AudreyHepburn wrote: » Made no difference to me one way or the other - it’s beyond me why so many people can’t or won’t wait 24 hours to go to the pub. Is it that terrible to have to drink at home one night of the year?
Ragnar Lothbrok wrote: No it's not.
Mr.H wrote: » Yes it is. I is officially a protestant religion. It is not ruled by the Roman Catholic Church in the Vatican. The Vatican is what influences Ireland not the religion who looks at a British ex king as the founder of its Church
AudreyHepburn wrote: Made no difference to me one way or the other - it’s beyond me why so many people can’t or won’t wait 24 hours to go to the pub. Is it that terrible to have to drink at home one night of the year?
Mr.H wrote: » OK Let's say it wasn't pubs. Let's say it was illegal to have sex one day a year instead. Would that be alright?...
jimgoose wrote: Mick Jackson is an ex-British king??
whisky_galore wrote: » So you would have no issue with pubs opening on Xmas Day?
jimgoose wrote: It's already illegal to have sex in the pub. What's your point??
jimgoose wrote: » It's already illegal to (get caught) have sex in the pub. What's your point??
Mr.H wrote: » Might as well be. The church of Ireland was established in 1536 by king Henry viii
jimgoose wrote: Nope. The Irish parliament at the time declared him the "Supreme Head of the Church on earth", and therefore in Ireland. Archbishop Jackson is his successor. The monarch over the road is the head of the Anglican Church (another member of the Anglican Communion, alongside the CoI) and the Pope is the head of the Roman Catholic Church. All the respective theologies agree on the founder of the church(es), viz. the figure known as Jesus Christ.
Mr.H wrote: » If you dont know the influence the Catholic Church had in Ireland in the last 100 years then you have absolute zero idea of what you are talking about
Birdie Num Num wrote: » I am not denying the origins of the ban but so what about the origins. It was legislation that prevented the sale of alcohol on Good Friday. Nobody is up in arms that they can't go to their favourite pub at 4am in the morning because of licensing laws or can't get take out after 10pm.
Birdie Num Num wrote: » Nobody is up in arms that they can't go to their favourite pub at 4am in the morning because of licensing laws or can't get take out after 10pm.
Mr.H wrote: » OK Let's say it wasn't pubs. Let's say it was illegal to have sex one day a year instead. Would that be alright? It's not about people desperate to go to the pub. It's about people wanting to rid the country from archaic laws invented to appease our Vatican oppressors by saying "look we are a good little Catholic country". As stated I personally might go out on good Friday. Not because I feel I haven't but because his year it falls 2 days after my birthday and the weekend is usually when my friends and loved ones are free. But every other year just like before it will be just another Friday. Except going forward there will be less ridiculous laws
Rose Ashy Rigging wrote: » ...and continued to be honoured, like many traditions, in an increasingly secular society. Far more important things to get worked up about.
GritBiscuit wrote: » I think that's it in a nutshell tho...it wasn't honoured in the true sense of the meaning - in that the pubs/off-licences were open and people chose not to partake on those days because their adherence to the principal meant more to them, it was a state mandated ban on alcoholic purchases that the masses had no option but go along with (and increasingly find ways around) to the point that the whole thing was a running joke. If people want to honour their traditions, more power to them, I'm all for that. State enforcing the traditions of an ever shrinking some on everyone else - not so much.
Rose Ashy Rigging wrote: » Yes, that's a fair point. I suppose it's the way some people got so worked up about it I find hard to understand, instead of just rolling their eyes and opening a bottle of wine at home.
Rose Ashy Rigging wrote: » but it was a tradition that was still upheld and allowed bar staff a day off.
Rose Ashy Rigging wrote: » I just don't understand why there was so much indignation about pubs being closed on Good Friday. I can understand concerns about issues such as tourism, but otherwise what was the big deal? It was a tradition founded, like many traditions, on a religious principle and continued to be honoured, like many traditions, in an increasingly secular society. Far more important things to get worked up about.
Rose Ashy Rigging wrote: » ...but it was a tradition that was still upheld and allowed bar staff a day off.
El Weirdo wrote: » Can people just stop posting this shit?
Rose Ashy Rigging wrote: » Did you read ShooterSF's post?