Lucy8080 wrote: » The D.U.P. insisted they wanted no hard border. May has delivered. The D.U.P. funded a front and back page advert in the metro( a free newspaper on the London underground) asking folks to vote Brexit. N.I. voted remain.London voted remain. Remainer's realise that they would better off not leaving than accepting this deal. Brexiteers must realise that too. The D.U.P. must realise that they have overstretched themselves. The don't want the break up of the U.K. They don't want a hard border.
facehugger99 wrote: » It's no coincidence that the most vocal supporters of a UI are those that don't pay income tax.
facehugger99 wrote: » The taxpayers of this country would revolt rather than pony up 10billion per annum on a basket case, not to mention the security headaches. Simply not worth it.
bnt wrote: » What else is there?
bnt wrote: » Honestly, even though I'm from the UK myself, I don't have any trouble envisioning a united 32-county Ireland. There are specific issues that would need to be addressed, though. #1 on the list is freedom of religion. Yes, I know what the Irish Constitution says, but as long as the Catholic Church has any control over school curricula, that would be unacceptable to any staunchly Protestant parent. The ideal solution to that problem is 100% secular schools, no Church involvement at all, but the alternative is one I saw in Scotland: Protestant schools alongside the Catholic ones. (My first school before I emigrated was like that: two small primary schools with one common playground, and at breaks the students formed opposing football teams and worked out their religious frustrations that way.) Today, religious schools are a small minority in Scotland, and non-denominational schools would be the preferred way forward. What else is there? Patriotism? Living in Ireland hasn't made me any less Scottish than I've always been. If the UK ever goes to war, people would volunteer or not according to their consciences, as happened with Irish soldiers during the two world wars. Living under a different government does not change one's nationality.
facehugger99 wrote: » The 100 billion per decade? I think we'd manage to build some schools, hospitals, roads and social housing that would prove better value than funding a Shinnerbot's wet dream.
maxwell smart wrote: » Never mind Brexit, the above is real news to me. I thought she was a single and very willing to mingle type.
Berserker wrote: » She's the only person representing NI.
jmayo wrote: » Schools aren't a problem. There are secular educate together schools, catholic schools, protestant schools here already. ... If anything I could see people of a unionist persuasion being against the removal of religion from education.
Avatar MIA wrote: » Watching Sammy Wilson standing alongside Snarlene on the BBC, he looked like he was going to throw up.
Gintonious wrote: » Can't say I'm not enjoying seeing the DUP slowly realize that they have been used during all of this, and that May is basically sacrificing them. Although I can't figure out how it took them this long. Idiots.
facehugger99 wrote: » It's no coincidence that the most vocal supporters of a UI are those that don't pay income tax. The taxpayers of this country would revolt rather than pony up 10billion per annum on a basket case, not to mention the security headaches. Simply not worth it.
The Rape of Lucretia wrote: » A rejection of Prime Minster May's deal, if triggering a no-deal Brexit, would make Breunion a slam dunk, as the only way to keep the border open, peace, commerce, and maintaining the cooperation and common purpose that has become the custom on the island over the last 20 years. The Irish govt will have plans for this contingency ready to roll if things go that way. It will be a hard sell to some of the die-hards, but there will be a lot of will on both sides of the community to make it work, and make the south welcome in the UK. And create a stronger British Isles block, in every respect, as it moves forward in a renewed shared future.
SafeSurfer wrote: » The British would be delighted to get rid of the north. It is a drain on resources and a cause of endless political nuisance. It would be the same in a United Ireland. Irish soldiers and guards being shot by loyalist extremists. A large socially conservative political block in the dail. A
bnt wrote: » I know there is diversity in schooling, but nowhere near enough. There are semi-weekly stories in the papers about parents forced to get their kids baptised just so they can go to a school in their catchment area. I think Scotland is the model: religious schools are on the way out there, slowly.
cgcsb wrote: » We paid more to bondholders in fairness. I doubt there would be any opposition to a UI in the South. Even if it meant paying more.
facehugger99 wrote: » Well, you're incorrect.
An IMF senior economist during German Reunification, Gunther Thumann, carried out the research, along with Daly, for the Oireachtas Committee. It shows that Northern Ireland would have a near balanced budget in a unification situation
klaaaz wrote: » Still perpetuating the "unaffordable" myth we see.https://www.thejournal.ie/united-ireland-costings-4144760-Jul2018/ I trust the word of a top IMF economist over someone spouting nonsense on an internet forum.
blanch152 wrote: » Laughable analysis in those reports, full of unattainable assumptions. Where would all the public servants go? Huge savings from sacking 50,000 public servants in the North. If that's your plan, why would any public servant in the North, Catholic or Protestant, nationalist or unionist, vote for a united Ireland? The problem for the likes of Sinn Fein, is that any unification deal means hardship for someone. That means some rump, be it Northern public servants, or Southern taxpayers or social welfare recipients will vote against it. Imagine if you told social welfare recipients down South that their payments were being cut by 20% to bring them in line with the North so that 50,000 public servants in the North could keep their jobs? Of course, you could also tell every worker on the island that we are increasing income tax by 5% or you could tell every MNC that we are increasing corporation tax by 10%. I don't care, pick whichever option, but somebody will have to pay for a united Ireland, and so long as it is not me, that's ok.
MSVforever wrote: » Also the romantic idea of an United Ireland wouldn't be backed up by a majority in the South imo once people's taxes will be raised to subsidise the North.
facehugger99 wrote: » The taxpayers of this country would revolt rather than pony up 10billion per annum on a basket case
klaaaz wrote: » What a knee jerk typical hardline Unionist response, oops maybe an opinion engrossed by the Indo's tabloid scaremongering nonsense?. The IMF guy actually studied all the facts and any assumptions that occur in such a scenario, you are not qualified to diss the expert's work on the issue. Plus its frecking amazing that you have spoken for business leaders, the workers and social welfare recipients, is that you Edward Carson reborn??
blanch152 wrote: » I am as qualified as the quack that did the report for Sinn Fein. As for the junior IMF economist, I wouldn't have faith in his work either. I don't do the bow down to expert opinion that others do, I look at their work and critically analyse. Both of those reports have been discussed at length previously in the politics threads and both of them have been ridiculed for their naive assumptions. P.S. I see the resident silent SF co-ordinator gave you a thanks for your post, enough for me to know I am on the right track