Imagine if we all spoke Irish
jill_valentine wrote: » As an Irish person, I'm not obliged to do anything. My nationality is a matter of happenstance and nothing more. This is what I was kinda trying to get at. Nationalism is no incentive to me. If you want to encourage people to pick up Irish, or at least to respect it's preservation, you need to find a better reason to offer them than just "You should because you're Irish."
RuthieRose wrote: » It makes me sad you feel that way. The fact you need a reason to be proud of your native language. If you do need a better reason than that then there is no way of convincing you.
karlog wrote: » Our first language is irish and hardly anyone I talk to speaks it:rolleyes:
karlog wrote: » In my opinion it would be a disaster. English being the most widely spoken language in the world it's lucky we have it as our first language agree?:D
marko91 wrote: » agree!...irish is a useless language "but its our 1st language" BLEHHHH! shut up theirs no need for it its pointless....in a few hundred years irish will be the new latin
karlog wrote: » In my opinion it would be a disaster. English being the most widely spoken language in the world it's lucky we have it as our first language agree?
karlog wrote: » Imagine if we all spoke Irish
Dynamo Kev wrote: » Gnéas Ar Lasadh! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyggOlf7FpU
I have no patience for any form of nationalism, and get cranky when somebody tries to blackmail me with it. I don't take kindly to being patronised. I really, really don't enjoy passive-aggressive swipes at my sense of civic duty. I resent it when somebody is blatantly taking it upon themselves to educate me mid-conversation by wedging cupla focail in where they don't fit. And so on, and on, and on.
asdasd wrote: » Of course you do have a form of "nationalism" - your tribal dislike of Irish may well come from nationalist roots - maybe Old English, for instance.
enniscorthy wrote: » went over to london lived there through 70s/80s so never really got a chance to learn it then came back here late 80s.1 day a thing comes through the letterbox.irish classes in local gaa centre hehehehehehe:D. i said what the hell i forked up me 10 pound at the time for first class,went down had 1 snob of a teacher simply dreadful she was a secondary school teacher by day wouldnt you know hehehehehahahahah:P class full of gaa heads and bar room republicans givin out about a province they have never even been to hehehehehehahahahahah:p anyway needless to say i didnt last song hohohoh but hey still managed to pick up a word or 2 but seriously dont even get me started on tg4 what a load of LIATHROIDÍ hehehehehehhehehehehehehahahahahahhaaahohohohohohohohohho;);););):D:D:D:D:D:eek:
phasers wrote: » póg mo thóin
This is hilarious.
Its like a post you'd see on Politics.ie.
Elliot Round Pennant wrote: » No it isn't... Not all of us do.
asdasd wrote: » Gosh, now. I cant believe you said that . I may cry. in the history of Ireland, some people came from English backgrounds. They would have been English speakers. Their descendents would obviously have a larger affection for Englishness, than Irishness. I hardly think this is in dispute. The argument that being anti-Irish is the same as being anti-Nationalist is a bit like someone of mostly Spanish descenent in Venezula who opposed the promotion indigenous languages, but loved Spanish, claiming to be anti-Nationalist. Or someone of English descent in Wales hating Welsh. Very few people get by talking Finnish all day, therefore the "anti-nationalists" are basically English nationalist, or anglophiles. Exactly why an anti-nationalist would be opposed to that idea is beyond me. Why would someone so opposed to nationalism, care what nationalism other people consider him.
I think I've got the gist of your argument ie. people of English descent are more likely to dislike Irish and possibly learn French instead. I don't agree with you by the way. Also, if you extend that logic, the English would largely be anti-English and learning French instead also, because they are of Norman heritage.
Anyway, don't know where the Finns fit into your point at all. Perhaps you would reword it in shorter sentences and maybe your point will come across a bit more clearly.
jill_valentine wrote: » I speak English. That's the language I'm fluent in. I didn't grow up in an Irish speaking area, and didn't enjoy the subject in school, and that's just how it is. I learned it from an ultra-Republican whackjob because I needed the qualification. I don't use it in "real life" at all, and don't foresee a practical need for it in future. I have no patience for any form of nationalism, and get cranky when somebody tries to blackmail me with it. I don't take kindly to being patronised. I really, really don't enjoy passive-aggressive swipes at my sense of civic duty. I resent it when somebody is blatantly taking it upon themselves to educate me mid-conversation by wedging cupla focail in where they don't fit. And so on, and on, and on. I could learn the language properly now, but why would I want to if my experience of Irish speakers is negative? The one big thing that any language has going for it is that it offers a door into an otherwise hidden community. That community chooses to consistently demean both the language I speak and me just for speaking it. Why should I want to engage with that community to any greater extent when it's been made perfectly clear to me that I'm not welcome? Irish speakers do their cause no favours by consistently belittling English speakers, and it frustrates me how few seem to recognise this. English is not the enemy.