JimmyMcGill wrote: » Went in for a breakfast roll the other morning. Ordered off an eastern European no bother, she turns around to her work colleague and speaks her native tongue for the duration of her serving me. Gives me the roll without any interaction. That **** annoys me. Big time.
yesto24 wrote: » I have read this a few times. I still can't see what other cultures you got to experience. I know what you are trying to do with this opening post. Disingenuous I think is the word.
smurgen wrote: » Judging by the smiley i reckon you got the reactions you wanted.whether you're sincerely believed anything in your op is another matter,or if anything your wrote was even real.
John_Rambo wrote: » "What an athlete!!" (darts commentator)
[Deleted User] wrote: » You were fine about it in the first reaction, then irritated, and then downright annoyed...:)
[Deleted User] wrote: » ...today I brought my daughter to the playground to meet Slovakian friends with their kids. Also met my cousin and his African partner and their little daughter. After that, I went to my Turkish Muslim barber and to her delight he produced a lollipop. And I thought, she'll grow up experiencing diversity and cultures that I could only dream of when I was a child in white Catholic Ireland in the late '70s and '80s. And it felt good.
BillyBobBS wrote: » It's just a load of lads running around in circles with a stick. Now darts that's a game of skill.
Academic wrote: » I think it was pretty clear in the original post that he or she is talking about multiculturalism in Ireland.
John_Rambo wrote: » Jaysus lads. Hurling is skillfully cool. Anyone can see that, even me.The guy that can't hurl.
Yes multi kulturalism is nice when you let in a controlled number of people who can integrate and can contribute to the host society. When you have uncontrolled migration from the third world it's not so good. Case in point, Germany, where women are now being advised to jog in pairs after yet another brutal stranger rape by one of Merkel's guests.
tomwaterford wrote: » Except they don't kick the ball with the foot much anymore....it's kind of devolved to suit inferior players/talent across a sectrum of counties to make it more "competitive" I'm not desputing it's better organised and more participants....it's just not as skilfull as hurling,by natural order it can't be The late ned power of tallow in the 60's produced a hurling skills training manual showing there to be up 99 different methods of striking the ball.... Which few if any master them all (when was last time someone scored with a overhead first time strike intercounty:( )
Deleted User wrote: » ...today I brought my daughter to the playground to meet Slovakian friends with their kids. Also met my cousin and his African partner and their little daughter. After that, I went to my Turkish Muslim barber and to her delight he produced a lollipop. And I thought, she'll grow up experiencing diversity and cultures that I could only dream of when I was a child in white Catholic Ireland in the late '70s and '80s. And it felt good.
CalamariFritti wrote: » Look lads. Its Saturday night, I'm in. The missus has the telly watching the tennis and I'm craving for a bit of entertainment. This thread isn't doing it for me the way its going. 5 pages in and its GAA vs footie. Wtf?
Dirty Dingus McGee wrote: » Load of ****e in fairenss. If hurling was as impossibly difficult as the hurling snobs would lead you to believe these hurling snobs wouldn't be capable of playing it themselves.Do they actually think that the average junior b hurler has something unique within him that makes him able to play hurling but the average junior b footballer couldn't possibly have the same stuff if he was drawn towards hurling instead of football. By the way I love hurling I just absolutely despise hurling snobs they do themselves or the game no favours.
marcus001 wrote: » I'm not against multiculturalism (although I am against large scale immigration for our little country for economic and infrastructural reasons), I just don't like the idea that in order to promote other cultures people feel the need to denigrate their own.
marcus001 wrote: » That's because hurling is harder to just pick up you have to start young, or at least it's perceived as such.
Dirty Dingus McGee wrote: » Football is a much much better sport, more participants, more people watching it's actually managed to get people playing it on an all ireland basis which is something the hurling lads have failed to do.
John_Rambo wrote: » You have a choice. Run with the pack if you please, but there's plenty of positive cultures to immerse yourself that isn't inorganic or manufactured in our little country.
fryup wrote: » oh its definitely a good thing we've become more sophisticated and cosmopolitan as a nation instead of the backward backwater that we use to benow if only we could get rid of the GAA
Deleted User wrote: » You were fine about it in the first reaction, then irritated, and then downright annoyed...:)