Professor Moriarty wrote: » I wouldn't wrap my chips in an article by Ruth Dudley Edwards.
Havockk wrote: » Red_Wake wrote: » This was explained to you - the agreement placed the DUP under the no obligation to support or introduce an ILA. Nobody has said their blocking of it is right, it's been repeatedly judged as acting in bad faith. What has been said is that the DUP has acted in bad faith, but that leaving the wiggle room through which they were able to wriggle out of the initial agreement, SF has been politically naive. When signing an agreement, very careful attention should be paid to what has been agreed, and what has been left out, as expecting enemy parties to go beyond their explicit obligations is setting yourself up for later trouble. This is a general lesson in politics that goes beyond NI. I'm saying the act of signing the document obviously indicates their agreement to everything that was included. To cherry pick after is not just bad faith, it's breaking the agreement.
Red_Wake wrote: » This was explained to you - the agreement placed the DUP under the no obligation to support or introduce an ILA. Nobody has said their blocking of it is right, it's been repeatedly judged as acting in bad faith. What has been said is that the DUP has acted in bad faith, but that leaving the wiggle room through which they were able to wriggle out of the initial agreement, SF has been politically naive. When signing an agreement, very careful attention should be paid to what has been agreed, and what has been left out, as expecting enemy parties to go beyond their explicit obligations is setting yourself up for later trouble. This is a general lesson in politics that goes beyond NI.
Red_Wake wrote: » In which case they agreed it was ok for the British Government to introdue an ILA. Which still places them under no obligation to do so once the power to do so was devolved back to NI. You're looking at the spirit of the agreement, rather than the exact wording. Only the latter can you expect parties which are fundamentally bad actor to be adhere to. Relying on the former is political naivete.
Havockk wrote: » Nonsense, this past fortnight I've read more than one serious commentator, Ruth Dudley being one, who explicitly stated that SF desire for Unity was essentially the problem.
Havockk wrote: » I'm saying the act of signing the document obviously indicates their agreement to everything that was included. To cherry pick after is not just bad faith, it's breaking the agreement.
oscarBravo wrote: » That's awfully generous of them. Did it cause them a great deal of heartache and soul-searching before they decided to grudgingly allow other people to want things? I've asked you several times now: on what frigging planet is an international treaty required before wanting something is considered legitimate? Be careful with phrases like "British rule", there are sensitive souls around here. I'm struggling to think of a rational response to your argument. I've typed several things and deleted them all. You seem to be of the view that if Sinn Féin accept the legitimacy of British rule, that they somehow lose any right to campaign for a change in the status quo. It's such a bizarre argument that it's hard to know how to counter it.
blanch152 wrote: » The SF desire for unity is not a problem at all. The problem is their failure to accept the legitimacy of British rule over Northern Ireland. This would include taking their seats in Westminister. After all, as you point out, when you sign up to something, cherry-picking is not just bad faith, it's breaking the agreement.
Havockk wrote: » They have even managed to turn my hardcore SDLP voting father into a shinner of late.
FrancieBrady wrote: » The complete abscence of anything but 'your opinion' of a phrase in the GFA which states that they accept the legitimacy of the majority wanting to be ruled by Britain. Which does not mean they accept the legitimacy of British rule.
Just as if I accept the legitimacy of the majority wanting FG to rule does not mean I accept FG as a legitimate ruling party. (I do by the way, I am just illustrating the point you refuse to deal with)
oscarBravo wrote: » That's fascinating and all, but it has nothing to do with anything I've said. I recognise the right of anyone to want to change the status of Northern Ireland, or - for that matter - to keep it the same. I also recognise that Northern Ireland is a legitimate part of the United Kingdom at the moment, and at some point in the future may be a legitimate part of the Republic of Ireland. What I'm not doing is arguing that it's somehow morally impossible for one community's view to be legitimate, because that would be arrogant and stupid.
oscarBravo wrote: » I really wish there was some form of words that would make it clear to you what a load of utter tripe you're spouting. Look: Sinn Féin have taken seats, and accepted ministerial positions, in a devolved regional Assembly of the United Kingdom, set up by the 1998 Northern Ireland Act - an Act of the British Parliament. Now, they can say that they reject the legitimacy of British rule, but everyone who isn't a slavish disciple of the Sinn-Féin-are-the-only-political-party-in-history-who-have-never-lied religious dogma can see that that's - to put it kindly - a pretty hollow thing to say. If someone sets up a business in your town and gives you a job, and you show up every morning for work and cash your cheque every weekend, all the while loudly proclaiming that you refuse to accept the legitimate right of that person to own a business - well, you can draw your own conclusions as to what those proclamations are worth. I know that nothing can persuade you of this. I know that there isn't a power in the universe that could convince you that Sinn Féin are, like all political parties, capable of speaking with forked tongue. What's bizarre is the way you act like I'm the one talking nonsense here. But what does that even mean? You present the idea of refusing to accept legitimacy as if it's just a completely random and inconsequential thought; a throwaway remark. What are the practical ramifications of your hypothetical refusal to accept the legitimacy of FG as a ruling party? Do you refuse to obey laws enacted by that government? Do you fail to appear in response to a court summons, because the Minister for Justice is a FG member? Or is it just meaningless rhetoric? Is your idea of refusing to accept the legitimacy of something nothing more than a completely empty political gesture?
Sinn Féin’s objection to entering the Commons chamber is ideological, stemming from its refusal to recognise the legitimacy of British authority in Northern Ireland.
charlie14 wrote: » What is relevant is that nowhere in the GFA or the MPA is there a requirement for SF to recognise Westminster`s right to rule NI.
SF have, by signing the MPA recognised the right of the majority to decide. Something the DUP have not put their signature to. That to me, if not stupid, is totally arrogant.
FrancieBrady wrote: » Well, if you had just admitted at the start that it is just your opinion of what SF are doing...
oscarBravo wrote: » No. Stop there. You don't get to manufacture from whole cloth a completely fallacious interpretation of what I've said and then gloat about how I've rowed back. I notice you carefully avoided the key point, which is that Sinn Féin sit in a regional Assembly of the United Kingdom, established by an Act of the British Parliament. If it suits you to pretend that that's consistent with rejecting the legitimacy of British rule in Northern Ireland, then you pretend away - but have the intellectual honesty not to accuse me of rowing back from anything while you bask in your own fantasies. I never cease to be amazed at the bizarre acts of self-deception required to be a Sinn Féin supporter.
jh79 wrote: » Status of Northern Ireland The agreement acknowledged: *that the majority of the people of Northern Ireland wished to remain a part of the United Kingdom; *that a substantial section of the people of Northern Ireland, and the majority of the people of the island of Ireland, wished to bring about a united Ireland. *Both of these views were acknowledged as being legitimate. *For the first time, the government of the Republic of Ireland accepted in a binding international agreement that Northern Ireland was part of the United Kingdom. * The Constitution of the Republic of Ireland was also amended to implicitly recognise Northern Ireland as part of the United Kingdom's sovereign territory, From wiki.
FrancieBrady wrote: » They sit on a regional assembly in THEIR OWN country and do not swear allegiance to a foreign monarch.
oscarBravo wrote: » A regional Assembly OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, established by an Act of the BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Which, according to you, that Parliament had no legitimate right to establish - but they take their seats anyway. I get that you can tell yourself whatever it is you need to hear in order to convince yourself that Sinn Féin are, uniquely among political parties, guided by a pure and unwavering adherence to principles. To anyone who isn't drinking the Kool-Aid, their hypocrisy is self-evident.
oscarBravo wrote: » Not really, no. We had a constitutional amendment to relinquish our sovereign claim to Northern Ireland. By doing so, the people of Ireland - not just the government, but the people - formally recognised the legitimacy of Northern Ireland's place in the United Kingdom. Some people can't bring themselves to do that, because Reasons - but their dogma has no more bearing on reality than that of a flat-Earther.
charlie14 wrote: » No, not really. Britain does not have a codified constitution so no requirement for a referendum to repeal, either the Government of Ireland Act of 1920, or the Northern Ireland Constitution Act of 1973. Both were repealed by an act of parliament, and replaced by the Northern Ireland Act of 1998. Under the Northern Ireland act of 1998 Northern Ireland remains a part of the United Kingdom until or unless a majority vote in a referendum determines otherwise. At which point Northern Ireland would be no longer be part of the United Kingdom.
FrancieBrady wrote: » A regional assembly of elected Irish MLAs. Again, that is no statement of acceptance of the legitimacy of British rule.
oscarBravo wrote: » We've clearly reached the point where you're just going to keep ignoring any facts that contradict your carefully-constructed worldview, so there's no point discussing it further.
jh79 wrote: » Francie, do you accept that under the GFA that NI is a legitimate part of the UK? That partition is legitimate?
oscarBravo wrote: » You seem to be working as hard as Francie to miss the point. Sure, there's nothing in the GFA that says "anyone who signs up to this agreement recognises Britain's sovereignty over Northern Ireland", because the Agreement makes it clear that sovereignty over Northern Ireland is a matter for its people to decide, and signing up to the Agreement is tacit acceptance of that fact. Sinn Féin can claim to be committed to the principles of the GFA; and they can also claim that British rule in Northern Ireland has no legitimacy. The problem is that they're contradicting themselves in the process, because the GFA clearly legitimises British rule in Northern Ireland. You won't find me arguing against the idea that the DUP are stupid and arrogant. My point isn't about the DUP at all, I'm merely pointing out that Sinn Féin are guilty of doublespeak, and their supporters are guilty of wilful blindness to that fact.
FrancieBrady wrote: » I am debating your world view Oscar...and seriously, it really is just a 'view'.
charlie14 wrote: » In accepting the GFA, SF accepted what the British accepted in their own 1998 Northern Ireland Act. That it would remain in British control until or unless a majority decided otherwise by referendum.
FrancieBrady wrote: » No. I accept that the majority want it to be for now.
oscarBravo wrote: » If Britain has no legitimate right to govern Northern Ireland, how can the Northern Ireland Act have any legitimacy?