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Is Sinn Fein right? (The Stack Issue)

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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,311 ✭✭✭✭weldoninhio


    Jawgap wrote: »
    How do they deserve credit for that when it was an organisation who enjoys their unconditional support that killed most, if not all, of them in the first place???

    That really demonstrates just how warped SF logic is.

    And seriously, I'd still well clear of mentioning suicide and SF in the same sentence......don't they control the Dept of Health in NI? Are they not in government there?

    Suicide Among the Ceasefire Babies

    You never mentioned if you were gonna hang Nelson Mandela either.


  • Posts: 18,749 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    It is when you couple it with the rather bewildering statement that we didn't aid in securing a border.

    We didn't aid in securing a border.
    We had Gardai in areas where terrorists were operating and there was a risk to the state.

    FYI, Gardai also supply protection to ambassadors in this country that are at risk from other terrorists.
    Do you think we shouldn't have any protection in this country from terrorists?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    And yet the gained 5x the seats they had after the last election.

    Who do you vote for?? Not many stories about FF handcuffing people to carts and dropping live grenades into their pockets during the War of Independence. But "that's the past" now
    Locking the detail of that away for the guts of 100 years seems to have solved the problem for FF and FG, who now seem evangelic about full disclosure about a conflict/war that happened because they abandoned NI and stood idly by while it combusted and compounded that abandonment by tacitly (if not deliberately) taking the side of Britain and Unionism.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    bubblypop wrote: »
    We didn't aid in securing a border.
    We had Gardai in areas where terrorists were operating and there was a risk to the state.

    FYI, Gardai also supply protection to ambassadors in this country that are at risk from other terrorists.
    Do you think we shouldn't have any protection in this country from terrorists?

    I think I am confused here. You seem to be saying we did secure the border but yet we didn't. An English army, a British Army. :confused:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,681 ✭✭✭Fleawuss


    The only bit of that I need to quote. We agree, they were involved then.

    I disagree on describing them as lunatics.

    They were not involved in any war. They were deployed to stop lunacy spreading. "Involved" is Provo speak for trying to reinvent reality. Give it a rest.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Fleawuss wrote: »
    They were not involved in any war. They were deployed to stop lunacy spreading. "Involved" is Provo speak for trying to reinvent reality. Give it a rest.

    We can argue about the classification of 'lunacy', because that is subjective. But there is no argument that we were involved in the conflict/war.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,311 ✭✭✭✭weldoninhio


    kbannon wrote: »
    So a TD is actively protecting a murderer and you're OK with that?
    If it was a drug dealer that shot an unarmed woman in the street, would you be equally as tolerant of a TD protecting the murderer?


    What would the purpose of such a process be?
    Would amnesty be provided to all witnesses?
    Which organisation would be first to "testify"?
    Would all murderers provide full and complete information?
    Would that information be in relation to sectarian crimes or all crimes including those not ordered by their superiors?


    Adams goal here is to protect his friend(s) who murdered someone outside of his pretend army's command.


    So rherefore if the IRA didn't exist, Stacks father would still be alive?
    But the IRA didn't sanction the murder so what us your point?
    Or are you simply trying to change the facts that are out there?

    Hasn't Micheal Martin had the names too since 2013??


  • Posts: 18,749 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I think I am confused here. You seem to be saying we did secure the border but yet we didn't. An English army, a British Army. :confused:

    Don't be confused
    We had Gardai in areas that terrorists were active.
    Are you suggesting that AGS shouldn't protect our citizens against terrorists?
    The Irish state did not secure any border.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,681 ✭✭✭Fleawuss


    We can argue about the classification of 'lunacy', because that is subjective. But there is no argument that we were involved in the conflict/war.

    Ireland was not involved in any war. Irish soldiers did not engage in any combat missions or battles. You are, like all Provos, deluded.

    The lunacy in the North was born of both sides: the bastard statelet with its rabid sectarianism and anti Catholic violence and the wannabe soldiers among the Provos along with assorted psychopaths. Add to that British murder gangs and you have the basket case that was NI. History will acknowledge the achievement of successive Irish governments in keeping that contained to those who bred it. The late Brian Stack played his part in that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    I know the Politics Forum doesn't like these debates degenerating into pitched battles so let's try to refocus on the original question.
    In my opinion the sign at the end of YET another cul de sac of faux outrage says, do not proceed past this point unless you are prepared to accept that every family needs closure, on all sides, and the only way to get that is to do what the combatants that became FF and FG did, which was to suppress all detail and consign the country to civil war politics for generations OR to construct a process were living survivors are given an opportunity to find out the why and were for of what happened to their loved ones.

    All this is based on the real and present fact that no other process has worked here. See: Gerry's membership, Jean McConville, Maria Cahill, Brian Stack, Ballymurphyt, Bloody Sunday, Omagh, Enniskillen, Le Mon etc etc etc etc.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Fleawuss wrote: »
    Ireland was not involved in any war. Irish soldiers did not engage in any combat missions or battles. You are, like all Provos, deluded.

    The lunacy in the North was born of both sides: the bastard statelet with its rabid sectarianism and anti Catholic violence and the wannabe soldiers among the Provos along with assorted psychopaths. Add to that British murder gangs and you have the basket case that was NI. History will acknowledge the achievement of successive Irish governments in keeping that contained to those who bred it. The late Brian Stack played his part in that.

    Not sure what I have to do here, let's try this. Even if they were aliens, we were still involved in trying to stop them. Involved = Involved.
    Short of a diagram I'm not sure how I can help.

    You can have you opinion of there mental health all you want. Personally I think the lunatics were those that thought you could SECURE a border on this island ad spent billions trying. Do you know how many IRA men and women were caught coming through the border? Look it up, you won't require many fingers to tally it up.


  • Posts: 18,749 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    The main issue is, if you believe that the provos were in a war against England/ Britain / the UK
    Then you can probably accept their terrorist acts against the mainland, or British forces in northern Ireland.
    The IRA however, were never at war against the Irish State.
    The Irish state, if I'm not mistaken, is what the IRA wanted the whole country to be?
    So any single criminal act that they committed in southern Ireland is exactly that, a criminal offence.
    Which includes the murders of all public servants in the south, as well as all robberies etc that they committed.


  • Posts: 18,749 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Not sure what I have to do here, let's try this. Even if they were aliens, we were still involved in trying to stop them. Involved = Involved.
    Short of a diagram I'm not sure how I can help.

    You can have you opinion of there mental health all you want.

    Are we involved in a war against the PKK?
    Are we involved in a war against ISIS?
    AGS protect all citizens in this land against terrorists.
    The state do not need to be at war with anyone to protect our citizens ( and others )


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    bubblypop wrote: »
    Are we involved in a war against the PKK?
    Are we involved in a war against ISIS?
    AGS protect all citizens in this land against terrorists.
    The state do not need to be at war with anyone to protect our citizens ( and others )

    :) where did I say we(the Irish state) were at 'war'?
    I said we involved ourselves by securing the border and the rest.

    But 60-80 Garda, in a town of 2000 is apparently nothing to do with being involved in securing a border.

    I have nothing more to say on the 'lunacy'of this particular sidebar.


  • Posts: 18,749 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    :) where did I say we(the Irish state) were at 'war'?
    I said we involved ourselves by securing the border and the rest.

    But 60-80 Garda, in a town of 2000 is apparently nothing to do with being involved in securing a border.

    I have nothing more to say on the 'lunacy'of this particular sidebar.

    But we didn't secure the border.
    We protected our citizens from terrorists that were active on our side Of The border.
    No securing any border by the Irish state. At all.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,013 ✭✭✭davycc


    bubblypop wrote: »
    But we didn't secure the border.
    We protected our citizens from terrorists that were active on our side Of The border.
    No securing any border by the Irish state. At all.

    If you where too young to recall our average road crossing from RoI to NI was setup like so .on the northern side of the border RUC-British army and on the southern side armed and unarmed Gardaí and the Irish army.
    I was part of the Irish army who secured our border on a daily basis on behalf of our state-government.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,296 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Sorry, can't be bothered debating this one.
    They were just resting in the station, for free. Okie doke :)


    *It was a British Army BTW.

    So, as the poster who drove a whole aspect of this thread to discuss the semantics of the words 'blacked out van' - you are now complaining about someone pulling you up on your use of language and refusing to engage because they pulled out a single phrase from a post and took it literally.......riiiiiiiight.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,296 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    You never mentioned if you were gonna hang Nelson Mandela either.

    Well what that has to do with anything, I don't know.

    I wouldn't hang anyone because I don't believe in capital punishment and I certainly don't believe it should be meted out summarily on a Dublin street to a public servant 'guilty' of just doing their job.......or a taxi driver or widow, even if they did tout.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,920 ✭✭✭billy few mates


    Not sure what I have to do here....

    Let me help you, from what I can see your main role on here seems to be to engage with every single poster that challenges the approved doctrine or questions the motives of the party leader or any party member on a 24/7 basis by responding to every single post that challenges the narrative you're desperately trying to peddle.
    Your current mission or project seems to be an attempt at rewriting the history of this island to spin the fanciful notion that the IRA were somehow 'involved in a war' with the Republic of Ireland in some sort of a desperate effort to sanitise and justify the brutal murder of a servant of this state, in order to save the blushes and political career of the party leader....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Let me help you, from what I can see your main role on here seems to be to engage with every single poster that challenges the approved doctrine or questions the motives of the party leader or any party member on a 24/7 basis by responding to every single post that challenges the narrative you're desperately trying to peddle.
    Your current mission or project seems to be an attempt at rewriting the history of this island to spin the fanciful notion that the IRA were somehow 'involved in a war' with the Republic of Ireland in some sort of a desperate effort to sanitise and justify the brutal murder of a servant of this state, in order to save the blushes and political career of the party leader....

    Were did I do that now?

    Talking of working things out, how would anyone seriously contend that the IRA were at war with the Irish state? A comparison of the casualty figures alone would show that to be a spurious argument. One prison officer?

    My point is that the Irish state involved itself (you are entitled to opinion on that) in the conflict/war and therefore there were going to be casualties.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Jawgap wrote: »
    So, as the poster who drove a whole aspect of this thread to discuss the semantics of the words 'blacked out van' - you are now complaining about someone pulling you up on your use of language and refusing to engage because they pulled out a single phrase from a post and took it literally.......riiiiiiiight.

    Do you agree with the poster or not? That the Irish state assisted in securing the border they were constitutionally against?

    Doesn't matter why you think they did it really, whether you think they were lunatics or aliens, they either did or they didn't. What would a potential PHd holder say?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,296 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Do you agree with the poster or not? That the Irish state assisted in securing the border they were constitutionally against?

    Doesn't matter why you think they did it really, whether you think they were lunatics or aliens, they either did or they didn't. What would a potential PHd holder say?

    Of course they did - look, we're a sovereign state and we are, to the best of our limited abilities, going to defend our borders......that's what sovereign states do.....
    The purpose of the Defence Forces is to defend the State against armed aggression from either internal or external sources and to fulfil all other roles assigned by Government.
    The ability of a sovereign nation-state to preserve and enhance the security and well-being of its people defines the defence role, and in the case of Ireland, the Defence Forces' role.
    Roles Assigned to the Defence Forces by Government
    • to defend the State against armed aggression; this being a contingency, preparations for its implementation will depend on an ongoing Government assessment of threats;
    • to aid the Civil Power (meaning in practice to assist, when requested, the Garda Síochána, who have primary responsibility for law and order, including the protection of the internal security of the State);
    Defence Forces’ Mission

    To contribute to the security of the State by providing for the military
    defence of its territorial integrity and to fulfil all roles assigned by
    Government through the deployment of well-motivated and effective
    Defence Forces.

    Once again the subtlety of the argument and wording is proving elusive to you......being for a 'national territory' is not the same as asserting sovereignty or being constitutionally 'against' the border......in fact the 'old' Article 3 made it clear the sovereigny of the state is co-terminus with the boundaries defined for the Free State.....
    .....the laws enacted by the parliament shall have the like area and extent of application as the laws of Saorstát Éireann


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,296 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Do you agree with the poster or not? That the Irish state assisted in securing the border they were constitutionally against?

    Doesn't matter why you think they did it really, whether you think they were lunatics or aliens, they either did or they didn't. What would a potential PHd holder say?

    Oh, and point of order.......I'm not "a potential PHd holder" - I'm an actual one.......the PhD in modern history I'm doing will be my second PhD, although the first is hardly relevant to the topic at hand as it doesn't relate to history or the interpretation thereof.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Jawgap wrote: »
    Of course they did - look, we're a sovereign state and we are, to the best of our limited abilities, going to defend our borders......that's what sovereign states do.....

    Thank you.





    Once again the subtlety of the argument and wording is proving elusive to you......being for a 'national territory' is not the same as asserting sovereignty or being constitutionally 'against' the border......in fact the 'old' Article 3 made it clear the sovereigny of the state is co-terminus with the boundaries defined for the Free State.....

    No argument that that was the theoretical case.
    The reality on the ground was that they assisted the British is securing a border because of Unionist agitation. They stationed there what became known as the 'Heavy Gang' which concentrated on policing the Nationalist/Republican community alone. Policing that brought the attention of Amnesty International and much other criticism for it's violent and Stasi like qualities.
    http://www.irishtimes.com/news/lynch-urged-to-act-on-amnesty-report-into-garda-heavy-gang-1.995288

    The reality was that that those actions enflamed the nationalist community who didn't quite see the subtleties you could on the ground. Which is critical when assessing/interpreting what actually happened.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,296 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Thank you.








    No argument that that was the theoretical case.
    The reality on the ground was that they assisted the British is securing a border because of Unionist agitation. They stationed there what became known as the 'Heavy Gang' which concentrated on policing the Nationalist/Republican community alone. Policing that brought the attention of Amnesty International and much other criticism for it's violent and Stasi like qualities.
    http://www.irishtimes.com/news/lynch-urged-to-act-on-amnesty-report-into-garda-heavy-gang-1.995288

    The reality was that that those actions enflamed the nationalist community who didn't quite see the subtleties you could on the ground. Which is critical when assessing/interpreting what actually happened.

    No, they defended the State and the citizens - there's a reason they were called subversives......you really have a fixation with the "heavy gang" - and why capitalise the description especially as there was more than one?

    btw, the Stasi were an intelligence agency, not a policing agency - again a subtle but very important distinction. You'd be better comparing Garda and RUC policing to the VoPo, rather than the Stasi, them's de boys that helped build the Berlin Wall etc


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    Jawgap wrote: »
    No, they defended the State and the citizens - there's a reason they were called subversives......you really have a fixation with the "heavy gang" - and why capitalise the description especially as there was more than one?

    btw, the Stasi were an intelligence agency, not a policing agency - again a subtle but very important distinction. You'd be better comparing Garda and RUC policing to the VoPo, rather than the Stasi, them's de boys that helped build the Berlin Wall etc

    Then they were 'involved'. It's not that hard to accept what I am saying. Really.

    The Heavy Gang gathered intelligence too, quite a bit of it. And their methods were draconian.
    But comparisons to other forces are valid too.

    And I am not 'obsessed' with them, in my opinion they contributed to a large degree to the environment where 'shots were fired in anger' and situations got out of hand. Reactionary violence was always going to happen.
    Similarly the behaviour and methods of officers in prisons and the alleged negligence of the minister for Justice (that were criticised by prison officers, see earlier link) led to reactionary violence.

    At the risk of starting howls of derision I would contend that it is amazing that there were not more casualties among the Irish security forces and if anything, it shows, a large degree of restraint among republican activists.

    Take that any way you want, it is not intended to defend any action against the Irish security forces, it's just a realistic opinion and an attempt to understand what happened.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,313 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    But they don't abide when it suits. The UN sat on it's hands when the north combusted and the British and Irish govs sat idly by.
    Forgive me if I think the UN is full of nonsense tbh.

    They had to be invited in AFAIK.

    They can't invade countries! No point getting angry at something they've no power over.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 73,516 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    K-9 wrote: »
    They had to be invited in AFAIK.

    They can't invade countries! No point getting angry at something they've no power over.

    Nobody said they should 'invade'.
    Paddy Hillery proposed that the UN send in a force in 1969
    Hillery's laudable idea was to have an independent non partisan force in place to diffuse tensions as the situation reached boiling point.
    Britain rejected the proposal.
    The UN complied and said nothing, and criticised nothing
    The armed forces of one of the 5 founding members of the UN then opened fire on innocent civilians on a human rights protest and the rest is tragic history.
    Some Irish people knew what was about to happen but were ignored/brushed aside. To them and to me, the UN in an Irish context was as useful as a handshake from a wet fish.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,414 ✭✭✭blackwhite


    Is the gist of the argument here now that people employed by the Irish Government were legitimate IRA targets, because the Govt "involved" itself by refusing to give specicial dispensation to the IRA and by not allowing IRA members break any laws they chose to?

    Is that really the warped logic that is being peddled now?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,296 ✭✭✭✭Jawgap


    Then they were 'involved'. It's not that hard to accept what I am saying. Really.

    The Heavy Gang gathered intelligence too, quite a bit of it. And their methods were draconian.
    But comparisons to other forces are valid too.

    And I am not 'obsessed' with them, in my opinion they contributed to a large degree to the environment where 'shots were fired in anger' and situations got out of hand. Reactionary violence was always going to happen.
    Similarly the behaviour and methods of officers in prisons and the alleged negligence of the minister for Justice (that were criticised by prison officers, see earlier link) led to reactionary violence.

    At the risk of starting howls of derision I would contend that it is amazing that there were not more casualties among the Irish security forces and if anything, it shows, a large degree of restraint among republican activists.

    Take that any way you want, it is not intended to defend any action against the Irish security forces, it's just a realistic opinion and an attempt to understand what happened.

    Of course they were involved - there was an armed bunch of thugs looking to subvert the democratically enacted constitution of the state and Oglaigh na hEireann and An Garda Siochana worked to mitigate that threat - that included co-operating with the British and securing, as far as was practical, the land border with the UK......

    .......because that's what the citizens wanted. We didn't want to spend huge chunks of what little money we had building up a military capacity to fight NATO, we just wanted to get on with life.


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