friendlyfun wrote: » Newtown sticks out for me the most because traditionally it's where the wealthy lived and was the most unionist part of the city. Lord Roberts (helped invent concentration camps during the Boer war) was also from the area. People usually used to vote conservative there back in the day. Also the Quakers lived there and they were very prosperous. Must be still a few still in the area considering there's a primary school, boarding school and Quaker meeting house. Many fine houses going out along the Dunmore road too.
Max Powers wrote: » That comes across like some a load of small mindedness, jealousy even. You need to open your mind a bit if quiche and rugby are evidence of some sort of negative trait.
Motivator wrote: » Jealous of what exactly? People paying way over the odds for their houses? Jealous of sitting in bumper to bumper traffic 6 days a week and for what? There’s an air of superiority that hangs over the Dunmore Rd area and there has been for years. I’ve family that have lived out that direction for years and they’re knobheads as well.
kuang1 wrote: » I live in the Dunmore Road area. Clearly there's a lot in what you say as I find myself feeling very superior to you right now.
Wanderer78 wrote: » any quiche? id love a bit now
kuang1 wrote: » No I've moved on from Quiche. I now put organic pears in my spelt bread sandwiches with bacon from hand reared pigs.
hardybuck wrote: » Absolute nonsense. The house is inherited, the au pair does most of the running to the school, and the shopping gets delivered.
Wanderer78 wrote: » whats an au pair?
Victor wrote: In the case of Waterford, the migrant is likely to be from Ballybeg.
Dum_Dum wrote: » I live in WD40 and my daddy works for KPMG.
Motivator wrote: » The kids fresh from Rugby training traipsing after Mum while she picks up a quiche for lunch. Mum, in her active wear and oversized sunglasses, loudly scolding kids for wanting a chicken roll instead of quiche.
deisemum wrote: » Funniest thread on here in a while, I confess to having quiche for lunch today but it was homemade.
Motivator wrote: » I’ve family that have lived out that direction for years and they’re knobheads as well.
El Tarangu wrote: » Imagine thinking that quiche constituted posh food in 2020 - it's egg pie...
hardybuck wrote: » Meanwhile, in the zoo like atmosphere of the Lisduggan shopping centre, Ardkeen mum's counterpart, also in her active wear but sans sunglasses, has collected her dole and single parent allowance and has the shopping trolley filled with the weekly shop which consists of frozen pizzas and vodka. Lisduggan mum loudly scolds her offspring for wanting a chipper for dinner instead of the Chinese that Dad has promised to bring home on his way back from the pub. Stereotypes are so much fun aren't they?
smellyoldboot wrote: » There's literally a post office in the Ardkeen shopping centre too. I'd say the Doley's have to snake in and out like ninjas. "Hide the card John, it's Mary from number 23"