The
Act should confer upon all Irish citizens the Crown
Irish special right of prompt access to health care
both physical and mental of an excellent nature.
The Act should leave undefined what a prompt access
to health care, both physical and mental, of an
excellent nature is. That should be left to those
with expertise in medicine or nursing to comment
upon and elaborate, the person being either an Irish
National or a non-Irish National.
The Act should also empower the State to exact payment
for the exercise of this right, if Dail Eireann
deems that necessary.
The Act should confer on all Irish citizens, the
Crown Irish right of access to a well disciplined,
liberal, creative and imaginative education from
infancy to old age.
The Act should leave such an education as given,
undefined.
The development of such an education should be left
in the Act to those with expertise in education
and teaching.
The Act authorizes the State to exact payment for
the exercise of this right, if Dail Eireann deems
such payment necessary.
The Act should confer upon every Irish Citizen the
Crown Irish right of access to an environment that
is clean, healthy, life giving, life promoting and
pleasant.
The Act empowers the State to exact payment for
the exercise of this right, if Dail Eireann deems
such payment necessary.
The Act bestows on all Irish Citizens the Crown
Irish right of access to a fair trial in a court,
based on evidence.
The Act should not define what a fair trial, based
on evidence, is. That should be left, in the Act,
to those with expertise and experience in the Law
to comment upon and explain.
The Act confers on all Irish Citizens, the Crown
Irish special right to a nutritional diet.
The Act should leave a nutritional diet undefined
- that is left to a dietician to elaborate on and
explain.
The Act should confer upon all Irish Citizens, the
Crown Irish special right of access to affordable
local housing of good quality. The Act should not
define what an affordable housing of good quality
is. That should be left in the Act to those with
expertise in architecture to comment upon and elaborate.
The individual may pay for the exercise of this
right by the State, a mortgage agency or an individual.
The act should confer on all Irish citizens, the
Crown Irish right of access to gainful employment.
The act should recognize that the realisation of
the right is dependent upon the nature and performance
of the Irish economy
The Act should recognise the Crown Irish right to
life from the moment of conception to the time of
natural death. The Act should State that this Crown
Irish right is sacred.
The Act should also State that, when the Crown Irish
right of a mother to good health, both physical
and mental, conflicts with the Crown Irish right
to life of the foetus in the womb, then the Crown
Irish right of the mother to good health, both physical
and mental, takes precedence over the Crown Irish
right to life of the foetus in the womb.
The Act should confer on the travelling people of
Ireland, the Crown Irish prompt right of access
to good health care, both physical and mental. The
Crown Irish right of access to a good education,
The Crown Irish right of access to good housing
or to a good halting sites. The Crown Irish right
of access to a fair hearing in court based on evidence,
the Crown Irish right to a nutritional diet and
the Crown Irish right of access to an environment,
which is, clean, healthy, life giving, life promoting
and pleasant. The Act should State that it is the
duty of and their responsibility to maintain such
an environment by the travelling people themselves.
The Act should convey on the disabled, the Crown
Irish right of access to Irish territory in all
it's aspects, to every nook and cranny of the environment
and to all buildings.
The Act should recognise the rights of animals and
wild life to live in a clean, healthy, life giving,
life promoting pleasant environment, so that animals
and wild life can increase and multiply. The Act
should also recognise the need for humane pest control.
The Act should forbid an animal to be treated cruelly.
The Act should recognise the right of an animal
to good health care. The Act should permit the humane
slaughter of animals for food. The Act should forbid
the setting of animals for Acts of aggressions.
Freedoms
The Act should recognise two sets of freedoms:
(a)
Individual freedoms
(b) State freedoms
Individual
freedoms
1.
The Act should recognise individual freedoms as
freedom from want, hunger, cold, thirst, poverty,
dirt, sickness, disease, fear, violence, abuse
both physical and sexual, murder, exploitation,
discrimination, intolerance, bullying, sectarianism,
bigotry, being despised, the brutality of punishment
beatings and punishment shootings, paramilitaries,
intimidation, terrorism, being lied to, being
deceived, being cheated, being marginalised, being
isolated, being alone and any other freedom from
which an individual can lay claim to.
2. Freedom to become that which the individual
aspires to become according to age, ability and
aptitude.
3. Freedom to be that which the individual has
aspired to be, lawfully.
State
freedoms
1. Freedom of mind within the Law.
2. Freedom of thought within the Law.
3. Freedom of expression within the Law.
4. Freedom of the press within the Law.
5. Freedom to be creative and imaginative within
the Law.
6. Freedom to discuss within the Law.
7. Freedom to challenge in speech or in writing
within the Law.
8. Freedom to plan and build within the Law.
9. Freedom to design within the Law.
10. Freedom to travel on Irish territory on lawful
business and in a lawful manner unhindered.
11. Freedom to leave Irish territory on lawful
business and in a lawful manner unhindered.
12. Freedom to enter Irish territory on lawful
business and in a lawful manner unhindered.
13. Freedom to trade at home and abroad within
the Law.
14. Freedom to demonstrate and protest within
the Law.
15. Freedom to form a trade union and go on strike
within the Law.
16. Freedom to farm within the Law.
17. Freedom to fish within the Law.
18. Freedom to assemble within the Law.
19. Freedom of movement within the Law.
20. Freedom of behaviour within the Law.
21. Freedom of will within the Law.
22. Freedom to smoke within the Law.
23. Freedom to drink alcohol within the Law.
24. Freedom of choice within the Law.
25. Freedom to entertain and be entertained within
the Law.
26. Freedom of conscience within the Law.
27. Freedom to worship according to personal conscience
within the Law.
28. Freedom to vote within the Law.
29. Freedom to refuse within the Law.
30. Freedom to experiment within the Law.
31. Freedom to educate and be educated within
the Law.
32. Freedom to accumulate wealth within the Law.
33. Freedom to gamble within the Law.
34. Freedom to supply goods and Services within
the Law.
and any other State freedom, which the individual
can legitimately claim - the freedom being within
the Law.
The Act should prohibit absolutely, the abuse of,
violence to, the torment of, intimidation of, the
wounding of, the striking or beating of a man, woman
or child or an individual on the grounds of sexual
orientation or of an individual on the grounds of
colour or racial origin, or on the belief, political
belief or of cultural expression. This is a violation
of the individual's freedom from.
The elderly should be free from want, hunger, cold,
thirst, dirt, disease, sickness, poverty, being
marginalized, being isolated and being alone.
The Act should recommend that the resources and
Services of the State be made free of charge to
the elderly.