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RIP Martin McGuinness

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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 3,430 ✭✭✭RustyNut


    elefant wrote: »
    I'd genuinely like to hear.

    You don't think he was a terrorist. Why not?

    And I'm not saying this in an effort to tarnish the man's legacy. I think history will remember him in a positive light for the important work on peace he did in politics in his later life.

    What would your definition of a terrorist be?


  • Registered Users Posts: 250 ✭✭DrWu


    Maybe his victims can RIP as well.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,438 ✭✭✭j8wk2feszrnpao


    PhuckHugh wrote: »
    We completely turned our back on the nationalist in the north and let them at the mercy of an establishment and almost terrorist state that despised them. You then have clowns coming in here calling nationalists who stood up for their community scumbags and the likes... I merely pointed out that's it's rich spitting on these people when growing up in the comfort of the south... War, i'm not so sure about, but we needed to do more to protect our own and we didn't... Our conservative media and state broadcaster did little to help matters either.
    I think their may have been one person who stepped over the line on McGuniness; largely it's been one of respect in the thread towards him.

    You may call it standing up for a community, but bombing innocent people isn't viewed in a similar manner by everyone.

    Again, what action did you want them to take? And what did you want the media and RTE to do exactly? You now have the benefit of hindsight that they didn't, but you don't suggest anything.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 71,051 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    I think their may have been one person who stepped over the line on McGuniness; largely it's been one of respect in the thread towards him.

    You may call it standing up for a community, but bombing innocent people isn't viewed in a similar manner by everyone.

    Again, what action did you want them to take? And what did you want the media and RTE to do exactly? You now have the benefit of hindsight that they didn't, but you don't suggest anything.

    Jack Lynch KNEW what would happen if they did nothing in 69.
    They did nothing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,672 ✭✭✭elefant


    McGuinness was in conflict/war with those he believed were terrorising his community. And they were in 'fact' doing everything that the IRA and SF claimed they were over the years, from taking a side in the conflict to engaging in covert terror acts.
    On this day of his death that is no longer happening, and his community have parity of esteem and equality.

    Call him what you want, who really cares. :rolleyes:

    Being in conflict with the British government I can understand. Bombing supermarkets and pubs full of civilians is another story. To me, that is terrorism.

    I doubt I'm alone in being torn in terms of hugely respecting the work he did as a politician, while hating some of the acts the organisation he played a leadership role in committed.

    As for your closing comment; I neither expect nor hope that you care what I think. I'm just trying to understand the nuances of some very black/white thinking around a man with many tones of grey.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,672 ✭✭✭elefant


    steddyeddy wrote: »
    Of course he was. As was Nelson Mandela. Terrorist as a word does not characterise the sum worth of either person.

    I completely agree. And I'm not trying to reduce the man to decisions he made while in his youth.

    I'm just trying to get a sense of where each side is coming from, because the extremities in the opinions that are held in this case are interesting.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,348 ✭✭✭✭ricero


    Only heard the terrible news. RIP Martin. You helped bring peace and stability to a troubled region


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,220 ✭✭✭✭Wanderer78


    Rip


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,438 ✭✭✭j8wk2feszrnpao


    Jack Lynch KNEW what would happen if they did nothing in 69.
    They did nothing.
    And they should have done what?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 71,051 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    elefant wrote: »
    Being in conflict with the British government I can understand. Bombing supermarkets and pubs full of civilians is another story. To me, that is terrorism.

    I doubt I'm alone in being torn in terms of hugely respecting the work he did as a politician, while hating some of the acts the organisation he played a leadership role in committed.

    As for your closing comment; I neither expect nor hope that you care what I think. I'm just trying to understand the nuances of some very black/white thinking around man with many tones of grey.

    As is bombing cities from 20,000 feet - terrorism.

    The British are spending billions on a couple of aircraft carriers furnished with state of the art military jets. They are not designed to shower the communities they visit with sweets. They are designed to terrorise others into submission to the will of those who own the carriers.

    Are they 'terrorists'?

    Nobody is condoning what happened when the north was allowed to erupt, but cop on with the trite descriptors.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,672 ✭✭✭elefant


    As is bombing cities from 20,000 feet - terrorism.

    The British are spending billions on a couple of aircraft carriers furnished with state of the art military jets. They are not designed to shower the communities they visit with sweets. They are designed to terrorise others into submission to the will of those who own the carriers.

    Are they 'terrorists'?

    Nobody is condoning what happened when the north was allowed to erupt, but cop on with the trite descriptors.

    Cop on with the whataboutery.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    elefant wrote: »
    I completely agree. And I'm not trying to reduce the man to decisions he made while in his youth.

    I'm just trying to get a sense of where each side is coming from, because the extremities in the opinions that are held in this case are interesting.

    As I say my family were SDLP and the civil rights movement but my uncle left the North after Bloody Sunday. He said after that there was always going to be violence.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,380 ✭✭✭sonofenoch


    Always confused me why the likes of Pearse and Connolly are lauded as heroes by conservative Ireland but the same people vilify McGuinness and Adams......is it because as Tubridy put it in his interview with with Adams 'a different time'


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 71,051 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    And they should have done what?

    There are other threads discussing that, re-open them and discuss. What is abundantly clear is that the Irish government knew the vacuum was forming from their in-action and STILL did nothing.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    sonofenoch wrote: »
    Always confused me why the likes of Pearse and Connolly are lauded as heroes by conservative Ireland but the same people vilify McGuinness and Adams......is it because as Tubridy put it in his interview with with Adams 'a different time'

    It's completely and utterly ridiculous. Bloody Sunday happened in both times and both spurned on violent reprisals. Yet some people are far enough removed from the earlier one that they try and differentiate the two.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,420 ✭✭✭Lollipops23


    I don't love the acts they carried out, particularly the "non-legitimate" targets (where completely innocent people died). I do think it was the only chance they ever had at being heard though, and the Good Friday Agreement never would have come to pass without those otherwise heinous acts.

    Political genius, he will be sorely missed by Ireland both North and South.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,789 ✭✭✭Alf Stewart.


    bubblypop wrote: »
    I don't think it matters really does it?
    Well, it kinda does actually, "British policemen" seems a tad too fluffy and cuddly a description to place on two members of the SAS, or, two highly trained processional killers and soldiers, they are the "crème de la crème" of the British military.

    They were killed in active service.
    The video of this attack remains one of the most horrific i have ever seen. I don't believe anyone could watch it without being seriously emotionally disturbed.

    I found the various news reports on Bloody Sunday much more so.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 71,051 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    elefant wrote: »
    Cop on with the whataboutery.

    You don't like your 'definitions' applied to others? Quelle suprise.
    Ask the people rained on by the bombs for their definitions of who the terrorists are?
    It's a useless meaningless term made popular by Maggie Thatcher while she was secretly trying to negotiate a deal with the very people she publicly claimed she would never deal with.

    You might have trouble spotting the hypocrites but I don't.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,321 ✭✭✭✭NIMAN


    As a fellow Derry man, another sad loss for the city.

    I didn't always agree with his beliefs, but I have no doubt he made this country a better place for my children.

    And for that alone, he deserves respect.

    Rip.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,438 ✭✭✭j8wk2feszrnpao


    There are other threads discussing that, re-open them and discuss. What is abundantly clear is that the Irish government knew the vacuum was forming from their in-action and STILL did nothing.
    If there are similar threads open, why don't you post there and discuss it? You are referencing it here; if you don't have an answer, then fine.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,639 ✭✭✭andekwarhola


    Obviously it's hard (for me anyway) to gloss over the earlier paramilitary incarnation, especially when people like Hume never went down that road despite being vilified.

    For all that though, his (McGuiness) brilliant later statesmanship, dedication to the peace process in the face of Unionist intransigence and the personal risks he took, deserves the most sincere plaudits.

    It's ironically instructive of the class and sectarian strictures of NI at that time that such a clearly able and intelligent working class Catholic was a butchers assistant, then a paramilitary commander - because of the sweep of the Troubles - before becoming one of the most able politicians of the modern era in NI. I'm sure in a slightly different reality, he could well have been highly successful in another field as a matter of course.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 618 ✭✭✭Thomas__


    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.
    Without Ahern the good Friday agreement was still possible without Martin onside it was not.
    I expect nothing else than ahern to accept credit for the gfa, more claptrap from the die hard Fianna Fáil supporters.
    Just to add what did the previous governments do to help the plight of there citizens up north.
    What means did the previous governments of the Republic of Ireland had to help in the first place?

    Btw, I am neither for FF, FG, SF or Labour. I judge the People by their characters and achievements, and I even hold some respect for Charles J. Haughey, in spite the fact that there are many Irish People who look at him as and call him a crook. My political leaning is centre-left and superfically saying, I consider myself to have more in common with the in 2015 founded Social Democrats than any other political Party in the Republic of Ireland.

    In the end of the day, it counts more to me what every single politician has done for the good of the Republic of Ireland in the first place, cos that was their Domain to give their best efforts. Just that there are hardly any Irish People I have come across so far who not always find one or another Irish politician to project their animosity on and loath about, doesn´t influences me at all. Every Taoiseach, since the Irish Free State was established, contributed to the future of this country. One never held that office and is still at the top of all the great Irishmen in this islands history and that is Michael Collins. Close behind Comes Arthur Griffith, Sean Lemass, then Jack Lynch and to some extend C. J. Haughey. I also have some respect for Reynolds (though a tad too weak imo), Berty Ahern (not convicted for any wrong doing). I pity Cowen (he had to pick up the pieces after Ahern resigned), but I don´t find Kenny that worse like others see him (had to bring Ireland through the financial crisis with the hardships that came along, but which other countries also had to endure).

    The many of them being from FF, it´s not my fault that they were cos, see it as it was, they always got their votes from the Irish electorate.

    The very only Irish politician I can´t stand is De Valera (too cosy with the Catholic Church and imo partly too stubborn on the Republic when there was no way to achieve it and he knew that perfectly well himself, and partly to weak to prevail against the other die-hards on the anti-treaty side like Brugha). He also was the one Holding Ireland backwards for decades. Lemass brought Ireland into modernity, Haughey set the seeds to bring Ireland to the 21st Century and Ahern reaped what was coming out of it and there hadn´t been the period of the "Celtic Tiger" without the work of his predecessors. Well, I am not saying that every man hadn´t his faults, but what Counts in the end is what they achieved.

    Mrs McGuinness never had the means to do likewise, cos he grew up and lived in a different country, but he achieved, together with others, peace in NI and if there is any legacy on his part, this is the very thing on his side which he´ll always be remembered as being part of. But also his way of conduct regarding his IRA past, on which - I think - he wasn´t quite that frank and admitting. That part was the very reason for why he lost to Higgins in the last presidential election.

    I really find it curious to notice how many people are jumping to defend McGuinness when it comes to his life and doings, the so called "failure" of the Republic to stand up for the Irish people in NI but on the other hand, reading posts from people who are uttery opposed to any chance of re-unification with NI. Well, I know, the political Standing is always leading the way of argumentation, one is either pro or contra. There is rarely something inbetween with a balance upon which one can build a better future. That´s a pity.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,672 ✭✭✭elefant


    You don't like your 'definitions' applied to others? Quelle suprise.
    Ask the people rained on by the bombs for their definitions of who the terrorists are?
    It's a useless meaningless term made popular by Maggie Thatcher while she was secretly trying to negotiate a deal with the very people she publicly claimed she would never deal with.

    You might have trouble spotting the hypocrites but I don't.

    Your post was all about 'what about the British?'. I'm not asking about them; call them what you want, nobody cares.

    I'm asking about Martin McGuinness. Both sides terrorising each other doesn't make both sides equally right.

    For all the perceptiveness, you seem to think I'm posting as some sort of defender of the British empire.


  • Registered Users Posts: 683 ✭✭✭PhuckHugh


    Thomas__ wrote: »
    What means did the previous governments of the Republic of Ireland had to help in the first place?

    Btw, I am neither for FF, FG, SF or Labour. I judge the People by their characters and achievements, and I even hold some respect for Charles J. Haughey, in spite the fact that there are many Irish People who look at him as and call him a crook. My political leaning is centre-left and superfically saying, I consider myself to have more in common with the in 2015 founded Social Democrats than any other political Party in the Republic of Ireland.

    In the end of the day, it counts more to me what every single politician has done for the good of the Republic of Ireland in the first place, cos that was their Domain to give their best efforts. Just that there are hardly any Irish People I have come across so far who always find one or another Irish politician to project their animosity on and loath about, doesn´t influences me at all. Every Taoiseach, since the Irish Free State was established, contributed to the future of this country. One never held that office and is still at the top of all the great Irishmen in this islands history and that is Michael Collins. Close behind Comes Arthur Griffith, Sean Lemass, then Jack Lynch and to some extend C. J. Haughey. I also have some respect for Reynolds (though a tad too weak imo), Berty Ahern (not convicted for any wrong doing). I pity Cowen (he had to pick up the pieces after Ahern resigned), but I don´t find Kenny that worse like others see him (had to bring Ireland through the financial crisis with the hardships that came along, but which other countries also had to endure).

    The many of them being from FF, it´s not my fault that they were cos, see it as it was, they always got their votes from the Irish electorate.

    The very only Irish politician I can´t stand is De Valera (too cosy with the Catholic Church and imo partly too stubborn on the Republic when there was no way to achieve it and he knew that perfectly well himself, and partly to weak to prevail against the other die-hards on the anti-treaty side like Brugha). He also was the one Holding Ireland backwards for decades. Lemass brought Ireland into modernity, Haughey set the seeds to bring Ireland to the 21st Century and Ahern reaped what was coming out of it and there hadn´t been the period of the "Celtic Tiger" without the work of his predecessors. Well, I am not saying that every man hadn´t his faults, but what Counts in the end is what they achieved.

    Mrs McGuinness never had the means to do likewise, cos he grew up and lived in a different country, but he achieved, together with others, peace in NI and if there is any legacy on his part, this is the very thing on his side which he´ll always be remembered as being part of. But also his way of conduct regarding his IRA past, on which - I think - he wasn´t quite that frank and admitting. That part was the very reason for why he lost to Higgins in the last presidential election.

    I really find it curious to notice how many people are jumping to defend McGuinness when it comes to his life and doings, the so called "failure" of the Republic to stand up for the Irish people in NI but on the other hand, reading posts from people who are uttery opposed to any chance of re-unification with NI. Well, I know, the political Standing is always leading the way of argumentation, one is either pro or contra. There is rarely something inbetween with a balance upon which one can build a better future. That´s a pity.

    Pure WUM.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,839 ✭✭✭Jelle1880


    elefant wrote: »
    Your post was all about 'what about the British?'. I'm not asking about them; call them what you want, nobody cares.

    I'm asking about Martin McGuinness. Both sides terrorising each other doesn't make both sides equally right.

    For all the perceptiveness, you seem to think I'm posting as some sort of defender of the British empire.

    It seems to be a common tactic.

    Mention the atrocities that were done under his command and you're bound to get a response about the Brits. Because that somehow makes it ok I guess ?

    I think Hitchens summed it up perfectly about Ian Paisley and Gerry Adams, and it probably works for McGuinness too:
    The British laws of libel forbid me to tell what I heard when I was a young reporter in the pubs and back streets of Belfast, but I'll put it like this: Both Paisley and Adams know very well of things that happened that should never have happened. And both of them, in order to arrive at that smug power-sharing press conference, have had to arrange to seem adequately uninformed about such horrid past events. Both have been photographed carrying coffins at political funerals—funerals that were at one time the main cultural activity in each of their "communities." One day, their private role in filling those coffins will be fully exposed. In the meantime, they are the recognized and designated peacemakers. If you can bring yourself to applaud this, you are a masochist clapping a well-matched pair of sadists.

    How can Paisley and Adams face the families of the victims and tell them that it was all for nothing and less than nothing? The answer to this poignant question is that they don't have to, because we are all so pathetically grateful for their forbearance that we are now willing to hand them control of the region that they have so desolated and profaned.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 71,051 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    elefant wrote: »
    Your post was all about 'what about the British?'. I'm not asking about them; call them what you want, nobody cares.

    I'm asking about Martin McGuinness. Both sides terrorising each other doesn't make both sides equally right.

    For all the perceptiveness, you seem to think I'm posting as some sort of defender of the British empire.

    You use of the term 'terrorist' is meaningless and it required a comparison to point that out.

    Both sides used terror. All sides use terror in war/conflict since the dawn of time.
    Everyone is a 'terrorist' therefore. Still want to use it selectively and then pretend you are not simply taking a side? :rolleyes: Go ahead, who cares.


  • Posts: 3,637 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    It's sometimes sad when someone dies. Sometimes it's sad because of the character of the person, the circumstances of their passing or the loss their family will feel.

    Martin McGuinness' death may be some of those things to some people but to me the greatest sadness comes from seeing so many Irish people praise his efforts for peace and attempts to portray him as some kind of folk hero. He should be remembered for what he was, a paramilitary commander who committed murder in the name of the nationalist movement. A man with the cold and cruel ability to blow up pubs, hotels and market squares no matter who may be there at the time.

    Martin McGuinness ran out of time leading and directing a violent, bloody, murderous campaign using normal everyday people as pawns, blowing them to pieces, maiming and mentally scarring the survivors and their families in the cold and calculating process.

    He had no choice to make. Peace was on the cards, with or without him. He was the man in the seat at the time but it wasn't his decision, when the community he supposedly represented wanted something his guns and bombs couldn't deliver. He went to his grave knowing more than he told about the victims of his violence and that's unforgivable. The years he spent in politics do not wash the blood from his hands.

    Never forget that.

    He wasn't a good man, let alone a hero.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,808 ✭✭✭take everything


    RIP.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 71,051 ✭✭✭✭FrancieBrady


    JayZeus wrote: »
    It's sometimes sad when someone dies. Sometimes it's sad because of the character of the person, the circumstances of their passing or the loss their family will feel.

    Martin McGuinness' death may be some of those things to some people but to me the greatest sadness comes from seeing so many Irish people praise his efforts for peace and attempts to portray him as some kind of folk hero. He should be remembered for what he was, a paramilitary commander who committed murder in the name of the nationalist movement. A man with the cold and cruel ability to blow up pubs, hotels and market squares no matter who may be there at the time.

    Martin McGuinness ran out of time leading and directing a violent, bloody, murderous campaign using normal everyday people as pawns, blowing them to pieces, maiming and mentally scarring the survivors and their families in the cold and calculating process.

    He had no choice to make. Peace was on the cards, with or without him. He was the man in the seat at the time but it wasn't his decision, when the community he supposedly represented wanted something his guns and bombs couldn't deliver. He went to his grave knowing more than he told about the victims of his violence and that's unforgivable. The years he spent in politics do not wash the blood from his hands.

    Never forget that.

    He wasn't a good man, let alone a hero.

    At least you are honest and don't engage in the patronising compartmentalising.
    I would argue that you are wrong but that is for another thread maybe.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 618 ✭✭✭Thomas__


    PhuckHugh wrote: »
    Why?
    The state was formed because men like McGuinness and women went to 'war' with the British.

    Charlie Flanagan this morning was funny, like some here, in his compartmentalising.
    He was making the trite point that McGuinness stopped being a 'militant republican' and became a politician like him', of course ignoring the blatant fact that Charlie was able to become a non militant politician precisely because his forebears did the 'militant' work.

    The hypocrisy and craw thumping today is actually hilarious.

    That's a important point that those throwing the stones usually miss - Martin was no different to the 'heroes' that founded the state that we celebrate - In many ways, FF/FG have far more blood on their hands when you think of the civil war and the murder of Irish citizens carried out by both sides - Men, women and children

    There was neither FF nor FG at that time. They were established afterwards. SF was split down in the middle upon the Treaty and if it falls back, it all falls back at SF in the first place, the anti-treaty side of SF to be precise. The forerunner of FG was pro-treaty and worked on the consolidation of the Irish Free State. De Valera founded FF in 1926. Three years after the end of the Civil War.


  • Registered Users Posts: 683 ✭✭✭PhuckHugh


    JayZeus wrote: »
    It's sometimes sad when someone dies. Sometimes it's sad because of the character of the person, the circumstances of their passing or the loss their family will feel.

    Martin McGuinness' death may be some of those things to some people but to me the greatest sadness comes from seeing so many Irish people praise his efforts for peace and attempts to portray him as some kind of folk hero. He should be remembered for what he was, a paramilitary commander who committed murder in the name of the nationalist movement. A man with the cold and cruel ability to blow up pubs, hotels and market squares no matter who may be there at the time.

    Martin McGuinness ran out of time leading and directing a violent, bloody, murderous campaign using normal everyday people as pawns, blowing them to pieces, maiming and mentally scarring the survivors and their families in the cold and calculating process.

    He had no choice to make. Peace was on the cards, with or without him. He was the man in the seat at the time but it wasn't his decision, when the community he supposedly represented wanted something his guns and bombs couldn't deliver. He went to his grave knowing more than he told about the victims of his violence and that's unforgivable. The years he spent in politics do not wash the blood from his hands.

    Never forget that.

    He wasn't a good man, let alone a hero.

    That's your view.

    Plenty others, including myself, will regard him as a hero. Nelson Mandela was full of praise for Martin and Gerry .. Gerry acting as a guard of honour for Mandela's funeral -- that's the esteem these men are held in. If we had politicians with half his character in the south we'd be a fine country.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,813 ✭✭✭Noveight


    As a man who was never really far from the news here in Ireland I find it strange to think he's dead. RIP.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,370 ✭✭✭✭citytillidie


    Bad few days for the city of Derry

    ******



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 618 ✭✭✭Thomas__


    PhuckHugh wrote: »
    Thomas__ wrote: »
    What means did the previous governments of the Republic of Ireland had to help in the first place?

    Btw, I am neither for FF, FG, SF or Labour. I judge the People by their characters and achievements, and I even hold some respect for Charles J. Haughey, in spite the fact that there are many Irish People who look at him as and call him a crook. My political leaning is centre-left and superfically saying, I consider myself to have more in common with the in 2015 founded Social Democrats than any other political Party in the Republic of Ireland.

    In the end of the day, it counts more to me what every single politician has done for the good of the Republic of Ireland in the first place, cos that was their Domain to give their best efforts. Just that there are hardly any Irish People I have come across so far who always find one or another Irish politician to project their animosity on and loath about, doesn´t influences me at all. Every Taoiseach, since the Irish Free State was established, contributed to the future of this country. One never held that office and is still at the top of all the great Irishmen in this islands history and that is Michael Collins. Close behind Comes Arthur Griffith, Sean Lemass, then Jack Lynch and to some extend C. J. Haughey. I also have some respect for Reynolds (though a tad too weak imo), Berty Ahern (not convicted for any wrong doing). I pity Cowen (he had to pick up the pieces after Ahern resigned), but I don´t find Kenny that worse like others see him (had to bring Ireland through the financial crisis with the hardships that came along, but which other countries also had to endure).

    The many of them being from FF, it´s not my fault that they were cos, see it as it was, they always got their votes from the Irish electorate.

    The very only Irish politician I can´t stand is De Valera (too cosy with the Catholic Church and imo partly too stubborn on the Republic when there was no way to achieve it and he knew that perfectly well himself, and partly to weak to prevail against the other die-hards on the anti-treaty side like Brugha). He also was the one Holding Ireland backwards for decades. Lemass brought Ireland into modernity, Haughey set the seeds to bring Ireland to the 21st Century and Ahern reaped what was coming out of it and there hadn´t been the period of the "Celtic Tiger" without the work of his predecessors. Well, I am not saying that every man hadn´t his faults, but what Counts in the end is what they achieved.

    Mrs McGuinness never had the means to do likewise, cos he grew up and lived in a different country, but he achieved, together with others, peace in NI and if there is any legacy on his part, this is the very thing on his side which he´ll always be remembered as being part of. But also his way of conduct regarding his IRA past, on which - I think - he wasn´t quite that frank and admitting. That part was the very reason for why he lost to Higgins in the last presidential election.

    I really find it curious to notice how many people are jumping to defend McGuinness when it comes to his life and doings, the so called "failure" of the Republic to stand up for the Irish people in NI but on the other hand, reading posts from people who are uttery opposed to any chance of re-unification with NI. Well, I know, the political Standing is always leading the way of argumentation, one is either pro or contra. There is rarely something inbetween with a balance upon which one can build a better future. That´s a pity.

    Pure WUM.
    Certainly not from my side, but there you go, your perception is yours, and yours alone. In contrast to that, I mean what I wrote.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,423 ✭✭✭✭Outlaw Pete


    Many of the well worn points being made here were put to Martin in the following excellent interview. Well worth watching.





    To me Martin McGuinness was simply an Irish resistance fighter and arguably a much needed one.

    RIP.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    Jelle1880 wrote: »
    It seems to be a common tactic.

    Mention the atrocities that were done under his command and you're bound to get a response about the Brits. Because that somehow makes it ok I guess ?

    I think Hitchens summed it up perfectly about Ian Paisley and Gerry Adams, and it probably works for McGuinness too:

    The same Hitchens that called for a united Ireland and famously said "partition of Ireland was the cause of sectarian violence".

    I'm not defending the bombing campaign. My family members in the SDLP tried the peaceful method. The British government created a situation where many people seen violence as necessary. The following probably didn't help
      Torturing and interning innocent Catholics Shooting unarmed protesters Colluding with loyalist terror groups to plant bombs 85% of loyalist terror groups information on targets came from the security forces. Most were innocent Catholics.

    Now I'm not saying that bombing was OK because of the above but some form of violence was always going to happen.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,690 ✭✭✭✭Skylinehead


    PhuckHugh wrote: »
    Pure WUM.

    Contribute better than accusations of trolling or don't post at all please.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I think SF as they are involved in ROI politics are a shabby and dangerous organisation but I have huge admiration for what McGuinness achieved in the North in the GFA and especially in his distinguished political career since.

    I wasn't a NI Catholic in his time, but I'm pretty sure that it's a lens we should try and adopt when judging the man in his aims and methods. You can't handwave away the activities he directed and you can't handwave away the activities of loyalist paramilitaries, British army collusion, the way that Catholics were treated by the state apparatus, etc.

    Trying to bring the govt of ROI into it is pure whataboutery. NI was and is a separate country, any pretence otherwise is fantasy. Whether or not I'd agree with McGuinness on that or not, he worked effectively and intelligently to bring about, establish and safeguard the current peace and political mechanisms, and the starting point was far from an ideal utopia.

    RIP


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,747 ✭✭✭✭wes


    RIP

    He was did a lot to bring about peace on this island.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,558 ✭✭✭✭castletownman


    RIP.

    Done more for the stability of this country than most other politicians can lay claim to. Something admirable in his honesty, and his strive for peace. That handshake with the Queen will be forever a symbol of the "new" Ireland.

    While I would never condone the IRA and their actions, one has to remember that back then, Martin was fighting for the rights of second-class citizens (in terms of how Catholics were treated).

    There is literally no difference between his early "military" career, and that of Nelson Mandela. But sure, Mandela was fighting for the poor Africans- a more important (and mainstream) cause than any plight on our island.


  • Registered Users Posts: 937 ✭✭✭swimming in a sea


    PhuckHugh wrote: »
    That's your view.

    Plenty others, including myself, will regard him as a hero. Nelson Mandela was full of praise for Martin and Gerry .. Gerry acting as a guard of honour for Mandela's funeral -- that's the esteem these men are held in. If we had politicians with half his character in the south we'd be a fine country.

    We have politicians like this in the south, your Gerry is a Louth TD. So we must be on the way to that fine country.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,567 ✭✭✭✭Fratton Fred


    The weren't policemen, they were SAS members, part of an elite military unit, who have done, and continue to do similar, and worse acts of atrocities as the Provos ever have, to this very day.

    They died in active service, caught carrying out a covert operation.

    Get it straight please.

    telling someone to get it straight, usually involves you being correct.

    They were not SAS, they were Royal Corp of Signals


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Did a lot of good in later life.

    RIP


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 434 ✭✭Lady Spangles


    Very sad news, actually. The IRA ceasefire would never have held without all his hard work and, we all know, SF were sorely tested at times. He took huge risks for peace and took some steps that must have been extremely difficult (meeting Queen Elizabeth to name but one).

    I don't care if I'm totally out of step with the rest of my home nation (England) on this (seeing as that's already been brought up here). They only saw one side of the conflict which was bombs going off on their streets. They didn't see the peace process transform Northern Ireland the way I did. McGuinness made a huge contribution to that.

    RIP to the man and condolences to his family. Very sad news.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,972 ✭✭✭✭Zebra3


    Following the death of Martin McGuinness, I'd like to hear from the white supremacists of the British Establishment.

    :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,839 ✭✭✭Jelle1880


    Zebra3 wrote: »
    Following the death of Martin McGuinness, I'd like to hear from the white supremacists of the British Establishment.

    :rolleyes:

    Who exactly are they ?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,567 ✭✭✭✭Fratton Fred


    Zebra3 wrote: »
    Following the death of Martin McGuinness, I'd like to hear from the white supremacists of the British Establishment.

    :rolleyes:

    say what?


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    In 1973, he was convicted by the Republic of Ireland's Special Criminal Court, after being arrested near a car containing 250 pounds (110 kg) of explosives and nearly 5,000 rounds of ammunition. He refused to recognise the court, and was sentenced to six months imprisonment. In court, he declared his membership of the Provisional IRA without equivocation: "We have fought against the killing of our people... I am a member of Óglaigh na hÉireann and very, very proud of it".

    There's enormously admirable integrity right there. I'd trust somebody with such conviction, courage and honesty.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    Zebra3 wrote: »
    Following the death of Martin McGuinness, I'd like to hear from the white supremacists of the British Establishment.

    :rolleyes:

    Very few unionists have come out with a statement.


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