O’Reilly was a man who believed in the truth and fearlessly defended those who sought to discover it were paid at his funeral in Dublin yesterday, it was hard to make sense of a life that was so rich, so diverse, so colourful, and, ultimately, so shrouded in pathos.
I prefer to think of him in the latter terms, and certainly my life would have been much diminished had I not been in his orbit for more than a decade. Tony appointed me as editor ofin the spring of 1998, and, in a letter he sent me a year later, he began by saying: “I have not thought to share my views .”. He was proud of bestowing on his editor and columnists the freedom to exercise independence from the paper’s paymaster as much as from political association.
On another occasion, he said: “My only value to you is to point out where danger lies.” And no single event during my editorship epitomised a reluctance to employ hisThe paper was united in its outspoken opposition to the war, and I only found out later that, in this touchpoint, defining issue of the time, Tony held a view that was directly contrary to that of the paper he supported financially, often against the wishes of those around him.
O’Brien, a fellow Irish magnate, sought revenge on Tony for being beaten by him in a bid for the Irish telecom company Eircom, and for negative press coverage in the Irish papers that Tony owned.
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