Everyone accepts that the war of independance would probably never have happened were it not for the 1916 rising
You have made a quite outrageous assertion that the WW1 volunteers would have been able to gain independance without partition
yes we were, but only because they invaded us and it was no choice of the Irish people.
Nearly all of the Irish who went and faught in WW1 and 2 did it so they could get some money and send it home for their familys.
magpie wrote: Everyone except the Historians who argue that the War of Independence was really triggered by British attempts to introduce conscription in 1918, and that it was more effectively waged than the Easter Rising owing to the vast majority of those involved having served in France for 4 years and therefore knowing a thing or two about fighting.
There would have been no support for the War of Independance were it not for the idealism of the 1916 rising
would you mind telling me how rotting away in a trench in the Somme teaches you "a thing or two about fighting", especially as it was a guerilla war being fought in Ireland.
Anyway, you're drifting off topic. The forum is about WW1
magpie wrote: *cough* Dogma *cough*
This is the best rebuttle you can come up with!?!
Can't refute the point that it was those who survived 1916 and were inspired by it as opposed to your beloved WW1 volunteers who won are independance
You still haven't proved why anyone was doing a service by fighting WW1 - the most unwarranted war ever.
As for your snide remarks about An Phoblacht, I fail to see the point you are making
it is accepted by all, bar yourslef, that the English were an oppressive force
I presume the "they" you are referring to is the Normans? Who you will remember from your history books had invaded Britain some hundred years previously and only arrived in Ireland under invitation to fight for the Irish against the Norwegian King of Dublin. But never let complicated things like facts get in the way of Provo Dogma.
magpie wrote: I'm sorry, I didn't realise you were expecting me to prove the worth of WW1. What I can prove is that 170,000 Irishmen served in WW1 with what they believed was good reason, and I fail to see why they should not be remembered because of the objections of a few snotty shinners with a propagandised version of history.
magpie wrote: By the English, do you mean the Germanic tribe the Angles who settled in the island of Britain in the 5th/6th century, after massacring the native British? Or do you mean the Norman (Franco/Norwegian) conquerors who vanquished the Angles in 1066 and then come to Ireland? I'm just confused that in all your statements about 700 years of oppression you don't seem to have a clear grasp of who was involved? If the Normans are to blame why aren't you in Normandy demanding that everyone with a surname beginning with Fitz be forcibly repatriated? I find it incredibly sad that the version of Irish 'history' concocted by Fianna Fail in the 1930s as a bulwark against counter-revolution is accepted by so many as fact. Then again if you only study history to secondary school level that's to be expected. Its high time the curriculum was changed to move away from dogma towards an understanding of the multi-racial, multi-cultural nature of these islands and the interdependence of the 'nations' therein.
I don't believe they were 'fighting for the freedom of small nations.' , although they may have thought they were
Snickers Man wrote: To wear a poppy, as some other posters have pointed out here, is to align oneself with the official British view of history, which with the benefit of a dangerous mixture of hindsight and revision, seeks to portray the history of the two world wars as being a seamless sequence of struggles of good versus evil.
It was a French woman, Madame E. Guérin, who conceived the idea of widows and orphans manufacturing artificial poppies in the devastated areas of Northern France that could be sold by veterans' organisations overseas for the benefit of veterans as well as the destitute children of northern France.
Snickers Man wrote: But wearing a bloody poppy,
Snickers Man wrote: which as the Republican posters here have pointed out, quite justifiably in this case, is a sign of endorsement of all actions of the British Army in the world wars 'AND ALL OTHER CONFLICTS' is not the way to do it.
Snickers Man wrote: It aligns you with the Black and Tans.
Snickers Man wrote: It aligns you with the British soldiers who committed the Amritsar massacre in India.
Snickers Man wrote: It aligns you with the SAS who propped up some of the most medieval sultanates in the Gulf States.
Snickers Man wrote: It aligns you with the soldiers in all THREE attempts this century to engage in regime change in Iraq. (When are the Brits going to realise that they're not very good at that. )
Snickers Man wrote: It aligns you with those who attempted to repress countless national uprisings in the 20th century in Cyprus, Aden, Kenya, Malaya, Palestine, Ghana etc etc etc
Snickers Man wrote: If we should remember the fallen of the First World War it should be with a spirit of horror at what we allowed to take place and a determination not to let such a catastrophe happen again.
Snickers Man wrote: Wearing the poppy won't do that. It only encourages the British to take up the white man's burden and screw over places like Iraq.
Snickers Man wrote: I had loads of relatives (at least five that I know of) who served in the British Army in WWI (a couple more in WWII) and several of them were killed, or died later at young ages from wounds received
landser wrote: I agree with you. I am a Nationalist, but today i'm wearing a poppy. I had two great - uncles in the first war, one of whom was killed at Messines. both were catholics. I have no problem wearing a lilly at easter and a poppy in november
DublinWriter wrote: Yer all probably too young to remember the sh*te that Gay Byrne got in when he wore a poppy on the Late Late sometime in the early 80's.
Mr.Nice Guy wrote: Yet another person who buys into the guff about the poppy being a predominantly British symbol. Historical facts shatter that myth. You want to know the origin of the poppy and its use as a token of remembrance?:
breandan wrote: What is done with the money raised from the sale of these poppy's?
Trying to say that one sacrifce is better then the other is just lame, tasteless political point scoring
What? You mean people were happy with the way things were run in this country in all of those 800 years? Cromwell was a figment of my imagination? The Battle of Kinsale, the uprising in Wexford and countless other incidents of "military oppresion" are just stories made up by Sinn Fein?
I would like to see a symbol of the 1916 rising
I don't believe they were 'fighting for the freedom of small nations.' , although they may have thought they were I don't believe they were fighting 'a great war for civilisation' which their medals claim they were.
"Know that we the fools, now with the foolish dead, Died not for flag, nor King, nor Emperor, But for a dream, born in a herdsman's shed, And for the secret scripture of the Poor".
magpie wrote: Anyway, regardless of motives its surely a sorry state of affairs where 170,000 men are effectively written out of history and their motives questioned while the actions of 1600 men (only 10% of those who stayed behind) are given the hagiography treatment.
By 1914, the Home Rule Bill for Ireland had been passed by the British Parliament on the third attempt. A special arrangement was promised for Ulster. However, it was suspended until the after the end of the War
If home rule had been granted it would have been 32 County, from which position it would have been easier to devolve a United Ireland.
Why is it Republicans have such a problem with the Volunteers? If you could explain without using terms like "oppressors" and "imperialists" for a change that would be helpful.
In WW1 nearly all the Irish people who fought were members of the Volunteers who signed up under the understanding given to John Redmond that Home Rule would be granted on the cease of hostilities. Of course the Easter Rising changed that, so we will never know if they were right or wrong
In WW2 I imagine any Irishmen who served did so out of ideological reasons, and if anyone signed up to feed their families surely it says more about Ireland under the inept revolutionary rule of Fianna Fail in the 1930s than the "Imperial Oppressors".
county wrote: as for myself having lost family in the 1st and 2nd world wars i feel great pride in wearing the poppy as it remembers their sacrifice
Home Rule was already accepted but not introduced
Diorraing wrote: Well, the IRA fought for what they believed was a good reason but I don't see you rushing to commemorate them. I have never been a member of Sinn Féin by the way, have never read An Phoblacht so if you could please refrain from implying that I do. You still dodge the question: What was achieved by anyside in fighting WW1?
I've heard about holocaust deniers but this surely has to take the biscuit.... Do you think Oliver Cromwell is a bed-time story Gerry Adams tells young children?
Quote: I've heard about holocaust deniers but this surely has to take the biscuit.... Do you think Oliver Cromwell is a bed-time story Gerry Adams tells young children? Ever heard of the "Plantation of Munster" and where the word "TORY" comes from?
Diorraing wrote: Its a sorry state of affairs when they go fighting for Belgian freedom when we didn't have our own freedom at the time
murphaph wrote: Not every irish person living at the time felt they were unfree because Ireland was part of the United Kingdom :rolleyes:
Yea they were called Unionists.
Mr.Nice Guy wrote: Yet another person who buys into the guff about the poppy being a predominantly British symbol.
NiceGuy wrote: The poppy is not about the British, it's about paying homage to brave and courageous men who were effectively spit on by later generations of Irish people.
NiceGuy wrote: A lie. Another lie. You're on a roll. More lies! Ridiculous lies!
Surely by hanging on to the prejudice and hate of the past (like yourself) then we are greatly increasing the chances of such catastrophes happening again?
Oh man, you do talk some rubbish.:)