PM me nudes wrote: » How pathetic is it that people seek all kinds of avenues to have a drink on Good Friday, like hotel bars or train station bars? Its one day FFS
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » What's pathetic is complaining about people wanting to get a ridiculous law changed when you just ignored that law anyway and hopped over the border, while those not living in border counties had to just suck it up.
Cee-Jay-Cee wrote: » Did you read your posting before posting it? I didn't ignore any law, that would imply I bought drink here against the law, I didn't, I went to another country where it was perfectly legal to buy alcohol and bought some,
5starpool wrote: » It's a national embarrassment to be honest. I've seen tourists and stag/hen parties wandering around Dublin on this day every year looking confused and annoyed. At least they will be staying in hotels that can serve them if needs be I guess, but it is still very much the principle. I don't care that the pubs are closed, I care that the pubs are closed for an archaic, religious reason. If they announced randomly that no drink could be served on the 10th of May I wouldn't really care (although I would be puzzled). It's mostly just a good Friday because I'm off work though.
tayto lover wrote: » I think its nice to see the pub workers get a rest.
Spanish Eyes wrote: » What will we do next year when the GF ban on alcohol sales is GONE!
punisher5112 wrote: » Minimum pricing coming in also in this new bill. That's the worrying and annoying part.
meeeeh wrote: » Yeah stags vomiting everywhere on good Friday will seriously increase Ireland's non religious credentials. Who needs a whole pile of changes in education, health, social issues when you can just start selling alcohol on Good Friday. It's sad how priorities always revolve around alcohol. And chest tumping.
andekwarhola wrote: » People get hung up on the drink fest but it's a Friday off work for a lot of people. It's at the start of Easter weekend so if you have it off work, it's the first day of a four-day weekend and just before the first Spring bank holiday. Even if you don't have it off, it's precisely the kind of Friday people take off anyway. Despite the usual smug homilies, it's less a national alcohol compulsion than a confluence of factors that have somehow come to earmark Good Friday as a day to have a party.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » Attack religious prejudice on any and every front.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » The old fallacy of "we can't act on injustice X unless injustice Y, totally unrelated, is fixed first" Bull**** Attack religious prejudice on any and every front.
Patww79 wrote: » This post has been deleted.
Patww79 wrote: » The definition of binge drinking is a load of pish that was only dreamt up to bump up stats like that and create a problem for a reason for taxation. 'Ireland' has no problem, some people in Ireland do.
ChunkyLover54 wrote: » I'm not religious and I enjoy a drink but it was nice to have one night a year apart from Christmas day where one could walk around a city centre in this country and not have an uneasy feeling you're about to be screamed at...or barged into...or clocked on the head.