So the Irish government is planning to give the U.S.-Ireland Alliance some $25 million over the next few years according to Batt O'Keefe, the minister for education there.
The government is either brain dead or victim of an incredible snow job at a time when other organizations such as the American Ireland Fund took the noble and correct step of refusing any money from Ireland given the extreme nature of the economic emergency there.
It is also is a terrible decision on another level given that there is no more divisive figure in Irish America than Trina Vargo, the woman behind the Mitchell Scholarship program run by the U.S.-Ireland Alliance that brings a dozen students to Ireland every year.
Worse, the name of George Mitchell, the fabled peace envoy to Ireland who helped create the Good Friday Agreement, is tied in to the massive criticism and damage being done through her divisive tactics in the Irish American community.
Vargo has made a career nowadays of bad-mouthing Irish American organizations to everyone in Ireland and elsewhere, and denying there is an Irish American identity at all. She has apparently refused to attend the upcoming Irish diaspora conference in Dublin on those grounds.
Vargo, for instance, has made it clear in several op-eds in The Irish Times that she believes Irish undocumented should not be helped. Even though the undocumented issue had nothing whatsoever to do with her, she decided to attack anyway.
She wrote that helping such people would be akin to putting “lipstick on a pig” -- this was her actual quote.
After her comments the actress Fionnula Flanagan withdrew from a U.S.-Ireland Alliance event, stating, “I must respectfully decline to be honored by your organization which appears to have taken such a strong position against the most vulnerable of my countrymen.”
More recently Vargo emailed an article (before it was published) by Niall Stanage in The Irish Times that was highly critical again of the Irish American community and sent it to every member of the Irish Parliament, noting that she believed that her organization alone stood for Irish America.
Vargo noted in her email, “I’m happy to say that the U.S.-Ireland Alliance is not part of the problem Stanage refers to, but rather is part of the solution. “
Vote now - Buzz this story up!