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    11 commenti

    1. SensitiveDress2581 on

      This is being told we have the best economy in Europe, but going outside and seeing the country hasn’t had a lick of paint since 2007.

    2. Freebee5 on

      Why would you want to be a part of a grouping that doesn’t want you?

      A la carte citizenship, pick what appeals to you, ignore the rest.

    3. WearingMarcus on

      I think its very disconcerting that Media/Governments (when they feel need politically need to) cherry pick to use the GDP metric, which with the double Irish tax, rarely gets to the average Irishman.

      Sure, Jobs have definitely been created, especially in Pharma and tech, but claiming Roscommon etc should feel “celtic tiger minted ” is just a flat out lie and must be disheartening for the population round there. Is gas lighting the right term in this scenario?

    4. interfaceconfig on

      Here’s the breakdown for Ireland by age. The outlier is the amount of women between 35-49 who feel left out. That’s over three times higher than the EU average for the same group.

      |Age Group|Total %|M%|F%|
      :–|:–|:–|:–|
      |16-24|9.4|11.7|6.8|
      |25-34|14.7|11.5|17.4|
      |35-49|21.4|16.8|**24.8**|
      |50-64|17.1|14.7|19.6|
      |64-74|14.2|15|13.4|
      |75+|13.4|13.6|13.2|

    5. Due_Evidence on

      Sad to see. Let’s all be a bit nicer to each other I say.

    6. DaithiOSeac on

      Housing estate sprawl with no plan for town and community building.

      Lack of funding for sports and activity clubs.

      Atrocious cost of living.

    7. fileanaithnid on

      I’m very much not surprised by Ireland or serbia, tbh I’m surprised the rest of the balkans isn’t higher. Finland is surprising though, that’s usually one of the happiest countries in the world

    8. WellWellWell2021 on

      So over 90% don’t feel left out. Sounds just like my friends when we were teenagers.

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