Edgware wrote: » If you want to see a good selection of dirt birds, welfare scroungers,junkies etc it's the place to go. Dublin City Council will rip you off as well-for committing the crime of owning a car.
DubInMeath wrote: » You forgot all the culchies looking up at all the buildings and public transport, while having a chance at getting the shift from someone who isn't their cousin.
jimwallace197 wrote: » Because the public transport and buildings are so impressive, would ya get up the yard!
DubInMeath wrote: » Compared to anywhere else in Ireland yes.
jimwallace197 wrote: » So, as if people from the country don't get the opportunity to travel abroad and see other cities. Stop acting like Dublin is the centre of the world.
Better Than Christ wrote: » I regularly go to town for no reason other than to stroll around Hodges Figgis or Books Upstairs and then while away a few hours in a quiet corner of a coffee shop. I really miss that. I don't live close enough to walk in, and unnecessarily bringing a car to the city centre is selfish and obnoxious, so I usually drive as far as the Luas.
Vita nova wrote: » I can understand how Edgware's stupid post might have pissed you off but Aint Eazy Being Cheezy was able to respond without resorting to name-calling or escalating things whereas you did the complete opposite.
Del.Monte wrote: » It's AH, you hardly expect normal responses do you?
LeYouth wrote: » Dublin definitely has a town feel about it. For a real city you have to go abroad.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » I’d only head into town with the “family“ a couple of times a year, Christmas to see the lights and maybe during the summer months. It’s never easy. I, personally, find that the types of families you see in town, on any given day, are the same ones who trek out to Ikea on a Saturday, or Sunday, for a “day out”. It’s just ridiculous and unimaginative. Any sane person would leave the family at home whenever they need to go shopping for anything, or at least only bring one child. I do understand that some mothers are for forced to bring 3, or 4, kids to Tesco to give the father, at home, “a break”. You know the kind, the same guy would storm home after work and lock himself away in his “office” or out into his “man cave” rather than spend time with the family. Hopefully, one of the upsides in the aftermath of all this virus stuff will be that people won’t be dragging their kids out with them to places they don’t want to go and then roaring at them for not being “telepathic” and being exactly where they want them to be.
Edgware wrote: » Sit outside in South William St having a coffee and within 5 minutes you will have dirtbirds annoying you looking for money for a hostel. The scumbags of Dublin might think that is fine but decent Dublin people will do without it. Of course in the Dublin scumbag mentality anyone who criticises them must be a Culche or a "bleeding foreigner" (who seems to have no problem finding work unlike Joxer)
DubInMeath wrote: » True you will have people asking you for money, never seen it within five minutes however, I don't spend much time sitting outside cafes or pubs. You get that being asked for money happens in Galway, Limerick and Cork at least in my experience, not just a Dublin thing, but you'd swear it was from most of your posts. And yeah plenty of Dublin bashing by country folks on here, you'd swear that it was personal with some of them or just trying to be edgy.
Kylta wrote: » Am a true blue ( it means born within the canals). Not many dubs go shopping in town anymore, they basically use the shopping centres on the outskirts. No parking and most of them have whatever shop you need. I personally think in the future dublin will be aimed at tourism. There already trying to keep the cars out off town. The clampers are like little fu¢king gremlins, its that bad that there even clamping in the outskirts too. Dublin is gone to expense for Dubs. I've been to prague and berlin etc, they seem to have an originality about them. People must remember that the brits ran this country a hundred years ago, so what your basically looking at is an old british city, thats maybe the equivalent of Leeds or Manchester. Definitely not the equivalent of London. Its still a great city dublin for tourist, but you won't find many dubs in the city centre
Vita nova wrote: » Oh, I know that but that doesn't mean one shouldn't bother commenting.You actually thanked that post