Galway would have eaten the food that was polluted by the bodily fluids of this human corpse. The grapevine tells of high numbers of tourists in Galway and south-west Ireland suffering stomach problems and diarrhoea; when these tourists visit local doctors they’ll be told that their illnesses results from, “being in a different country and eating food that they’re unused to,” or put down to them having, “allergies”.
The natives, on the other hand, don’t suffer too much from food poisoning because they have, over the centuries (and because of their lax attitude to cleanliness) developed high levels of resistance to the germs that cause it – there’s examples of them eating the dead bodies of family members and neighbours during a famine in the 18oos.
A high number of deranged staff will also be found working in the kitchens of Irish gastropubs, hotels and restaurants. These suffer high levels of bullying and abuse from their colleagues and superiors. Retarded Irish people (and there’s many of them) will get their revenge by interfering with the food. I personally wouldn't trust 98% of Irish pre-cooked food outlets.
Manuela Riedo is probably the young girl you refer to: she was raped and murdered in Galway. Google Judge Brian Curtin and you’ll see how atrocious the Irish attitude is to sex offenders and paedophiles; do the same with Dan Foley and the Listowel rape.
Paedophilia and sexual offences are the most disgusting of crimes; all over the world these crimes cause revulsion and the perpetrators are severely dealt with by the authorities. It’s different in the Republic of Ireland – as you’ll see from the results that a google search of above names will bring up.
It’s not that the Irish are purposefully sadistic, it’s just that they’re slow (probably at a stage of evolution that’s a couple of hundred thousand years behind other caucasians) and extremely unintelligent. For instance: A lack of empathy is very observable right across rural Ireland, particularly in the west and south-west. This is a type of mental dysfunctionality that will, sometimes, be found in people with low-end mental illnesses, such as, aspergers syndrome and dyslexia.
People with these mental afflictions can’t interact with others socially because they don’t understand what will cause offence, they don’t, and can’t, experience empathy. For instance, they can’t understand why an interlocutor might be annoyed with something insulting they’ve said or done, the type of person who can’t apprehend why a 95-year-old woman, whose pet of 15-years is laying dead in front of her, having been just killed by a car, might be crying.
In Galway and south-west Ireland, the locals, gaping at you with their mouths open, are very likely wondering why anyone would find anything wrong with a dead human body laying in a freezer for six years. Sure Jayus, they’d ask, wasn’t he dead, what harm could he do?
If it was my daughter I’d advise her that while in Europe to go no further west than Wales.

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