Infini wrote: » The difference is were far better at referendum's here than in the likes of the UK. We'd have people on our side pushing fact's and clear information and all it would take is to have people on hand to tackle the DUP's ignorant BS and any other headbanger like Sammy Wilson by hitting them with fact's and shutting them down if they try passing off misinformation and opinionated BS like they're facts. Get the fact's across, get the reasons for a UI across and counter and shut down the idiot's trying to BS their way through argument's when they fail to back up their case with FACTS.
RobMc59 wrote: » SF are truly embarrassing and are once again trying to stir up trouble-she should be ashamed of herself.https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/explanation-demanded-from-sinn-fein-leader-mary-lou-mcdonald-over-england-get-out-of-ireland-banner-37922299.html
FrancieBrady wrote: » 2018 banner and not a word about it. Are you being led by media generated outrage .....again? :rolleyes:
Quin_Dub wrote: » The issue isn't the banner (as pointlessly,vacuously "Irish-American" as it is) - That banner or at least a variant of it has been in the NYC Parade since 1948 The issue is the leader of Sinn Fein parading with it in 2019 - I would have thought that much was obvious to all.
FrancieBrady wrote: » Why is it an issue now when it wasn't last year? Is this on behalf of Unionist sensitivities?
blanch152 wrote: » Unless Mary Lou has changed her hair colour since last year, I don't see her posing with the banner last year. The issue is one of leadership, or in this case, the lack of it.
Peregrinus wrote: » She's leading Sinn Fein, Francie. Surely you knew this?
FrancieBrady wrote: » Yes, I did know that. So who is questioning her 'leadership' only those who always questioned the SF leadership from outside it...obsessively so.
Peregrinus wrote: » And rightly so. And SF should be very attentive. Now that they've embraced the ballot box, the only way to progress is to attract support from people who don't already support you. Which means the views of people who are not already your supporters are very, very important to you, and you need to pay attention to them. The issue here, as I see is, is that the "England Get Out Of Ireland" slogan is, literally, 40 years old or more. Rightly or wrongly it comes across as fossilised thinking by a bunch of out-of-touch sentimental Irish-Americans. SF doesn't want to alienate potential support in Irish America, I get that, but at the same time this is not a stance, or an analysis of the question, with which SF ought to be associating itself. SF should have the confidence to say that, no, Ireland needs a slightly more realistic, nuanced and thoughtful analysis of the question that this, which doesn't focus on the perfidy of Albion but on the need to change thinking in Ireland. Which means they should be a bit embarrassed to have their leader photographed marching behind this banner. It's not a good look.
FrancieBrady wrote: » I agree about the attracting support bit. But I don't think attracting the demographic who go into outrage overdrive at a quick snap at a St Patrick's Day Parade or who wait around for similar opportunities to take offence is SF's goal tbh . . .
Peregrinus wrote: » I take your point. But for every person who has clutched at their pearls in public over this there are probably ten or twenty who saw the picture, felt as I felt about it and are that bit more distant from SF as a result. They don't post to social media about it, is all. And, of course, quite a few of the those people probably only saw the picture because of the pearl-clutchers who posted about it. So you may think that the pearl-clutchers are histrionic over-reactors whose own views you can sneer at, but that doesn't mean that their actions don't cause the party a problem, even if not an immediately visible problem. So, yeah, a party leader needs to not give them this kind of opportunity.
FrancieBrady wrote: » And, like they did with the previous leader, if they can't find anything current to distract, they will find something in the past.. . .
Peregrinus wrote: » They don't have to look for somethign in the past if you give them something in the present . . . like this. This was a slip by McDonald. She should not have let herself be photographed anywhere near that banner. If there was to be any coverage about this, it should have been of McDonald urging people to move forward from such thinking, or at least of her modelling that behaviour herself. The party and its supporters need to learn from this, not whinge about it.
Cryptopagan wrote: » Tbf Peregrinus, you seem like someone who is quite far removed from SF anyhow, and the party’s leadership may already have calculated that jettisoning the trappings of traditional republicanism to try and attract people unlikely to vote for them is not a good strategy. SF’s baggage from the Northern conflict already puts them beyond the pale for older, moderate voters in the Republic (I don’t think I know anyone over 50 who’d support them, and certainly none who’d admit it); what progress the party has made has been in appealing to and mobilizing voters from traditionally low turnout groups: young people and those in working class areas. Those people are just as put off by FG making an issue of this as you are by McDonald doing it in the first place. I’d also add that tongue in cheek use of outmoded republican slogans and terminology is fashionable on social media now, so there are plenty of people who are as much amused as put off by the banner.
blanch152 wrote: » I heard the SDLP leader Colum Eastwood on Pat Kenny this morning about it. His views on the issue would be as strong if not stronger than anything posted in this thread about it. Comments like "silly", "stupid", "plastic Paddy stuff", "lack of leadership", "astonishing lack of judgment", etc. were peppered throughout his contribution that pretty much dismantled any argument in support of Mary Lou. That will not stop her receiving blind unqualified support on here.
Cryptopagan wrote: » Well, firstly I’d point out that I’m not offering “blind unqualified support” to the leader of a party I don’t even support. Secondly, why don’t you actually present those arguments, rather than just assuring us the leader of SF’s main rival for the nationalist vote in NI “demolished” all contrary views on this? Finally, I wouldn’t appeal to Colum Eastwood as an authority on how Northern nationalists perceive this, as his party has been consistently beaten in the polls by SF for years.
Cryptopagan wrote: » Well, firstly I’d point out that I’m not offering “blind unqualified support” to the leader of a party I don’t even support.
Cryptopagan wrote: » Secondly, why don’t you actually present those arguments, rather than just assuring us the leader of SF’s main rival for the nationalist vote in NI “demolished” all contrary views on this?
Cryptopagan wrote: » Finally, I wouldn’t appeal to Colum Eastwood as an authority on how Northern nationalists perceive this, as his party has been consistently beaten in the polls by SF for years.
Matt Barrett wrote: » Has Coveney apologised? He's the only person with something to answer for. Using the murders in NZ to score points is disgusting. I expected that level of discourse from Varadkar but I had given Coveney more credit. Misplaced obviously. Nationalist party leader who's remit is a united Ireland marches with regularly used flag regarding getting the English out of Ireland, so what? We've enough serious issues to be talking about, but I suppose that's the point.
blanch152 wrote: » I think Coveney was at least clumsy in what he was trying to convey, but I don't think he has the greater need to apologise. When one person on one side of the world is shooting people in order to convey a message of kicking a religious/racial minority (Muslims) out of one country (New Zealand) it is beyond tasteless to be marching behind a banner on the other side of the world that to a visitor from outer space effectively calls for the same outcome in a different country (albeit with no suggestion of violence to achieve that end). In a world of inclusiveness, the difference between English and Irish should be immaterial and the concept of nation should not be about territory.
jm08 wrote: » Unionists are not 'English'. I have a lot of time for Simon Coveney, but he was wrong in this instance for using this situation to have a pop at Mary Lou. What was she to do? Refuse to walk behind it and offend her hosts? If that is the case, Leo should have refused to be in the same parade as McGregor who is far more embarrassing for the Irish nation than any banner produced by an American-Irish organisation.