AudreyHepburn wrote: » So he wasn't both a terrorist in his youth and a peacemaker in his later years?
Witchie wrote: » Rest in the peace that you gained for us. Thank you Mr McGuinness. It has been one rough week for the Donegal/Derry area. Danielle McLoughlin being murdered in Goa, Ryan McBride dying so young and now Martin McGuinness. .
ThisRegard wrote: » He's the only self admitted former member of the IRA, at a pretty high level, who never got involved in violence?
FrancieBrady wrote: » And you do the lazy thing again. McGuinness seen himself as a soldier and a leader of his people. His soldiering is inseparable from what he did in his later life.
AudreyHepburn wrote: » Snooty tone of your question aside, all I would like is an acknowledgement that there were two sides to the man, the terrorist in his youth, the peacemaker later on. I just think people are trying to ignore the early McGuinness, maybe because they find it too hard to look back on those difficult times.
AudreyHepburn wrote: » Autonomous Cowherd wrote: » And how should we phrase that, Audrey? A big, bold comma in the middle of the ''on the one hand, but on the other hand'' sentence? Just wondering what would satisfy you, as most of the commentators I have seen in this post have openly acknowledged the dichotomy and contradictions of the man's history. In spite of that history, there are a lot of people alive today in Northern Ireland that might not be if he had not worked very hard to make the Peace Process a reality. Would be tough to be a Heavenly judge in such a case... Snooty tone of your question aside, all I would like is an acknowledgement that there were two sides to the man, the terrorist in his youth, the peacemaker later on. I just think people are trying to ignore the early McGuinness, maybe because they find it too hard to look back on those difficult times.
Autonomous Cowherd wrote: » And how should we phrase that, Audrey? A big, bold comma in the middle of the ''on the one hand, but on the other hand'' sentence? Just wondering what would satisfy you, as most of the commentators I have seen in this post have openly acknowledged the dichotomy and contradictions of the man's history. In spite of that history, there are a lot of people alive today in Northern Ireland that might not be if he had not worked very hard to make the Peace Process a reality. Would be tough to be a Heavenly judge in such a case...
AudreyHepburn wrote: » How is acknowledging that there were two vastly different sides to him lazy? I never said the two inseparable, rather one followed as a result of the other. I really think you need to stop your hero worshiping and take a reasonable honest look at the man as whole.
steddyeddy wrote: » No you can't ignore what he did. I don't agree with bombing campaigns. However you have to understand the British in NI caused just as much bloodshed and colluded with loyalist terrorists. It's not a goodies VS the baddies scenario.
steddyeddy wrote: » AudreyHepburn wrote: » Snooty tone of your question aside, all I would like is an acknowledgement that there were two sides to the man, the terrorist in his youth, the peacemaker later on. I just think people are trying to ignore the early McGuinness, maybe because they find it too hard to look back on those difficult times. No you can't ignore what he did. I don't agree with bombing campaigns. However you have to understand the British in NI caused just as much bloodshed and colluded with loyalist terrorists. It's not a goodies VS the baddies scenario.
steddyeddy wrote: » The British have zero clue about the history most of the time. The little Englander mentality is out in force today.
Tipsy McSwagger wrote: » You have to laugh at the British establishment being interviewed and calling McGuiness a coward and a murderer when the Brits were sending death squads to NI to murder innocent Catholics. McGuinness must have done something right to upset so many horrible people who were stuck up Thatchers hole.
Prime Minister Theresa May said: First and foremost, my thoughts are with the family of Martin McGuinness at this sad time. While I can never condone the path he took in the earlier part of his life, Martin McGuinness ultimately played a defining role in leading the Republican movement away from violence. In doing so, he made an essential and historic contribution to the extraordinary journey of Northern Ireland from conflict to peace. While we certainly didn’t always see eye-to-eye even in later years, as deputy First Minister for nearly a decade he was one of the pioneers of implementing cross community power sharing in Northern Ireland. He understood both its fragility and its precious significance and played a vital part in helping to find a way through many difficult moments. At the heart of it all was his profound optimism for the future of Northern Ireland – and I believe we should all hold fast to that optimism today.
Thomas__ wrote: » What more could they have done than what they have done, eh? NI and the Troubles was a domestic matter for the Brits in the first place, not that of the Republic of Ireland, unless Ireland had taken on the UK and that way had certainly not led to what is now in NI. Always sneering at former leading politicians from the Republic and dismissing that it was Mr Ahern who was Taoiseach when the GFA was worked out and signed. That sneering doesn´t make any sense to me, it is just the usual claptrap from the usual die-hard Shinners who always know better but never did anything better than those who were at the place when history was made. Surely, the signing of the GFA was a moment of history for the whole of the Island of Ireland.
Bubbaclaus wrote: » What's your definition of a terrorist? You seem to be pushing hard to get this label attached to him. Were Padraig Pearse and Michael Collins etc also terrorists?
AudreyHepburn wrote: » I do understand that, I've never said otherwise to be fair. But there does seem to be a great number of people determined to ignore McGuinness's past or make it out to be something other than it was.
Autonomous Cowherd wrote: » I don't understand your constant request for balance ..almost as if it is not here in the thread. In the thread i am reading people can acknowledge the complexity of the situation, and are doing so, just as President Higgins has done, and other political leaders from all sides. I think if you read this thread from the beginning that, aside for a few strident remarks, which is to be expected, most people have been balanced in their appreciation of the undeniably great legacy of a complex political person.
AudreyHepburn wrote: » Some-one who uses violence to cause terror in a effort to make people capitulate to their demands is how I define a terrorist.
AudreyHepburn wrote: » I did read it from the beginning and it's very hard to see anything past the praise for McGuinness work in the Peace Process (which he absolutely deserves) and those determined to make his early years into something heroic.
Autonomous Cowherd wrote: » Okay, well we are reading the thread differently then. I also think the Irish impulse is not to put the boot in directly on the death of another, but rather to emphasize the good the person has done in this world. Almost a folk superstition I suppose, a recognition that we are all to some degree or another made up of dark and light. At the end of the day many more innocent people would be dead today were it not for his work in the past 25 years. Peace out.
AudreyHepburn wrote: » lawred2 wrote: » Who is asking you to? The tone of a lot reactions here and in the media suggest to me that a lot of people feel we should gloss over his past and be concerned only with the peace process etc.
lawred2 wrote: » Who is asking you to?
Bubbaclaus wrote: » So you would consider the British Army's presence in Northern Ireland to be a terrorist attack also then?
AudreyHepburn wrote: » dragging British policemen out a car and beating them to death in front the media just because they drove the wrong through a funeral
Bubbaclaus wrote: » AudreyHepburn wrote: » So he wasn't both a terrorist in his youth and a peacemaker in his later years? What's your definition of a terrorist? You seem to be pushing hard to get this label attached to him.
AudreyHepburn wrote: » I think you'll find on this thread that people are saying the opposite - that McGuinness is a heroic freedom fighter and the British army are evil murders. Which is also completely incorrect of course.
lawred2 wrote: » So nobody then.
FrancieBrady wrote: » He did what the republic SHOULD have been doing and was constitutionally mandated to do - protect Irish people. The IRA did not want to get involved in 69 but were forced to by continued state backed oppression and aggression.