I'm picturing scenes from "Angela's Ashes";
People complain about cultural diversification and yes, when it's improperly managed (or ill-resourced), ees probleem.
But adapting to this is the basis for societal evolution (of course no one claimed this was easy nor straight forward).
Opening our doors to alternate cultures has been the best thing this country has done since the dark ages (the remnants of which I can recall being a kid), falling off my bike about 10% of the time I'd cycle down to my mates house, lose half a pound of flesh on the pot-holed, pebble stoned, non-tarmac road.
Then we joined the EU, had the infrastructure boom.
I recall a proper road was laid between my folks house and the small adjacent urban center.
It was so smooth, I'd never experienced anything like it before in my life, it felt divine - like a magic carpet ride, compared to the muck track it replaced.
We've gone from strength to strength ever since, the country we live in now.... millennials just don't know how it was for younger generations (and I still classify myself as a young generator, being a 90's kid).
Technology and the internet has clearly paved the way for globalization, it's like humanities nervous system in a way, a nervous system to the super organism.
Has the fundamental basis of historical Irish culture and thought process actually changed though, in spite of our diversification?
If we withdrew from the EU and had a non-native exodus, would it be back to square one?