ZuluDawn2020 wrote: » Apparently a ceremony is going to be held attended by the Minister for Justice and Garda Commissioner to comemorate members of the DMP (Dublin Metropolitan Police) and RIC (Royal Irish Constabulary) killed during the Irish Revolution. Does anyone else think this is grotesque?
Del2005 wrote: » Considering that they where Irish people why shouldn't we commemorate them? Picking the wrong side doesn't make them less Irish and in a war neither party has a moral high ground.
ZuluDawn2020 wrote: » Does anyone else think this is grotesque?
super_furry wrote: » Not at all. If there's ever going to be any hopes of a United Ireland, it's going to be crucial to show that unionists and loyalists will be respected and treated as equal in unity. It may be distasteful to those of a Republican persuasion but gestures like this offer a real example of inclusivity.
The Satanist wrote: » They were collaborators and traitors. I celebrate only their death.
Edgware wrote: » The Irish people made their wishes known in the 1918 election. Members of the R.I.C. and D.M.P. acted contrary to those wishes. The Republican leadership appealed to these Irishmen to quit in 1919 and support the Republic. Many did, others didnt and participated willingly in prolonging the war, roundng up suspects, assisting the Auxies and Tans
Hamsterchops wrote: » Yet their an ancesters walk amongst us..... Many of them "traitors" plain old Dublin policemen on the beat who became the enemy overnight, courtesy of their Republican brothers & sisters who demanded a new State & a total break with our neighbors! Sounds a bit like a hard Brexit, sadly with lots of death thrown in the mix
Bambi wrote: » Blue shirts, Ted. blue shirts. One assumes Macron will follows Leos brave lead and announce a commemoration for the Vichy regime. I wonder if the defence forces will be apologizing for beating Noel Lemass to death and dumping his body up the mountains or tying prisoners to landmines. Or will the spirit of reconcilliation not stretch that far?
cryptocurrency wrote: » This is the problem with Ireland today
TheValeyard wrote: » Also agree with the OP, while many in the RIC sided with the IRA and became garda afterwards, there were those in the DMC and RIC who actually helped the Auxiliaries and the Tans. That should not be commemorated. It be like the Germans holding a service for the Gestapo or the Stasi.
Hamsterchops wrote: » Wow, lots of talk in this thread about genocide, Nazis, Gestapo, oppression & massacre ...... The RIC & the DMP were neither Nazi's nor the Gestapo, they were in the most good honest law abiding Irish citizens, doing their job in good faith.
Hamsterchops wrote: » Born and raised in Ireland & of Irish ancestry but not Irish! Yes of course they were British subjects, as Ireland was part of the UK back then, but they were still out Kith & kin with Irish accents, heck as I've said before, their an ancesters walk amongs us today, still with Irish accents...
CrankyHaus wrote: » And why should we honour them and the terrible deeds they committed? Because they did it with a Kerry brogue? Sorry but that doesn't cut it for me, or any reasonable person. We can acknowledge that Irish people in the RIC attempted to serve the law within a corrupt system; we can sympathise with their decisions made in the face of limited choices; we can respect that many may have been good people; but we cannot deny that they served and defended an oppressive and corrupt system, responsible for the death of about 1 million Irish in the famine. When we commemorate and honour those who served in that organisation, we honour that organisation and all of the deeds it committed. I do not want my country to honour the massacre and oppression of my countrymen. It is perverse, you would find no other country in the world that would even consider it. What this is about is a bunch of Gardai whose great great grandaddies took an oath to the crown and now they want to rewrite this country's history for their own selfish desire to remove a stain from their family history. That is not right. This is all of our history, not just theirs to rewrite as it suits them.
CrankyHaus wrote: » They weren't Irish citizens as Ireland did not exist as a state to be a citizen of. They were willing British subjects who took an oath of loyalty to the crown. They were not neighbourhood Gardai enforcing the law by consent and Peelian Principals. They were a force of Gendarmerie armed with rifles enforcing the rule of the crown through force and terror. They performed evictions at gunpoint of starving tenants at the behest of absentee landlords. They baton charged the public, mainly mass goers, during the 1913 lockout and beat 2 to death while injuring 400 - 600. They perpetrated the Bloody Sunday Massacre. They accepted serving alongside the RIC Auxiliary Division, which challenged the Black and Tans for human rights abuses, during the war of Independence. The nonsense you spouted has zero basis in fact and is a perfect example of the kind of ahistorical masochism I mentioned above.