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Louise McKenna(c)

Louise McKenna(c)

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They are sucking the CO₂ out of the atmosphere to make carbon batteries to power AI data centres

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How many people in Ireland have even heard of the Critical Infrastructure Bill 2026? While the public is distracted by day-to-day politics, legislation is being introduced that allows the Government to designate projects as "critical infrastructure" and requires public bodies to prioritise and accelerate their approval. This is not a minor administrative change. It creates a legal framework that places designated infrastructure projects at the front of the queue and requires State bodies to work together to speed them through. Every Irish man and woman should be asking: Who decides what is "critical infrastructure"? Data centres? Grid expansion? Wind farms? Battery storage? Water infrastructure? Telecommunications? In a constitutional republic, the Government is expected to exercise its powers in accordance with Bunreacht na hÉireann and in the interests of the people. Many will question whether legislation that concentrates decision-making and fast-tracks major projects receives the level of public scrutiny, transparency and democratic oversight that it deserves. Articles 1 and 6 of Bunreacht na hÉireann state that sovereignty belongs to the people. Article 10 provides that the nation's natural resources are to be managed according to the principles of social justice and the common good. These are not empty words, they are constitutional principles that should guide every Act of the Oireachtas. Transparency, accountability and constitutional government depend on an informed public, not one kept in the dark. There is absolutely no transparency with this tyrannical government. https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-public-expenditure-infrastructure-public-service-reform-and-digitalisation/press-releases/minister-chambers-announces-publication-of-the-critical-infrastructure-bill https://data.oireachtas.ie/ie/oireachtas/libraryResearch/2026/2026-05-11_bill-digest-critical-infrastructure-bill-2026_en.pdf

They are sucking the CO₂ out of the atmosphere to make carbon batteries to power AI data centres

This CO₂ battery farm they're building in Offaly should be a major concern for everybody in the surrounding area. If a catast
This CO₂ battery farm they're building in Offaly should be a major concern for everybody in the surrounding area. If a catastrophic failure were ever to occur here, this would not be a Hollywood-style explosion or a fireball. The real danger is a sudden release of vast quantities of pressurised CO₂. The gas is colourless, odourless and heavier than air, meaning it can spread across the ground and accumulate in low-lying areas, silently displacing the oxygen that people and animals need to breathe. In high enough concentrations, it can cause rapid unconsciousness and can be fatal. This is precisely why facilities handling large volumes of CO₂ require robust engineering controls, continuous monitoring and detailed emergency response plans. When a project of this scale is proposed, communities have every right to know what the credible worst-case scenarios are, how far their effects could extend, and exactly how public safety would be protected.

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Bedtime lullaby 😴😋🎵🌕💙 Óiche mhaith .....

A battery the size of a stadium is coming to Offaly. Let that sink in. Ireland is being asked to host one of the world's first commercial CO₂ Battery projects, a technology that has only recently moved beyond the demonstration stage. This isn't just another wind turbine or a few shipping containers full of batteries. It is a vast industrial energy storage facility covering a huge site, designed to hold thousands of tonnes of carbon dioxide in a pressurised, closed-loop system. The public is told it is the future. But where is the long-term evidence? Where are the independent studies showing how these facilities perform after 10, 20 or 30 years? Where is the evidence of their cumulative impact on rural landscapes, wildlife, local communities and surrounding infrastructure? Ireland has become a testing ground for ever-larger energy projects, data centres, substations, battery storage, solar farms and wind farms. Now we are being asked to accept one of the first commercial CO₂ Battery plants in the world. Innovation has a place. But so does scrutiny. If this technology is as safe and beneficial as claimed, then every aspect of it should withstand independent examination. Local communities should have access to the environmental assessments, emergency planning, long-term monitoring proposals and contingency plans, not just promotional material. Projects of this scale will shape the Irish landscape for generations. Before another piece of critical infrastructure is built, people have every right to ask: Why here? What are the long-term consequences? Who benefits? And who carries the risk if things do not go as planned? Another experiment that nobody consented too. https://energydome.com/google-and-energy-dome-advance-multi-continent-energy-storage-buildout-with-first-bilateral-project-in-ireland

Plasma event? Giant lithium batteries 🔋

A battery the size of a stadium is being planned for Offaly. If a lithium-ion battery storage facility catches fire, it can b
A battery the size of a stadium is being planned for Offaly. If a lithium-ion battery storage facility catches fire, it can be extremely difficult to extinguish. Such fires may burn for many hours or even days and can release hazardous gases, including hydrogen fluoride and other toxic combustion products. Emergency planning, evacuation procedures, water contamination risks, and the impact on nearby communities should all be openly addressed before projects of this scale are approved. The question isn't whether we need reliable energy, it's whether people living nearby have been fully informed of the risks, whether independent safety assessments have been carried out, and whether local communities genuinely consent to these developments. Projects of this scale deserve rigorous public scrutiny because the consequences of a major incident could extend far beyond the site itself. Whoever allowed planning permission for this needs to be sacked and investigated for their crimes against the Irish.

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This heavy dense fog is coming in every evening from the sea since the hot weather a few days ago, and it gets really cold in the evening after the roasting hot day.

Its all an illusion 😘😆❤️🙏🏼

Those born again Christian zionists hey 🤣🤣
Those born again Christian zionists hey 🤣🤣

My family and friends showed me who they were 20 years ago when I stood up against the vaccine and the agricultural industry.
My family and friends showed me who they were 20 years ago when I stood up against the vaccine and the agricultural industry. No one wants to know you when you're pointing fingers at corporate criminals.

Cancel culture has hit the billionaire nerds...