RobbieTheRobber wrote: » So not Irish Culture then right? I mean I did specifically ask about Irish Culture.
Cordell wrote: » All the values of the western culture are also values of the Irish culture, they are inseparable.
Deleted User wrote: » No reasonable person reading this discussion will read my response to you as ad hominem. You are doing yourself no favours here. I already answered the question. You rejected my answer. I asked you to clarify, by way of example, what sort of answer you are looking for. You are refusing. Entirely your prerogative, of course, but you nonetheless bring the discussion to a logical end point with that choice.
Wibbs wrote: » No flilflam about definitions, no defection, no reframing.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » All of them? So name one and lets link it specifically to Irish people and culture and see if it stands up.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Well you have placed a ban on arts, cuisine, sports, etc so I'm assuming language, mythology, storytelling , known for being highly social, being held in high regard (mostly) throughout the world, historically Catholic, poetic etc are all banned too? All of which are valuable and important parts of our impact on the western culture as a whole.
Cordell wrote: » All of them. You can't separate them, western cultures evolved together as THE western culture with it's values that we value today. And because we're going into the "what have the Romans ever done for us" territory please excuse me now.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » Yeah banned as a positive for multiculturalism so banned here sorry dunne. Catholicism is imported and it is not distinct to Irish culture and is our Catholicism a positive?
[Deleted User] wrote: » Id say it is much more positive than an Islamic culture. But it's ok Robbie, I've no intention of discussing the merits of Irish and western culture under your outlined parameters.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » I'm not asking you to compare.I'm asking was Catholicism a positive force in Irish culture? My outlined parameters, I just extended the exclusions applied to multiculturalism on this thread.
TomTomTim wrote: » What exactly is your aim here? You seem to jump around from point to point, hardly knowing what you're doing, or what you want from the conversation.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » If we can ask the question of multiculturalism surely it would only be fair to reflect that question back on ourselves and answer it. If the question is fair we should have no problem answering it!
Deleted User wrote: » Except, you've shown that you have no interest in dealing with what others have written in answer to your question. Cymro answered you, and you dismissed their contribution out of hand, without even trying to constructively expand on what they'd said. At least when it comes to multiculturalism, posters are willing to discuss the various aspects associated. If you'd wanted something similar for Irish culture, then, you should have encouraged discourse, not shut it down. Probably the reason why others haven't rushed to answer your question on Irish culture... because you've shown you don't have any real interest in discussing it.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » So is this post an example of how I should engage with other posters in this thread Klaz?
One positive of Irish culture Klaz. So far the only real suggestion is Catholicism and I'm going to be honest I don't think that can be considered positive in an Irish culture context.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Except, you've shown that you have no interest in dealing with what others have written in answer to your question. Cymro answered you, and you dismissed their contribution out of hand, without even trying to constructively expand on what they'd said
MikeOxsgreen wrote: » What's tragic, is people debating in good faith with Robbie, to find there actually is no goal, not to mind it constantly being shifted.
Dyr wrote: » Common enough tactic, spam away, try drag threads down dead ends, over and over.
It is becoming increasingly clear that the price of unregulated globalisation, mass immigration and the free movement of labour is paid for by the lower classes.”
Deleted User wrote: » Nope. Ahh well, I'd struggle to define anything unique about Irish culture anymore. I used to think that the combination of the traditional pub culture along with our live music, (along with poetry) were distinctive parts of Irish culture which fed into many other area, but the pub culture is pretty much dead now. TBH most of the things I would have considered being Irish have diminished significantly over the last two decades, but then, I don't actually spend much time here in Ireland going out. I doubt I'd be best placed to describe what modern Irish culture consists of. One thing about Catholicism, is that regardless of where you go in Europe, you will find countries that were shaped by it's presence as part of their cultures. They all were shaped differently though, based on their own circumstances, and reaction to events. Naturally enough. However, the point being that Irish people were shaped by Catholicism in ways that were different to other cultural groups. I see Catholicism as being a combination of positives and negatives. It would be very difficult to separate our sense of morality from the influences of the RCC. I'm sure it could be done, but I doubt it would be terribly accurate. IMO the RCC influenced so much in Ireland, that any positives or negatives in this country, can all be traced back to that religion.,. (either because of, or in reaction to it)One positive of Irish culture. Directness and general honesty. Irish people are generally very direct in expressing themselves, and there aren't the layers of hidden meanings that you often find in other cultures. Comparing Irish people with Spanish or Italians, or even Germans, you'll often find the Irish to be far more direct and honest about their intentions. Now, I dunno, how true that is anymore... it could be something that has been discarded but most people I know over 30 tend to reflect such a sense of behavior.
MikeOxsgreen wrote: » What's tragic, is people debating in good faith with Robbie, to find there actually is no goal, not to mind it constantly being shifted. I mean you could benchmark Ireland against international standards, our standing in UN/OECD ratings, and produce health, education, literacy rares, welfare standards, relatively transparent security and policing , the mature legal and democratic system with enfranchisement for all, the free press, a planning and development process, protection of children and minors and how as a society we're outraged when things go wrong, the rights of women being equal to men, free expressions of gender identity, free expression of religion albeit evolving to much more secular one, animal welfare protections, investment in rural and deprived areas by a central government, protection of the environment and public health, a historic love of music, sports, film and storytelling, a strong County identify, an affinity with the plucky underdog, an internationally recognised voice for oppressed nations and contribution to global peace as opposed to warmongering. But why bother. I know I won't. I can't for the life of me think of one positive of Irish culture, I mean who would even want to come here... Why are we even having a conversation on inward migration and the risk of multiculturalism to Irish culture.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » The modern Ireland we are using in this thread to claim superiority is I would argue as a result of shaking off the catholic hold on the country over the past 30 years. So I really can't agree it as a positive.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » Mike their is no goal to discussion everything we argue about in CA is for nought. We are all anonymous nobodies and none of our arguments here will have any effect on the policy of the state. What Goal do you think there is to derive form this thread for anybody? I mean your making my argument for me mike you haven't yet produced a single unique positive thing about Irish culture.
RobbieTheRobber wrote: » What are the positives of Irish culture?
kildare lad wrote: » Gaa, traditional Irish music , great pubs , great writers and storytellers , the like of Riverdance brought Irish dancing to the global scale
Cordell wrote: » But camel racing, halal music (no pitched instruments, just percussion), no alcohol, no books, men only dancing are just as good You fell for it What you listed are indeed things that are making life enjoyable, but the core western values are those that make life worth living. They are not specifically Irish, but they are Irish and French and German and American all the same. Western values, they are those that make our culture superior. After all, computers and internet, i.e. what makes this very conversation possible, is the result of western science and, why not, capitalism.