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Is there a differance between the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA?

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    tdv123 wrote: »
    There was no party in Scotland who stood on a manifesto of independence & setting up a Republic.

    There was a party in Ireland who stood on that manifesto & won a landslide victory.

    If the Scottish people vote for independence (which I don't think is there best interest) that will have to be respected. But it was not respected here & in that lies the underlining problem. When the unit of decision went against them the ruling class changed the unit of decision to suit their own agenda.

    So it's really that not difficult when people playing by the rules get cheated & turn to revolutionary organizations & reject constitutionalism as their way of voicing opinion. It's really not that difficult to understand & candidly I don't believe you can't understand it the truth is you can't accept it.

    There certainly is a party in Scotland that has an unambiguous policy of independence - it doesn't really matter that it's not an overtly republican party, it's an independent party. It's won a majority through constitutional means, but there's significant opposition within Scotland to independence. The 'ruling class agenda' in this case is to let the Scottish make up their own minds on what they want to do. The historic reality in Ireland is that this was the case too -1914, 1920, 1922 all have one thing in common - a requirement for the Irish electorate to determine the issue of partition amongst themselves. That's about the best expression of 'respect' for the Irish from Britain, and undermines the notion that some devious agenda was at play.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,062 ✭✭✭Tramps Like Us


    alastair wrote: »
    There certainly is a party in Scotland that has an unambiguous policy of independence - it doesn't really matter that it's not an overtly republican party, it's an independent party. It's won a majority through constitutional means, but there's significant opposition within Scotland to independence. The 'ruling class agenda' in this case is to let the Scottish make up their own minds on what they want to do. The historic reality in Ireland is that this was the case too -1914, 1920, 1922 all have one thing in common - a requirement for the Irish electorate to determine the issue of partition amongst themselves. That's about the best expression of 'respect' for the Irish from Britain, and undermines the notion that some devious agenda was at play.

    Pleas learn some history. Ireland was not allowed to democratically determine anything, hence the tan war.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Pleas learn some history. Ireland was not allowed to democratically determine anything, hence the tan war.

    If by not being allowed to determine anything, you mean recognise the legitimacy of a self-appointed 1918 Dail ahead of any political dialogue, and an armed insurrection without any electoral mandate, well, yes - that's true. But like I said - Ireland voted for the arrangements of 1914, 1920, and 1922. Britain didn't interfere.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,292 ✭✭✭tdv123


    alastair wrote: »
    There certainly is a party in Scotland that has an unambiguous policy of independence - it doesn't really matter that it's not an overtly republican party, it's an independent party. It's won a majority through constitutional means, but there's significant opposition within Scotland to independence. The 'ruling class agenda' in this case is to let the Scottish make up their own minds on what they want to do. The historic reality in Ireland is that this was the case too -1914, 1920, 1922 all have one thing in common - a requirement for the Irish electorate to determine the issue of partition amongst themselves. That's about the best expression of 'respect' for the Irish from Britain, and undermines the notion that some devious agenda was at play.

    1914 the year the Carsonites armed themselves with guns, bombs & generades & declared their intentions to have an armed military revolt if Ireland was granted Home Rule? When the leaders of the newly found terrorist group looked for & more than likely would have got the mutiny of British battalions stationed in the North if not for the outbreak of WW1.
    This was the 3rd Home rule to be quashed by the British (the first 2 being vetoed in the House of Lords so military action was not needed). I don't remember any crisis like the Curragh incident happening in Scotland when Home Rule in the 70's went of peacefully their. So nobody should think that the 1918 general election results being ignored where anything exclusive in Ireland. The IPP was being ignored for over 30 years & when it looked like democracy might triumph in Ireland the British Government capitulated to the threat of the Ulster Volunteers & gave the green light for the gun to rule & cloud Irish politics for the rest of the century. What a strange year to be boasting about.

    1920 is the year official reprisals are granted to British military personnel in Ireland because (not that unofficial reprisals were out of the ordinary at the time) they believe everyone in Ireland to be a "shinner". And to add insult to injury blamed locals in the aftermath of the burning down of Cork City (one of the many crimes committed against the civilian population that year.

    1922 again another strange year to boast about. If the British were so concerned about letting democracy rain in Ireland why are they so determined to keep Ireland within in the empire? A decision which plunges the country into civil war? It took another 27 years for the south to be recognized as a Republic & officially no longer part of the empire, one can only draw the conclusion that Britain did not intend to let Ireland go anywhere without some sort of war taking place.

    1993 with the Downing Street declaration or 98 with the GFA might have been more productive years to boast about.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 390 ✭✭Rubeter


    alastair wrote: »
    If by not being allowed to determine anything, you mean recognise the legitimacy of a self-appointed 1918 Dail ahead of any political dialogue, and an armed insurrection without any electoral mandate, well, yes - that's true. But like I said - Ireland voted for the arrangements of 1914, 1920, and 1922. Britain didn't interfere.
    Are you honestly trying to say Britain wasn't "interfering" with the wishes of the majority of the people of this island between 1914 and 1922?
    Also how is it possible for Britain not to interfere regarding the issue of Partition when it was they that did the partitioning?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    tdv123 wrote: »
    1914 the year the Carsonites armed themselves with guns, bombs & generades & declared their intentions to have an armed military revolt if Ireland was granted Home Rule? When the leaders of the newly found terrorist group looked for & more than likely would have got the mutiny of British battalions stationed in the North if not for the outbreak of WW1.
    This was the 3rd Home rule to be quashed by the British (the first 2 being vetoed in the House of Lords so military action was not needed). I don't remember any crisis like the Curragh incident happening in Scotland when Home Rule in the 70's went of peacefully their. So nobody should think that the 1918 general election results being ignored where anything exclusive in Ireland. The IPP was being ignored for over 30 years & when it looked like democracy might triumph in Ireland the British Government capitulated to the threat of the Ulster Volunteers & gave the green light for the gun to rule & cloud Irish politics for the rest of the century. What a strange year to be boasting about.

    1920 is the year official reprisals are granted to British military personnel in Ireland because (not that unofficial reprisals were out of the ordinary at the time) they believe everyone in Ireland to be a "shinner". And to add insult to injury blamed locals in the aftermath of the burning down of Cork City (one of the many crimes committed against the civilian population that year.

    1922 again another strange year to boast about. If the British were so concerned about letting democracy rain in Ireland why are they so determined to keep Ireland within in the empire? A decision which plunges the country into civil war? It took another 27 years for the south to be recognized as a Republic & officially no longer part of the empire, one can only draw the conclusion that Britain did not intend to let Ireland go anywhere without some sort of war taking place.

    1993 with the Downing Street declaration or 98 with the GFA might have been more productive years to boast about.
    Irish people were the ones who voted for the political arrangements of 1914, 1920, and 1922. Irish people were the ones who lobbied and voted for partition in Ulster - the British didn't initiate or promote that particular idea. Partition was always seen and framed as a temporary measure by the legislators, with a permanent arrangement to be negotiated between the two Irish sides. The British didn't 'cheat' the electoral demands of the Irish people for constitutional change - they were responding to two contradictory electoral demands, and the clear probability of a war if they gave either side everything they demanded. Whatever your feelings about the nature of the British military response to insurgency within what was still the UK, or the vulnerability of particular Irish garrisons to mutiny, the policy of the British state was essentially hands-off when it came to the issue of Irish self-governance.

    Oh, and no-one is 'boasting' about any year.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Rubeter wrote: »
    Are you honestly trying to say Britain wasn't "interfering" with the wishes of the majority of the people of this island between 1914 and 1922?
    Also how is it possible for Britain not to interfere regarding the issue of Partition when it was they that did the partitioning?

    They didn't 'do' partition, any more than they 'did' Irish self-governance. They provided what was being asked of them by two different groups of Irish lobbyists. Partition was an Irish demand.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    They didn't 'do' partition, any more than they 'did' Irish self-governance. They provided what was being asked of them by two different groups of Irish lobbyists.

    Yes they did. The Government of Ireland Act began to be enacted in the British Parliament during 1919 without reference to the wishes of the majority of the Irish people as expressed in the recent November 1918 election.
    Partition was an Irish demand.

    It was a demand of a minority of the people on the island.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Yes they did. The Government of Ireland Act began to be enacted in the British Parliament during 1919 without reference to the wishes of the majority of the Irish people as expressed in the recent November 1918 election.
    It began to be enacted on the basis of the electoral will of the Irish people. The constitutional will of the Irish people in 1918 was anything but clear, as there was no attempt to formalise it on the back of dialogue between the elected SF MP's and parliament. The Irish people also did not vote for a war against the British.

    It was a demand of a minority of the people on the island.
    That's correct. Just as the demand for independence was from a minority of the people of the UK.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    It began to be enacted on the basis of the electoral will of the Irish people.

    As interpreted by the British government themselves. The Government of Ireland Act of 1920 came into law before the war of 1919-1921 ended in July 1921. There was no input by the majority's representatives during it's creation.
    The constitutional will of the Irish people in 1918 was anything but clear, as there was no attempt to formalise it on the back of dialogue between the elected SF MP's and parliament.

    The result of the 1918 election would suggest otherwise.
    The Irish people also did not vote for a war against the British.

    Based on the version of the Sinn Fein manifesto of 1918 which was censored by the British before release.
    That's correct. Just as the demand for independence was from a minority of the people of the UK

    A minority if one believed that Ireland was part of the UK.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    As interpreted by the British government themselves. The Government of Ireland Act of 1920 came into law before the war of 1919-1921 ended in July 1921. There was no input by the majority's representatives during it's creation.
    Who was supposed to interpret it? They were the governing authority. There was ample input by the majority's elected representatives during it's drafting.
    The result of the 1918 election would suggest otherwise.
    Why would it? SF simply took their ball away and wouldn't talk, while the IRA started a campaign of insurgency without any democratic mandate. No-one actually attempted dialogue with the British.

    Based on the version of the Sinn Fein manifesto of 1918 which was censored by the British before release.
    Neither the censored, or original wording of the election manifesto reference , or seek support for, a military campaign against British rule.

    A minority if one believed that Ireland was part of the UK.
    It was (and is, in the case of NI).


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    Who was supposed to interpret it?

    Yes, who I wonder?
    They were the governing authority.

    So you keep saying.......
    There was ample input by the majority's elected representatives during it's drafting.

    By the SF reps?
    SF simply took their ball away and wouldn't talk

    The election result gave them impetus to do so.
    No-one actually attempted dialogue with the British.

    Shouldn't it have been the other way round?
    Neither the censored, or original wording of the election manifesto reference , or seek support for, a military campaign against British rule.

    You can't take that definitve interpetation from the original wording. Look at section 2.
    It was

    According to you.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Yes, who I wonder?.
    Any determination from those musings?

    So you keep saying........
    Because it's true.

    By the SF reps?.
    SF didn't have MP's or any electoral mandate when it was being drafted.

    The election result gave them impetus to do so..
    That's debatable, and not terribly useful when a constitutional change requires dialogue.

    Shouldn't it have been the other way round?.
    Why would it have been? And why would it be once the IRA started killing people?

    You can't take that definitve interpetation from the original wording. Look at section 2..
    Nothing about any military campaign in there. It refers to the British use of military force.

    According to you.
    Yes - because it's a fact.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    Any determination from those musings?

    As opposed to your own? That Britain could have recognised the outcome of the 1918 election and subsequently acted upon it like the democrats they claimed to have been?
    Because it's true.

    As you say yourself, thats debatable.
    SF didn't have MP's or any electoral mandate when it was being drafted.

    What? SF had 73 MP's elected in November 1918. The Government of Ireland Act didn't begin drafting until 1919.
    That's debatable, and not terribly useful when a constitutional change requires dialogue.

    Yes, dialogue recogising what the majority wanted.
    Why would it have been?

    You tell me.
    Nothing about any military campaign in there. It refers to the British use of military force.

    Section 2 says 'by any means'. It doesn't say exclusively electoral means.
    Yes - because it's a fact.

    As regards to a physical presence here. Nothing more, nothing less.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    As opposed to your own? That Britain could have recognised the outcome of the 1918 election and subsequently acted upon it like the democrats they claimed to have been?
    To act upon it they needed dialogue with those who proposed that change.

    What? SF had 73 MP's elected in November 1918. The Government of Ireland Act didn't begin drafting until 1919.
    ... on the basis of the constitutional demands of the Irish people in 1912. SF chose not to engage with the drafting of the act, just as they chose not to engage with any other aspect of the UK authority until 1922.


    Yes, dialogue recogising what the majority wanted.
    Precisely. Something SF refused to do, until '22.


    You tell me.
    It wouldn't. Any progress on a change of constitutional change required those who are lobbying for that change to engage in dialogue. It took them six years to do so.

    Section 2 says 'by any means'. It doesn't say exclusively electoral means.
    It says nothing about an armed campaign. As I keep repeating.

    As regards to a physical presence here. Nothing more, nothing less.
    Rubbish. Try telling that to any unionist.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    To act upon it they needed dialogue with those who proposed that change.

    Then why didn't the British start the dialogue?
    ... on the basis of the constitutional demands of the Irish people in 1912.

    No. You keep forgetting the outcome of the 1918 election result that followed it.
    SF chose not to engage with the drafting of the act

    They made a declaration of independence instead.
    just as they chose not to engage with any other aspect of the UK authority until 1922. Precisely. Something SF refused to do, until '22.

    As was their right.
    It wouldn't. Any progress on a change of constitutional change required those who are lobbying for that change to engage in dialogue. It took them six years to do so.

    Off you go again with 'the Irish had to' line.............
    Rubbish. Try telling that to any unionist.

    They had a major problem accepting democracy in 1918 didn't they alastair........


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Then why didn't the British start the dialogue?
    Because SF didn't talk to them, but chose instead to start killing them?

    No. You keep forgetting the outcome of the 1918 election result that followed it.
    I don't - SF chose not to engage. The act was brought about as a consequence of Irish demands from 1912, and SF chose not to engage with that process. It was their right of course, but you can't complain that the British didn't take their input, when they didn't actually offer any.

    They made a declaration of independence instead.
    Not much use in practical terms, regarding the continued drafting of an act demanded by the Irish people then, was it?

    As was their right.
    Of course.

    Off you go again with 'the Irish had to' line..............
    Because SF had to. Head-in-the-sand politics lasted all of four years. That a section of the IRA went on to stick their head in the sand regarding the legitimacy of both the UK and Irish governments up until recent times is just more evidence of the futility of that strategy.

    They had a major problem accepting democracy in 1918 didn't they alastair........
    They had a major problem accepting the goals of a minority within the UK being imposed on them - sure. Is that undemocratic? Not particularly.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    Because SF didn't talk to them, but chose instead to start killing them?

    SF started killing people?
    .......regarding the continued drafting of an act demanded by the Irish people

    No. Only 6 Nationalist MP's remained out of 105 Irish MP's. Even some of them, such as Joe Devlin voted against the Gov of Ire Act. I'm baffled that you continue to insist that the passage of this act was 'demanded' by the Irish people.
    accepting the goals of a minority within the UK being imposed on them

    Only if one believed that Nationalists were that 'minority' within such an entity that many rejected had the right to govern them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    SF started killing people?
    SF supported the IRB/A in their armed campaign.

    No. Only 6 Nationalist MP's remained out of 105 Irish MP's. Even some of them, such as Joe Devlin voted against the Gov of Ire Act. I'm baffled that you continue to insist that the passage of this act was 'demanded' by the Irish people.
    Of course it was - where do you suggest the impetus would have come from otherwise?

    Only if one believed that Nationalists were that 'minority' within such an entity that many rejected had the right to govern them.
    The UK had been a reality for a long time, British dominion for longer than that. The nationalist movement was in a minority within the UK - which was the structure of electoral and parliamentary representation. Unionists had every right to oppose that minority nationalist movement, and do so within the bounds of democracy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    Of course it was - where do you suggest the impetus would have come from otherwise?

    Er, no. How can you interpret the 1918 election result as an impetus from the Irish people to get the Gov of Ire Act passed?
    The UK had been a reality for a long time, British dominion for longer than that. The nationalist movement was in a minority within the UK - which was the structure of electoral and parliamentary representation. Unionists had every right to oppose that minority nationalist movement, and do so within the bounds of democracy.

    The 'reality' of one entity governing another plus the length it's governed for it for, can't singularly be used as proof on moral and/or legal grounds to define a 'minority' as you want to do here.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    Er, no. How can you interpret the 1918 election result as an impetus from the Irish people to get the Gov of Ire Act passed?
    The impetus predated the 1918 election - and was Irish in origin. The majority of 1918 Irish MP's chose not to participate in parliamentary politics, so had no input into the act.

    The 'reality' of one entity governing another plus the length it's governed for it for, can't singularly be used as proof on moral and/or legal grounds to define a 'minority' as you want to do here.
    Morality isn't the issue. Legality, and democratically - of course it can. Irish nationalism was a minority cause within the UK, and one that Irish unionists did not subscribe to. There was no nationalist democratic majority for unionism to 'accept'.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    The impetus predated the 1918 election - and was Irish in origin. The majority of 1918 Irish MP's chose not to participate in parliamentary politics, so had no input into the act.

    An impetus defined by the results of earlier elections surely? The 1918 election outcome demonstrated a major shift in opinion by the majority, ignored by the British. Plus it was the first election held under universal suffrage giving a more accurate barometer of opinion than before.
    Irish nationalism was a minority cause within the UK, and one that Irish unionists did not subscribe to. There was no nationalist democratic majority for unionism to 'accept'.

    Only if one starts from the basic idea accepting the existence of a UK of GB & I pre-independence as the default entity. You seem to have a difficulty in recognising that others may reject this interpretation of Irish history as offered by yourself.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    An impetus defined by the results of earlier elections surely? The 1918 election outcome demonstrated a major shift in opinion by the majority, ignored by the British. Plus it was the first election held under universal suffrage giving a more accurate barometer of opinion than before.
    Of course defined by the earlier election. And by the mandated Irish representatives. If few representatives from a subsequent election choose to engage with the ratification of that demand, then that's no reason to halt ratification. Perhaps if they had, as suggested, engaged in dialogue, they might have been able to present a new set of demands.

    Only if one starts from the basic idea accepting the existence of a UK of GB & I pre-independence as the default entity. You seem to have a difficulty in recognising that others may reject this interpretation of Irish history as offered by yourself.
    The existence of the UK is not in question. It's a matter of historic fact - not an issue of 'interpretation', and remains so with regard to NI. It was (and in the case of NI, remains) the default 'entity'. If you refuse to accept reality, that's a matter for you, but denial of reality rarely helps matters.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    Of course defined by the earlier election. And by the mandated Irish representatives. If few representatives from a subsequent election choose to engage with the ratification of that demand, then that's no reason to halt ratification. Perhaps if they had, as suggested, engaged in dialogue, they might have been able to present a new set of demands.

    And hence ignoring subsequent election results? Your interpretation of how democracy should function is interesting to say the least......
    The existence of the UK is not in question.

    Just the extent of it.
    It's a matter of historic fact - not an issue of 'interpretation'

    Now would that be fact or dogma? Repeat something often enough and it must be fact........
    and remains so with regard to NI. It was (and in the case of NI, remains) the default 'entity'.

    Why the switch to NI? We weren't discussing that.
    If you refuse to accept reality, that's a matter for you, but denial of reality rarely helps matters.

    No, that's just your take on it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    And hence ignoring subsequent election results? Your interpretation of how democracy should function is interesting to say the least......
    The only ignoring that was going on, was from the SF MP's. I've no difficulty understanding how the democratic process works. If you choose not to participate, you're obviously not going to have input into any given process.

    Just the extent of it.
    Nope. Ireland was part of the UK.

    Now would that be fact or dogma? Repeat something often enough and it must be fact........
    It's a fact. It really doesn't require repeating.

    Why the switch to NI? We weren't discussing that.
    No switch at all. You had difficulty in recognising that Unionist opposition to the nationalist project within the UK wasn't actually undemocratic. NI is the consequence of that opposition.
    No, that's just your take on it.
    Not at all.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    The only ignoring that was going on, was from the SF MP's. I've no difficulty understanding how the democratic process works.

    If its ok with Unionism it seems.
    Nope. Ireland was part of the UK.
    It's a fact. It really doesn't require repeating.

    Whatever you say alastair.
    Unionist opposition to the nationalist project within the UK wasn't actually undemocratic.

    If the UK was defined as encompassing both islands. Many didn't accept this.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    If its ok with Unionism it seems.
    The Irish nationalist movement was a minority one within the UK. Unionists were not being anti-democratic in refusing to be forced into it.

    Whatever you say alastair.
    Nothing to do with me, I'm afraid - just the reality of the situation.

    If the UK was defined as encompassing both islands. Many didn't accept this.
    Again - denial of reality isn't particularly useful. Ireland was a part of the UK. NI still is.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    The Irish nationalist movement was a minority one within the UK.

    You keep calling Irish nationalism 'a minority in the UK'. How did they get to become that minority within it in your view?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,309 ✭✭✭✭alastair


    You keep calling Irish nationalism 'a minority in the UK'. How did they get to become that minority within it in your view?

    The same way any minority within the UK found themselves in that situation. The UK was the historic consequence of rationalisation of various competing fifedoms across the islands. But the unambiguous outcome was a UK that encompassed GB and Ireland - a factual and existent reality that simply can't be swept under the carpet.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,463 ✭✭✭Mr Cumulonimbus


    alastair wrote: »
    The same way any minority within the UK found themselves in that situation. The UK was the historic consequence of rationalisation of various competing fifedoms across the islands. But the unambiguous outcome was a UK that encompassed GB and Ireland - a factual and existent reality that simply can't be swept under the carpet.

    So it wasn't a democratic process then as to how Irish nationalism became a 'minority in the UK'? But at the same time you would use the selective application of the democratic process to attempt to show that it was a 'minority', once this 'rationalisation of various competing fifedoms' was complete as you so diplomatically put it.


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