PodcastsSociety & CultureThe Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

Niall Boylan
The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)
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  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #811 If Anyone Can Become Irish, What Does Irish Mean Anymore?

    09/07/2026 | 1h 53 mins.
    In this episode, Niall talks to journalist John McGuirk about a question that goes right to the heart of Irish identity: does becoming an Irish citizen automatically make someone Irish?
    The debate follows a wider conversation about citizenship, nationality, belonging and what it really means to be part of a country. According to official Dáil figures, 100,471 certificates of naturalisation were issued in Ireland between 2021 and 2025. That included 10,490 in 2021, 14,249 in 2022, 19,464 in 2023, 29,868 in 2024 and 26,400 in 2025. The latest citizenship ceremonies took place in Killarney on 22 and 23 June 2026, where around 4,600 people from more than 139 countries were due to become Irish citizens.
    For many people, those ceremonies are a powerful and emotional moment. They represent years of living in Ireland, working here, raising families here, contributing to communities and making a formal declaration of fidelity and loyalty to the State.
    But does that legal act answer the deeper cultural question?
    Niall asks John whether Irishness is simply a matter of a passport, or whether it is also tied to ancestry, culture, history, loyalty, language, shared values and a genuine sense of belonging. If someone moves to Ireland, lives here long enough, receives citizenship and contributes to society, are they Irish in exactly the same way as someone whose parents, grandparents and great grandparents were born and raised here?
    Or is there a difference between being an Irish citizen and being culturally, historically or ancestrally Irish?
    Niall also raises the comparison many people instinctively understand: if an Irish person moved to India, lived there for years and eventually became an Indian citizen, would that make them Indian, or simply an Irish person with Indian citizenship?
    This is not just a legal debate. It is an emotional one. It touches on immigration, integration, national identity, culture, respect for the host country and the future of what Ireland means. Some will argue that citizenship is enough and that anyone who commits to Ireland should be accepted fully as Irish. Others will say Irishness is something deeper than paperwork and cannot be granted by the State alone.
    So where do we draw the line? What makes someone Irish? A passport, ancestry, culture, loyalty, community, or something more difficult to define?
    Niall and John McGuirk discuss the issue, and we want to hear from you.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #812 Vaping Ban: Is The Government Treating Adults Like Children Again?

    09/07/2026 | 54 mins.
    In this episode, Niall looks at the Government’s latest crackdown on vaping, and asks whether this is a sensible public health measure or another example of the nanny state treating adults like children.
    The Public Health (Single-Use Vapes) Bill 2025 has now passed through both Houses of the Oireachtas, paving the way for a ban on the sale of disposable vapes in Ireland. Once the law is commenced, retailers are expected to be given six months to sell off existing stock before enforcement begins. After that, health enforcement officers will be able to carry out inspections to make sure single-use vapes are no longer being sold.
    Supporters say the ban is long overdue. They argue that disposable vapes are cheap, colourful, easy to hide and clearly attractive to children and teenagers. They also point to the environmental damage caused by millions of plastic, battery-operated devices being thrown away.
    But this is only one part of the Government’s wider plan.
    A separate piece of legislation, the Public Health (Tobacco Products and Nicotine Inhaling Products) (Amendment) Bill 2026, is also moving through the Oireachtas. That Bill would bring in much stricter rules on how vapes are sold and presented. It would ban retail advertising, restrict point-of-sale displays in mixed retail outlets such as supermarkets, garages and newsagents, and place new controls on the colours, images and packaging used on vaping products.
    Most controversially, it would limit vape flavour names to tobacco and unflavoured. That means popular flavours such as fruit, menthol, sweets, desserts and drinks could effectively disappear from ordinary legal sale.
    The Government says this is about protecting children from nicotine addiction and stopping companies from using bright colours, sweet flavours and cartoon-style packaging to lure young people into vaping. The Oireachtas research digest notes that around 7% of adults vape daily, while youth vaping rates are higher, with one study showing 13% of 12 to 17-year-olds had vaped in the previous 30 days, and another showing 16% of 15 to 16-year-olds vaping.
    But many adult vapers are furious. They say vaping helped them get off cigarettes, and that flavours were a major part of that. They argue that banning flavours will not stop teenagers getting products, but it may push adults back towards smoking, or push both adults and young people into the black market.
    So is the Government right to act strongly to protect children from nicotine addiction, or is it punishing adults who used vaping as a way to stop smoking?
    Should disposable vapes and flavoured liquids be banned, or should adults be free to make their own choices?
    Niall discusses the issue and asks whether Ireland is protecting public health, or simply banning anything the State does not like.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #809 Tax Them, Insure Them, Licence Them: Has the E-Scooter Free-for-All Gone Too Far?

    08/07/2026 | 1h 6 mins.
    Niall Boylan is joined by Laura Perrins, journalist with Gript Media, to discuss the growing controversy around e-scooters and calls for tougher regulation.
    Green Party leader Roderic O’Gorman has called for the law to clamp down on retailers selling e-scooters, following reports that six children were admitted to Temple Street Hospital ICU in recent days after e-scooter related accidents. Minister of State for Road Safety Sean Canney is also reported to be considering stricter rules, including mandatory registration, tax and insurance obligations similar to those placed on cars.
    But is this common sense regulation, or another example of politicians encouraging a trend and then punishing the public when things go wrong?
    There is an obvious irony in the Green Party, long associated with promoting electric transport and alternatives to cars, now calling for tougher restrictions on e-scooters. Supporters of regulation say these machines are not toys and that children are being seriously injured, with pedestrians and road users also put at risk. They argue that if e-scooters are being used on public roads, riders should face proper rules, enforcement and accountability.
    Others say making e-scooters subject to tax, insurance and registration could destroy the very purpose of them: affordable, convenient and environmentally friendly transport. Would tougher laws protect children and pedestrians, or would they simply punish responsible users?
    Should e-scooters and certain e-bikes be over-18s only? Should riders be licensed, taxed and insured like drivers? Or is this a heavy-handed response that will make cheap electric transport impossible for ordinary people?
    Niall and Laura discuss safety, personal responsibility, political hypocrisy and whether Ireland needs tougher laws before more children are seriously injured.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #810 Ireland Then vs Ireland Now: Progress or Collapse?

    08/07/2026 | 57 mins.
    Niall Boylan is joined by former journalist Larissa Nolan to ask a question that always sparks strong memories and strong opinions: what was the best time in Ireland to grow up?
    Was it the Ireland of the 60s, 70s or 80s, where children played on the streets, neighbours looked out for each other and family and community seemed stronger? Or was that Ireland far tougher than we sometimes remember, with less money, fewer opportunities, harsher schools and a society where many people had little freedom or choice?
    Niall and Larissa look back at the Ireland of the past and compare it with the Ireland of today. We may now have more wealth, better education, more technology and greater opportunity, but have we lost something important along the way? Has modern Ireland become more disconnected, more anxious, less safe and less rooted in family and community?
    They also discuss politics then and now. Ireland’s politicians of the past were far from perfect. Figures like Charlie Haughey became associated with corruption, while Bertie Ahern faced questions over truth and trust. But many people still feel that, flawed as they were, politicians of that era had a stronger sense of national identity and a greater connection to ordinary people. Is that fair, or is it just nostalgia?
    Was Ireland better when we had less but expected less? Were people happier when life was simpler? Or do we look back through rose-tinted glasses and forget the poverty, silence, emigration and lack of opportunity?
    Niall and Larissa invite listeners to share their own memories of growing up in Ireland. What era would you choose, taking into account lifestyle, happiness, family, community, crime, safety, education and life in general?
    Was Ireland better when you were young, or is the best time to grow up actually now?
    And if you have never been on air before but would like to join the conversation, send a WhatsApp saying, “Let me on.”
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #808 Is “Pregnancy Loss” the New Sanitised Word for Abortion?

    07/07/2026 | 57 mins.
    In this episode, Niall talks to Sandra Adams, advocate for women’s sex-based rights, child safeguarding and fact-based education, about the reported plan to classify both miscarriage and abortion under the same heading of “pregnancy loss” for the purposes of paid leave.
    The proposal has opened up a difficult and deeply sensitive debate. Supporters say this is about compassion, privacy and dignity in the workplace. They argue that women should not be forced to explain to an employer whether a pregnancy ended through miscarriage or abortion in order to access time off. Both can involve physical recovery, emotional distress and a need for privacy.
    But Sandra Adams strongly objects to the classification. She argues that miscarriage and abortion are not the same thing and should not be treated as though they are. A miscarriage is the involuntary loss of a pregnancy, while abortion, in elective cases, is the intentional ending of one. Sandra believes placing both under the same neutral administrative term blurs an important moral, emotional and factual distinction.
    Niall asks whether this is a compassionate workplace policy or whether language is being used to deliberately soften and sanitise abortion. Should paid leave be available in both cases without asking women to disclose deeply private medical details? Or does calling both miscarriage and abortion “pregnancy loss” ignore the very real difference between losing a baby and choosing to end a pregnancy?
    This is a conversation about language, truth, women’s rights, workplace compassion, abortion, miscarriage and whether the State should treat both situations the same when it comes to paid leave.
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About The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)
Niall Boylan is online, and nobody can hold him back. Subscribe to The Niall Boylan Show and access premium content by visiting https://niallboylan.com

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