Thelonious Monk wrote: » ...I wish the Brits had stayed around a bit longer to get a few more things done tbh, a nice metro and more trams...
Thelonious Monk wrote: » Well somehow we managed to get things done in the past. I was looking at the route of the Royal Canal which goes all the way from Central Dublin to Longford, such a huge project at the time and we don't seem to be able to do anything here now except build motorways.
Rufeo wrote: » We're not nearly hard enough.
Raconteuse wrote: » Disagreed very much. Major inferiority complex going on here. The Irish were looked down upon for a long time, and I think that has been internalised to an extent.
pgj2015 wrote: » "its a bit Irish" is something Irish people say to describe something that isnt done in the right way.
Raconteuse wrote: » Major inferiority complex going on here. The Irish were looked down upon for a long time, and I think that has been internalised to an extent.
JustAThought wrote: » And they’re 100% right.We have brains to burn in this country and are as obstinate as a nation as we want to be - but apart from Free the Guilford Four and Water Tax protests and the organised farmers we take any owl shyte thrown at us and accept it,. We have never marched en masse as a nation against he corruption, the lying, utter waste or myriad of scandals including crime, our revolving criminal justice farce, endless assylum applications, handout society of lifelong wasters, the ateady crucifixation of the middle class, paying 2 weeks out of every four in tax, abysmal transport and 3 1/2 hour commutes to 1950 style boxes, sewage fliwing into the sea, trees and habitats casually felled in our cities and no proper planning for habitats/lifestyles/happiness etc. We have one of the most educated workforces in the planet yet we allow gombeenism and cronyism to be the order of the day, every day and every year. We are not hard enough on ourselves at all. It is harrowing what an absolute waste this once proud nation has become . We are a pitiful crawling servile disgrace of nation. God forbid they ever take away our pubs or punts or tellies - the mess of what is left would be crippling.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I was talking to a guy a couple of weeks ago, who had spent 10 or so years living in the north of England, and he said there's a kind of heaviness about people in Ireland that just isn't there in the English..
Feisar wrote: » Are we a bit hard on ourselves as a nation I wonder?
[Deleted User] wrote: » 100 per cent agree. We like to portray an image of being up for the craic but as a people we are generally quite wooden and uptight. Was talking to a South African who went to watch Ireland v S.A. in Aviva and they couldn't believe how placid and wooden the fans were it was like a library apparently.
citysights wrote: » It wasn’t always like that though people used to be more fun and there was more wittiness about people, crack a joke, have a laugh. Still around but less so I think, maybe it has been educated out of people that little spark, almost as if people are afraid to let themselves go. In older people not so much they are more themselves, less pc and some could literally light up a room.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » . I wish the Brits had stayed around a bit longer to get a few more things done tbh, a nice metro and more trams.
[Deleted User] wrote: » You could be right about this actually. Maybe it is that thing of overcompensating that we do so well in Ireland.
Deleted User wrote: » 100 per cent agree. We like to portray an image of being up for the craic but as a people we are generally quite wooden and uptight. Was talking to a South African who went to watch Ireland v S.A. in Aviva and they couldn't believe how placid and wooden the fans were it was like a library apparently.
Gretas Gonna Get Ya! wrote: » "Come to Ireland... you won't die in a tornado/earthquake/hurricane/tsunami/landslide/heat wave/drought/snowstorm/wildfire/cyclone/"... :pac:
Deleted User wrote: » We have made great progress economically and as a society. There is definitely less craic than before but also less madness so that's probaby a wash. I do think we get worked up over the wrong things. FG actually did a great job turning the country around from bankruptcy, and kept social welfare largely intact, while hammering the working people, yet the Shinners got a huge vote in the recent election, whose policies will further hammer those same working people. Similarly for water charges - now it comes out of "general taxation". Who pays for that? The idiots getting up early in the morning. The homeless "crisis".... The government spends a fortune on this already, both directly and indirectly, yet its still a huge problem. In Cork for example they have a bed for every homeless person but many still sleep rough, we need to ask "why", not throw more money at it. It's a management and governance problem, not a money problem. Similarly with health, again a management problem. We need to demand better value for the taxpayers money.
BanditLuke wrote: » What's the craic Leo?
Deleted User wrote: » I was talking to a guy a couple of weeks ago, who had spent 10 or so years living in the north of England, and he said there's a kind of heaviness about people in Ireland that just isn't there in the English..
Church on Tuesday wrote: » The English are generally more confident. They have come up through a different education system to us and with no yolk of Catholic shame. Which is a shame really because we arguably have more to be proud of.