jm08 wrote: » Sunningdale was one of the best recruiting drives for the PIRA. Tell me why do you think SF has such support in NI? Why is the SDLP not getting more support from the voters in NI, particularly when SF doesn't sit in Westminster?
Bonniedog wrote: » The Council of Ireland was nothing to do with getting a united Ireland. It was giving the nationalist/Catholic population the assurance that Dublin would stand up for their interests.
FrancieBrady wrote: » The SDLP were in Dublin giving speeches about how they saw the 'Council of Ireland' as "the vehicle that would trundle Unionists into a united Ireland". That was the final straw for Unionists and we saw what happened.
FrancieBrady wrote: » Any of us who call ourselves Irish and who have pride in our sovereignty and freedom has 'blood on our hands' whether you were physically involved or not. Don't be hypocritical about it. Dying for a cause in 1916 was just as real and savage as it was in 1976.
Bishop of hope wrote: » Whose going to sell it to them? It won't be sold, it will be democratically voted for and the majority of them will never vote for it. It will have to be forced on them as such even then.
Brendan Bendar wrote: » Bit of a stretch there Francie .......
FrancieBrady wrote: » The 'stretch' is the effort to pretend that the methods of achieving our own freedom was any different to that of northern nationalists and to divorce yourself from the realities of one and not the other. People were killed for your freedom Brendi.
Brendan Bendar wrote: » Indeed they were Francie, may they Rest In Peace. What was it in Omagh ....29 including a pregnant woman and Spanish students. I think I’d sacrifice ‘freedom’ to bring all those innocents back, in the cold light of day. Some however might see them as ‘expendable’ pawns in game, usually well away from the event but ever anxious to keep the fires lighting and the bitterness flowing for as long as they can. Some folk can see through these ‘warhorses’ Francie, there are folk out there who see the big picture and are not driven by foolish idealism into a campaign of death and destruction. Some folk see other ways and innocent people are alive and prospering because of it.
McMurphy wrote: » Omagh was carried out by dissidents Brenner (I'm sure you know this already) - Maira Cahill's crew. Enda and Joan embraced her with open arms lest we forget.
blanch152 wrote: » Nauseating disingenuous nonsense. Mairia Cahill has apologised for her six months with the dissidents as a vulnerable young woman recovering from horrific abuse by Sinn Fein and the PIRA.
markodaly wrote: » Who is Andrew Dunne? Honest question. See I don't spend my days travelling Twitter looking for outrage or laughs in this idiotic political meme games that some like to go on about.
Bonniedog wrote: » The Council of Ireland was nothing to do with getting a united Ireland. It was giving the nationalist/Catholic population the assurance that Dublin would stand up for their interests. there is no equivalent in the GFA by the way. The reason SF eclipsed the SDLP because it is a more efficient electoral party and offered something new. It is no closer to achieving a united Ireland, but at least the SDLP only barely pretended that was an end goal.
Brendan Bendar wrote: » I’m sure Randal, those poor souls weren’t concerned who carried it out. Only the faceless folk and those eager to keep the fires burning would have any concern or interest in that, other than law enforcement. You see Randal, to keep the ‘street cred ’ these people need to give the impression that, to use the euphemism ‘they were in the GPO in ‘16’. In other words to give the impression they somehow they took part in ‘operations’ even thought they were never next or near any ‘operation’ All part of the game,Randal,(I’m sure you know this already)
Bowie wrote: » Do you support all dissidents? What about the shooting of Lyra McKee, you condone that? Do FG support all dissidents or just the ones endanger the peace process if they can score cheap points off them? Do you think there are dissidents out there thinking all they need do is recant their beliefs and score a senate job off FG to stick it to SF? I would image FG would accomodate.
blanch152 wrote: » What a silly set of questions!! (1) I am not FG (2) Mairia Cahill was in a dissident organisation for six months (3) She has apologised for her membership and support of dissidents (4) Why would I condone the shooting of Lyra McKee, when I have condemned many other killings (5) The killing of Lyra McKee was equally abhorrent to me as the killing of Mountbatten. Was it to you?
Bowie wrote: » FG/Lab gave a dissident republican who campaigned against the GFA a senate position. No. Lyra McKee was an innocent bystander shot by dissidents who do not support peace. Mountbatten was a legitimate target in the conflict, It's unfortunate others died too. If I had my way nobody would have died but in a conflict that's not realistic. What's your view on the BA/UDA blowing up two teenagers?
jm08 wrote: » Brendan, where do you stand on 1916? Are you a Redmondite?
Brendan Bendar wrote: » “Unfortunate” you say........ Hope you never get “Unfortunate”.
Bonniedog wrote: » What happened?
50 years later and still no nearer to a united Ireland.
Would love to see a source for that SDLP statement, if you have it?
hatrickpatrick wrote: » the Catholic campaign against systemic discrimination, .
FrancieBrady wrote: » https://www.drb.ie/blog/comment/2020/05/12/sunningdale-trundling-on
Bonniedog wrote: » Thanks. Don't think Logue was articulating either the main SDLP position, and certainly not that of the Coalition in Dublin which dreaded any move towards to a united Ireland.
FrancieBrady wrote: » The fact is he articulated it and I don't think he was censured or corrected on it by the SDLP. Regardless, it was the final straw for Unionist. I'll let jm08 find the piece where Noel Dorr said that Cosgrove and Fitzgerald thought it would bring a UI as well. It was amatuer hour really and Sunningdale and those behind it, failed spectacularly. Dublin, Belturbet and Monaghan got bombed as a result of the escalation it caused.