The Backwards Man wrote: » Saw cheap rosebushes in ALDI, everyone's gardens could be rosy.
renegademaster wrote: » because if we continue to do nothing we're encouraging the corrupt to carry on as normal which can only get worse and i am also worried about the **** we don't know about, what we know about is freaky enough for me thanks very much, i've had enough and would love to get involved with peaceful protests imediately to try bring about some change. what is wrong with that?? I repeat, all i want is change, for the better, is this wrong????
For Forks Sake wrote: » Godwins Law by page 2 . Impressive.
cml387 wrote: » You've Godwined your own thread there. I think I'd start again.
For Forks Sake wrote: » To what end? Outline your post-revolutionary paradise. With actual facts and figures please.
renegademaster wrote: » i'm not saying reinvent the fcukign wheel, merely suggesting we make the one decision to do the right thing instead of coming up with all the wonderful spin it take sto pull off this corrupt bull$hit!!
renegademaster wrote: » ah this old chestnut again i'm not saying reinvent the fcukign wheel, merely suggesting we make the one decision to do the right thing instead of coming up with all the wonderful spin it take sto pull off this corrupt bull$hit!! way's a go though, the force is strong within you a chara :rolleyes:
MadYaker wrote: » Nothing wrong with wanting change for the better, we all want that. But for a protest to be effective you need to have a clear message, as in something you specifically want to change otherwise its not effective, unless of course you live in Syria or the Ukraine where the entire system is rotten to the core and you need to tear it all down and start again from scratch. I don't think Ireland will ever get that bad though.
For Forks Sake wrote: » Oh goody, another one of these threads. Let me save us all the bother...revolution, revolution..sheeple, WAKE UP...sheeple...an incredibly long-winded KyussBishop piece on an obscure economic theory /thread
My name is URL wrote: » Funny, seeing as you have most posts in this thread so far. /thread indeed :rolleyes:
Slicemeister wrote: » Cool Username OP.
For Forks Sake wrote: » Ah, but I keep my posts to a couple of sentences, rather than submit a postdoctoral thesis each time I hit submit reply.
For Forks Sake wrote: » You're the one trying to get people onto the streets. Tell us why, how you plan on changing things and what it'd be like after the glorious overthrow of the government. Why should people follow you?
renegademaster wrote: » i would like to start some debate surrounding taking to the streets
Paige Famous Fog wrote: » I'm just wondering who the renegades are that he's master of.
renegademaster wrote: » anybody who is fed up has not one group offering a way to channel that anger and show the government you've had enough. where are all the militant revolutionaries out there, occupy, the left, previous protestors, why aren't we deciding to all hit the streets at the same time for the first time ever, all groups together
hfallada wrote: » This is what corruption looks likehttp://youtu.be/7w7xJdSLrxo Its the house of the former leader of Ukraine.
renegademaster wrote: » i couldn't see it being anything like the Ukraine so that itself is comforting, the right people would be allowed to communicate with the people at mass gatherings, if the majority know these people to be corrupt they won't be allowed to speak, and only through general concensus with the crowds could any decisions be made before elections, whatever chance we could have of bringing about change we have no chance if we continue to do nothing indefinately. sure why would they change if they think we'll sit back for another 2 years until april 2016 when edna lets us have general elections, they're all out on massive pensions and the next crowd in will hav eno great gra for change either judging by the amounts of civil obedience having being witnessed for another 2 years in light of all the corruption coming to light and i stress again, we only know about what's come to light, you'd be a fool to think it stops anywhere near there!!
renegademaster wrote: » where are all the militant revolutionaries out there, occupy, the left, previous protestors, why aren't we deciding to all hit the streets at the same time for the first time ever, all groups together, it would rattle the $hit out of government in a matter of days
MadYaker wrote: » Riots do look like a bit of craic though. Seriously, fighting police, burning cars, looting, throwing bricks around the place. Id say if you were off your head on yokes it'd be only mental!
renegademaster wrote: » peaceful protests is what i'm talking about though, this is the acid test regarding the true will to change or not amongst the elite circles, if they see numbers on the streets yet don't change then of course carnage will probably come about as people will see that under no pressure these guys continued to become more and more blatently corrupt and even under mass demonstrating pressure they still kept up the corruption, well then the options available to the people then are plain to see in that scenario or of course we can do nothing and in april 2016 look back at all the wasted opportunity we had to limit the damage the current corrupt are doing to the country
Phoebas wrote: » Maybe we aren't having these mass protests because nobody is organising them. Maybe the people who should be organising them are too busy sitting at home complaining on the internet.
renegademaster wrote: » i do know this to be a fact and that is what has me most worried, i'm burnt out cos we were first out of the blocks the last few years attending as many small/medium/large protests the last few years as was humanly possible, organising many protests myself personally or my mates did through their many different affiliations, and a good crew of us even did an extended stint in galway occupy which lasted over 250 days, but, at this very late stage in the game the entire country is practically defeated and i'm almost convinced that if the likes of enda kenny or shatter called round door to door robbing people, in their own homes, in the cold light of day, people would start excusing it