javaboy wrote: » This is a false sweeping generalisation. I'm mid-30's and not from NI.
MacronvFrugals wrote: » I wonder which generations saddled us with that 200 billion debt
Assetbacked wrote: » I'm not SF, not really any party to be honest, and am 31 but I've seen no link from SF to these troubles. I just hear the same comments from my parents about them but I see my parents as being irrational with these views.
Assetbacked wrote: » .......... But the fear of SF seems to be so irrational as they are a centre-left party, not even extreme in policies. ............
Hubertj wrote: » its funny that some people think that a political party that advocates and defends the murder of women and children have the best interests of the country at heart. That before we even consider their "policies", which are mainly drafted in another jurisdiction. Its unfortunate that this pandemic has hit the country. IF the Dail was properly functioning it would provide the opportunity to scrutinize some of the SF TDs elected earlier this year. Skeletons in the closet would have a more literal meaning. Sad state of affairs when younger generations think bombers are the solution.
Assetbacked wrote: » I'm not SF, not really any party to be honest, and am 31 but I've seen no link from the SF we see (Mary Lou, O'Broin, Pearse Doherty (I think is his name)) to these troubles. I just hear the same comments from my parents about them but I see my parents as being irrational with these views.
drogon. wrote: » I don't get this mentality. Sure person "B" bought the house at 450K, and person "A" might buy a similar house in the area for 300K in few years time. But what about when you include the average rent person "A" is going to spend from now until they can buy the same house for 300K ? The average rent in Dublin is 2K a month, so in one year person "A" will pay €24,000 in rent alone, rather than paying off a mortgage. Now if Person "B" pays the same amount towards their mortgage they could easily save money on the long run by paying more towards their mortgage and saving on interest.
brisan wrote: » So do the trouble in the north mean anything to you Do you remember them Have they any impact on your thinking today
The_Conductor wrote: » We have a demographic time bomb which is already beginning to explode- and the under 40s are in for one hell of a shock when their turn to pay taxes comes into focus.
Augeo wrote: » You'd not believe the claims that the IRA army council has political influence/control over Sinn Fein so?
PommieBast wrote: » My working assumption is that by the time I get to 60-70 there won't be a state pension. When the cohort who have had nothing to show for gov't spending become the majority, the political pressure will be to slash it.
enricoh wrote: » Here's sinn feins proposals today for the upcoming budget- basically double the social housing spend. They must live in a parallel universe where coronavirus hasn't wrecked the government finances!https://m.independent.ie/irish-news/tenants-with-a-history-of-bad-behaviour-would-not-be-blacklisted-under-sinn-feins-new-housing-plan-39548392.html The monthly affordable rent in Dublin for a three-bedroom home would be €700-€900, he said, and less outside the capital.
brisan wrote: » ..................... The results of the last election show that a significant proportion of the under 40s voted SF ..........
Augeo wrote: » On a site where?
Danny552 wrote: » Well if you have land you will, I will be building my own house in kildare like most of my family have over the years. All new builds are poor quality just built to fast and a ridiculous price slapped on.
Augeo wrote: » No doubt. We are in a time when the yellow vest brigade way of thinking has a huge following. Folk don't want water charges, folk want tax cuts, folk want better hospitals, no patients on trolleys, cheap houses for all etc etc. SF promise all that and in return propose taxing the wealthy (whoever they are, folk on over €50k/annum maybe ??? ).
Ignacius wrote: » I reckon they mean the millionaire/ billionaire class. Of course it is a dystopian communist nightmare to expect decent services from the taxes you pay.https://www.google.ie/amp/s/www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/who-are-ireland-s-17-billionaires-1.4145400%3fmode=amp
Pelezico wrote: » A lot of our tax is being consumed by the public sector and their fabulous gilt edge pensions. They are milking the cow dry.fair play to them.
fliball123 wrote: » They sure are and teachers now looking to strike ...........
Get Real wrote: » There's an elected Sinn Féin TD who sits in the Dáil who has convictions for bomb making. He served 10 years in Portlaoise. He was convicted of possession of power timers suspected to have been used in the Hyde Park, and Regency Park bombs in the 1980s. There was an outdoor play of Oliver on when one of the bombs went off. There were deaths (soldiers at a ceremony) and there were children and members of the public about. His fingerprints were discovered on a huge store of weapons hidden in Berkshire. Nobody has been convicted of the two park bombings. A Donegal man, as recently as 2014, was up for trial on it, but was acquitted after he received a letter from the psni in 2007 saying he wouldn't be prosecuted for it. None of the above names you list are this TD. But these people are associating a) another TD who has terrorism convictions b) know what went on and the inner workings c) others who aren't politicians but were involved. Whatever about modern ideology achieved peacefully through the Good Friday Agreement, or support for something 100 years ago. But nobody, nobody, should be shaking hands, calling on doors and be sitting in the Dáil, for being involved in modern terrorism, using romanticism and politics of time past as an excuse to kill someone who is across the sea. A dressed up housing policy, that only nets 4000 homes for the squeezed middle shouldn't gloss over that imo. To think people were (rightfully) annoyed that Barry Cowen got a fine for drink driving in comparison.