MrFresh wrote: » Cowardly attack on the streets of Galway.https://twitter.com/4dger/status/1127258773595336707
enricoh wrote: » Was in that supermacs a year or so ago n got chatting to one of the staff. He was saying eyre square was gone to the dogs. He pointed to a few dodgy young junkies at a table inside the door. All nursing a cup of tea for an hour or more until they spot some lad buckled walking past n rob his phone n wallet. Was surprised, but i reckon he had the story right.
imme wrote: » Pure scum
not yet wrote: » How has Eyre Sq gone the dogs over a couple of junkies drinking tea. If you think that video, or any of the big ticket crime issues in this country are because of junkies you're sadly mistaken.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » Agree. Junkies look a state but are more often too strung out to do anything to anyone. In that sense most of them are harmless from my experience in Dublin. Then you have the dragged up feral scumbags...
italodisco wrote: » Fair play to the 2 black guys who intervened, it was a Nigerian taxi driver who saved me a few years back, 2 blokes tried to rob me on parnel street and i took them on, 1 pulled a screw driver and out of nowhere a taxi mounted the path, he tried to run the guy over lol. In dublin its usually foreigners that get involved to help whilst the locals stand around recording.
italodisco wrote: » Irish are very quick to forget we were and still are foreigners in many countries.
specky4eyes wrote: » The only people to help the fella were immigrants, so narrow minded people should take note and not class each and everyone as scumbags, there's good and bad in every race, colour and creed. The supermac's security didn't know basic first aid like putting the lad in the recovery position.
topper75 wrote: » I've no beef with foreigners here provided they are: -here on a legal basis and compliant with our laws -respectful of our ways and not attempting to move the cultural furniture around to suit themselves (if you don't like our culture, then why would you ever have come here in the first place?) If that is OK, then it is 100% a Céad Míle Fáilte from me.
Dannyriver wrote: » What the **** is that meant to mean. Reeks of Enoch Powell's cricket test which would be pretty appalling coming from an Irish person.
Dannyriver wrote: » What the **** is that meant to mean.
Blueshoe wrote: » Ireland and it's customs and traditions.
TeaBagMania wrote: » It means don't move to Ireland and try to turn it into the turd world s******e you just came from
Dannyriver wrote: » Again what are you talking about? Are you suggesting that immigrants elect to live in poverty.
hatrickpatrick wrote: » Does this mirror anyone else's experiences of living in 'known' dangerous areas for gang violence? I always interpreted it as a sort of "whack a mole" thing with the Gardaí, where they'd clamp down on one specific set of streets, and after a few weeks or months of relative calm, the assholes involved would have found new "turf" nearby to continue their bullsh!t. When it comes to people here advising folks to sell up and get out, this is why I would be somewhat hesitant. I'd have no problem at all recommending Cork Street / Donore Avenue or their smaller side-streets as places to live if someone asked me now, but I would have advised them to avoid like the plague if anyone had asked me six or seven years ago. On the other hand, I'd have recommended The Liberties in a heartbeat if someone had asked me in the early 2010s, but since 2014 I'd have to tell them that while my information may be out of date, the area between Pimlico and Guinness went from relatively chilled out to a dumpster fire in what seemed like a period of just one or two years. So don't assume that because your area has its share of bullsh!t right now, that it might not change significantly in a short space of time.
TeaBagMania wrote: » in short, Yes i grew up in floriduh and watched the people from the islands south of floriduh and central americans move in and turn our neighborhood into a s******e so again yes, have seen it firsthand but dont worry, it could never happen in Ireland
Blueshoe wrote: » Tyrellstown
Dannyriver wrote: » Why who s being trying to stop our customs and traditions? Have I missed something?
topper75 wrote: » It is not a riddle. It doesn't reek of anything. It wasn't an invite to read between lines. It means what it means in the dictionary denotative sense. If you come to Ireland - don't expect to change it into the place you came from. If you do - stay back home. Otherwise welcome.
italodisco wrote: » 1 pulled a screw driver
biko wrote: » How come you had a screwdriver on you?