Larbre34 wrote: » I wouldn't try to persuade them. Their perception is totally and absolutely correct. Fact is, they have been let down, even betrayed by their own representatives for decades now. Their time is over and thats all there is to it. We don't need them to agree to a United Ireland, 6 million to 0.8 million is a pretty easy bit of arithmetic understand. They can either remain where they are and live exactly as they always have, albeit electing to a Dublin parliament, or they can piss off to GB. Either way, the momentum is unstoppable now, UI is leaving the station and building up steam.
martinedwards wrote: » Ok instead of the usual, yellow numberplate/petrol bomb as soon as you cross the border/Derry girls are easy thread...... Boards seems to be a strongly Pro united Ireland community Ok, lets say that there is a border poll. Having a minority with strong anti ruler views has historically not been the most peaceful system in the North. so, how would you persuade the folk that are terrified of all the things that they PERCEIVE to be against them in an all island Irish nation? and lets be honest, "Suck it up, my auntie Brigit was spat on by a brit soldier in 1972" isn't going to persuade the likes of Sammy Wilson that it's a good idea. Discuss!
martinedwards wrote: » So a restarting of the troubles with the other lot in minority is OK with you. Cool. I've lived through it once already. With a Ruling group with the military force of a world superpower on their side. Garda and Irish Army.......? I'd prefer not to face it again.
alchemist33 wrote: » They can have their marches (in places where they're wanted) and maybe even British passports. But they all have to subscribe to the one true Tayto.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » I think many of us in ROI need to be persuaded why we would want to unite with the North, not something that would ever interest me anyway
PokeHerKing wrote: » If the majority on the island vote for a UI, once we've the Irish army on the streets of the six counties we can start to round up all the Sammy Wilsons and have the container ship waiting to sail them all back to Scotland.
screamer wrote: » Not interested in taking on that basket case for the sake of a united ireland. They don’t identify as Irish in any way. There’s no convincing them and why would anyone waste their breath. They are people who struggle for an identity, England doesn’t class them as British , Ireland class them as Northern Irish and they worship a Dutchman dead the last 319 years...
banie01 wrote: » Unionism has been betrayed.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » Aren't half of them employed by the UK government up there? I think there are tonnes of public service and civil service jobs that were put there to keep them quiet. What do we do with those people? The north is in a better place now than it maybe ever has been, I'm not sure why any rational person would want to be part of our country.
Irish Praetorian wrote: » I really think people over-estimate the likelihood of a majority vote in the North for a United Ireland - the 'Catholic' portion of the population is lingering around the 45% mark, whilst although the 'Protestant' proportion is declining and ageing much faster, there is an increasing cohort of 'neither'. This new 'neither' cohort is far more likely to be convinced by more secular and pragmatic arguments about their future, and such pragmatism would probably lead them to stay in the UK. Even the process of Brexit has not stirred things up dramatically.
Deleted User wrote: » Catholics likely outnumber protestant already in nihttps://www.birmingham.ac.uk/news/latest/2020/12/northern-ireland-census.aspx Unionism is being let down by its leaders in shouting down any debate as regards a unity poll.....they will be vastly under prepared come what may as regards it,and have no card remaining to play.... they tried so hard to get a hard border to cut nationlists off from the south/strengten partition and when push come to serve,the british government fcuked em over......no amount of lies,will detract from fact,the ni protocol is a result of dup policy surronding brexit
Zebra3 wrote: » Unionism betrayed itself. DUP/UUP used loyalists when it suited them and then threw them to the wolves when it suited them. Bit like the Tan forces.
Fake Scores wrote: » A lot of people assume that the catholic population in the North all want a United Ireland. It's around 50% and doesn't change too much off that mark over the years and decades. Remember the 'troubles' in the North kicked off over civil rights. The catholics fighting against a quasi Apartheid society. Not any teary eyed, four green fields nonsense.