ittakestwo wrote: » Successful and secure? Don't make me laugh. Consistently runs a deficit and has noway to pay its own way, and the two many parties encourage sectarianism. And secure? Very precarious more like. Signed up to an international agreement which allows it to no longer exist by popular vote at any time.
Junkyard Tom wrote: » Good to see that young Irish students in the northeast won't miss out on the chance to avail of the Erasmus programme just because the British have spitefully withdrawn from it.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » The Irish government should not be paying a cent for anything in the north so long as it is part of the UK. The UK should pay.
downcow wrote: » I agree with you, but why look a gift horse in the mouth
Fionn1952 wrote: » Further integration between NI and Ireland is no bad thing alright, Downcow. Just think, all those University educated children looking towards the Irish state for expanding their horizons. Certainly it won't be some big seismic push either way, but another little move on the numbers as some people will certainly be looking at post-Brexit Britain as holding them back and further embracing their Irishness, particularly given that the majority in NI already supported remaining part of the EU. Arlene and Co may have done more for Irish Unity than the Shinners ever managed.
downcow wrote: » Some truth in some of what you say. I think the greening of the north will continue to crawl along. But actually the greener the north becomes then the more nationalists are happy and don’t want to rock the boat ie a north that recognised their identity and also had the nhs etc. That’s the conundrum for republicans. And I can assure you young people in Northern Ireland, when they think, let me broaden my horizons, thinks, I could spend a year in the south. Haha get real. They think South America, Africa, Far East. You really have an amazing opinion on your country
downcow wrote: » Some truth in some of what you say. I think the greening of the north will continue to crawl along. But actually the greener the north becomes then the more nationalists are happy and don’t want to rock the boat ie a north that recognises their identity and also had the nhs etc. That’s the conundrum for republicans. And I can assure you young people in Northern Ireland, when they think, let me broaden my horizons, thinks, I could spend a year in the south. Haha get real. They think South America, Africa, Far East. You really have an amazing opinion on your country
pixelburp wrote: » I'm confused trying to parse your contention here. That young people won't support unification because they're too busy emigrating to South Africa? How is support for unification lead by or negated by (a pretty standard) desire for a J1 or Erasmus? And reads like you yourself have an amazing opinion of your own system if you think the darling NHS will keep people from voting for change. Isn't exactly working with the Scots at the moment... While the Tories continue to gut the NHs out of recognition, it's a far cry from the days of Atlee.
downcow wrote: » I don’t know where to start to reply. You are the one who said
downcow wrote: » young people in ni would look to an experience in Roi to broaden their vision (or something like that). I am just telling you that the young people o know want that experience on the other side of the globe.
downcow wrote: » The polls are clear. The nhs is a huge factor in the vast majority in ni not want to join Roi. You need to either fix you health service or do a better or job. Scotland has the nhs and I am quite sure would maintain it in an independent Scotland do no comparison
pixelburp wrote: » No. I didn't. I can't speak to the other user you're patently mixing me up with but that's not how I read it at all. Even the most ardent republican wouldn't be so blind to think the RoI is an appealing foreign destination for the wanderlust types. The RoI is however helping maintain that ability to do so. I'd like to see the poll please, am curious. It's a fairly well established point that the Tories are gutting the NHS at the moment, and is a far cry from its heady days of yore (much like Britain in general, but hey). A long way to go until it hits American levels but the shine is lost a little. I'm not playing a pißing contest of health services but the National 'Elth is far from its peak that'd I'd snark so fast at the HSE (with its own, albeit different problems). Were "fixing a health service" so simple.
Fionn1952 wrote: » Just to be clear, I wasn't suggesting that the extending of Erasmus to the young people of the North would be part of broadening their horizons purely so they could spend a year living in a different part of their own island. Either you're being willfully misrepresentative or you don't actually know what Erasmus is Downcow, but it's a bit more than having the option to spend a year in Dublin. It really is a fantastic idea and I'm saddened that British children won't have that option in years to come. And yes, in a few days, an Irish passport will be much more useful for broadening ones horizons than a British passport, even taking Erasmus out of the picture. Aren't we of the North very lucky that the Irish government are still looking out for us? As for the rest, if the likes of the DUP weren't so aggressively anti anything Irish, that might be a real issue. As demonstrated time and time again, they can't help themselves though, and will continue to push people from Nationalist backgrounds away unless they have some huge changes in how they act. Unionism has as much work to do on its inclusiveness to maintain the Union as Nationalism has to do on the other side. You demonstrate your complacency on this time and time again with your insistence it'll never happen.
pixelburp wrote: » No. I didn't. I'd like to see the poll please, am curious. It's a fairly well established point that the Tories are gutting the NHS at the moment, and is a far cry from its heady days of yore (much like Britain in general, but hey). A long way to go until it hits American levels but the shine is lost a little. I'm not playing a pißing contest of health services but the National 'Elth is far from its peak that'd I'd snark so fast at the HSE (with its own, albeit different problems). Were "fixing a health service" so simple.
downcow wrote: » I did think you were suggesting a year in Roi so apologies. British children living in ni will be able to avail of Erasmus- unless you know differently. I can’t see Roi government making it being necessary to hold a irish passport British children in gb will have a new scheme to avail of. Low and behold, British (and Irish) children living in ni will be able to avail of both systems. It is laughable to suggest Roi are looking after the people of gb and by implication UK are not
Hamsterchops wrote: » NI health service is not a failure. I was very surprised to hear some expert on the radio this morning proclaiming how advanced and organised the health survive is in Northern Ireland when compared to our health service! He was being interview by Mark Little on Newstalk before 10am. Can't remember his name, but he really knew his onions, and he couldn't make it clear enough as to how advanced, organised & structured the NHS is in Northern Ireland when compared to our health system! Mark Little brought up about the call for help by their ambulance service for our ambulances to assist, to which he totally agreed but said isn't it great that we could help with their Covid crisis, but doesn't it also show how bad the virus had become there & how they're fighting it. (Vaccine already rolled out several weeks ago). He's also stated that NI was a sovereign state within the UK, and as such was outside our grasp, or words to that affect... All this has me scratching my head, as listening to various reports in the Irish media over the months I thought the NI health system was in a total mess! Obviously not :cool:
Five Eighth wrote: » Who claimed that the Northern Ireland health service was a 'failure' and a 'total mess'? Please provide the relevant links to the Irish media which you refer to in your post. Also, you state that this 'expert' stated that "NI was a sovereign state within the UK, and as such was outside our grasp, or words to that affect..." So what? You don't to be an expert in anything to know that NI is currently within the UK.
Hamsterchops wrote: » Easy there tiger, keep your hair on and don't shoot the messenger. Loads of negative media stuff relating to NI and it's failing health service, jezz even in this thread there's more than a little negativity about NI and the mess they're in. I was surprised when the interviewee explained how advanced their Health Service was in comparrson to ours, that's all. Presumably you knew this already?
Five Eighth wrote: » Who claimed that the Northern Ireland health service was a 'failure' and a 'total mess'?
Five Eighth wrote: » Still didn't provide the links as requested. Don't know of anyone or any media who claimed that the NHS in NI was a 'failure' or 'in a mess'. It appears that the NI Executive made a right bags of managing the effects of Covid and the hospitals were under pressure coping with the results of the mess. It's not an NHS mess but a NI Executive mess.
Junkyard Tom wrote: » Nobody did, pay no heed to our unionist friend there. The NHS was built out of the ashes of WWII and was the envy of the developed world, a very admirable project that the Tories would like to defund and sell off. The NHS has very strong cross-community support in the north and a United Ireland would provide an great opportunity to build a 21st Century Ireland-wide version if we could get it by the special interests that partition serves.
FrancieBrady wrote: » So when the NHS does good...that us down to the great NHS but if it cannot cope that is because it's somebody else's fault? There is a lot of myth about the NHS and much the same complaints in reality as there is about the HSE. Would be great if we could take what was best about both and combine them in a new island efficient service.
Hamsterchops wrote: » a hardened Irish Republican
recognise that the NI health system is far more advanced then ours!
Five Eighth wrote: » Would assume that the NHS in NI, just like the HSE, is just trying to cope as best it can with the dynamic nature of the virus.