While every denizen dweller in all the world knows that their county councils are populated by tossers, it's lost on my why said tossers feel the need to continually prove their provenance.

Moderator: Site Mods
Yeah, the first thought would be an April Fools thing (which, to be honest, isn't really done here), except Ray Yeates really is part of the Dublin City Council and it would be more in keeping to just attribute it to "an unnamed source" instead of having him explicitly state otherwise. Raidió Teilifís Éireann is the state-broadcaster who've had more than enough troubles this year without publishing fake nonsense.Dublin City Council Arts Officer Ray Yeates said the practice has caused "worry and discomfort" and he has concerns about the safety of people perching on the plinth to touch the statue.
He added that this is not an April Fool's Day joke.
In other news, Iarnród Éireann (Irish Rail) would like to announce that:Dublin City Council has said it will consider moving the Molly Malone statue if the installation of flowerbeds around it does not deter people from touching the bronze sculpture's breasts.
Unfortunately no pictures of the Inflatable Jesus were shown in the article, which I found kind of disappointing.Two ukuleles, a bag of spuds, a Christmas tree and an inflatable Jesus were among the items lost and found on Irish Rail services last year.
Because... umm... it clearly does?An Post (the State Post Office) has said AI software was not used to generate the artwork on a stamp which appears to show a television aerial on a building behind the nationalist leader Daniel O'Connell.
You can spin that any way you want, but if it looks like AI crap and smells like AI crap, it's a good bet that it is AI crap.Despite television not being introduced in Ireland until 1949, some 105 years after the image depicted on the stamp, a spokesperson said the stamps were developed by the renowned Irish designer and artist David Rooney who "included some sort of visual signal to link to the very modern global range and impact of O’Connell".
"O’Connell’s methods in terms of communications and galvanising the population were thoroughly modern, hence the inclusion of a sort of artistic anachronism to link those very points."