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The Irish language is failing.

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,779 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    You don't seem to be able to read. Stating that the Irish who fought for Irish independence are terrorists while people who fought for the British Empire are heroes is bigotry and jingoism when it comes from somebody who incessantly lauds his "Britishness".

    That would be more in line with what I'd agree with it to be, but what's that got to do with anything you linked to? Or the failing of the Irish langauge?

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,499 ✭✭✭Carlos Orange


    You don't seem to be able to read. Stating that the Irish who fought for Irish independence are terrorists while people who fought for the British Empire are heroes is bigotry and jingoism when it comes from somebody who incessantly lauds his "Britishness".

    Plenty of people who fought for Irish independence are terrorists.


  • Posts: 5,094 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    psinno wrote: »
    Plenty of people who fought for Irish independence are terrorists.

    We'll have to agree to differ on that.


  • Posts: 5,094 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    but what's that got to do with anything you linked to?

    If you followed the links you'll find he subscribes to the view of British Empire fighters = good; Irish freedom fighters = bad.

    But back on topic: you wanted people to be connected with their heritage, he's connected with his heritage. WHat's the problem?

    You're mistaking me for somebody else. I couldn't give a fiddler's if the Irish haters connect with "their heritage", although in a good 90% of the cases here they seem to be firmly connecting with a certain part of "their heritage" when they carry on a very English atavistic hatred of Irish culture.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,779 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    If you followed the links you'll find he subscribes to the view of British Empire fighters = good; Irish freedom fighters = bad.

    I did follow them and I didn't find one mention of British Empire Fighters. Closest he came was when he refered to the Easter Rebellion as a terrorist operation which, by definition, it was - it had very little support. Like it or not, that's what terrorism is defined as. It might not be the tradition viewpoint, but that doesn't mean it's bigoted jingoism.

    The others just answer a question and express his own feelings about what his heritage is - why did you link to those?
    You're mistaking me for somebody else. I couldn't give a fiddler's if the Irish haters connect with "their heritage", although in a good 90% of the cases here they seem to be firmly connecting with a certain part of "their heritage" when they carry on a very English atavistic hatred of Irish culture.

    You say that, but as soon as anyone expresses a lack of a connection with Irish, we automatically get the pro-British rhetorc and scorn from you. Expressing an anti-British sentiment seems to be most important aspect of Irish hertiage to you, to the point I wonder why you're expressing this in a thread about the Irish langauge?

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 10,087 ✭✭✭✭Dan_Solo


    Ah, so opposing bigoted jingoistic British imperialism.
    We could say the exact same thing and substitute "Irish" for "British".


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 10,087 ✭✭✭✭Dan_Solo


    You don't seem to be able to read. Stating that the Irish who fought for Irish independence are terrorists while people who fought for the British Empire are heroes is bigotry and jingoism when it comes from somebody who incessantly lauds his "Britishness".
    Maybe it is.
    Then again nobody has said this until you did.


  • Posts: 5,094 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Closest he came was when he refered to the Easter Rebellion as a terrorist operation which, by definition, it was - it had very little support. Like it or not, that's what terrorism is defined as.

    By that definition of "terrorism" the British Empire was the biggest "terrorist" organisation in world history, unless you're saying it had more than "very little support" among the natives who suffered from its plunder and dispossession across the world?

    At any rate, I reject the claim that the Rising had "very little support" (although I accept you were probably wrongly taught that in school). See this extract from J.J. Lee, Politics & Society 1912-1985 (start on p. 28). Essentially this legendary "opposition" to the Rising was in most cases manufactured by the pro-Unionist and pro-Redmond media in Dublin. Lee mentioned the intense hostility in many parts of working-class Dublin to the British Army, and instances the little-known massacre in North King Street as an example of resistance among Dubliners to the British army during Easter Week: "We tried to get the women and children to leave North King Street area. They would not go. Their sympathies were with the rebels."

    Fair enough, but the question remains: why, as soon as someone expresses a lack of a connection with Irish we automatically got the pro-British rhetorc from you?

    "Someone"? You mean one person, a person who has a long record of anti-Irish, anti-republican and pro-British and pro-Unionist rhetoric?

    Why is stating that you have unionish or British heritage automaticalyl make you bigoted jingoistic?

    Of course, you know this isn't the issue. If Jeremy Corbyn or Ken Livingstone stated their "British heritage" or indeed Protestant Irish republicans from Antrim like John Robb or Jack McDowell declared their "Unionist heritage" this is obviously not a problem. If, however, they were to laud the jingoism of the British Empire and demonise those who resisted it, this dovetailing between their "heritage" and their current views is merely a matter of their being ensconced within their tribal prejudices.
    Being anti-British seems to be more important to you than being pro-Irish.

    Please desist with the disingenuousness. In the same puerile, feigned style, "being anti-Irish seems to be more important to you than being pro-British".


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 10,087 ✭✭✭✭Dan_Solo


    "Someone"? You mean one person, a person who has a long record of anti-Irish, anti-republican and pro-British and pro-Unionist rhetoric?
    OK so, can you name anybody here who is against compulsory Irish who isn't "anti-Irish, anti-republican and pro-British and pro-Unionist"?
    This is a self-defining thing for you I'd imagine...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,779 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    By that definition of "terrorism" the British Empire was the biggest "terrorist" organisation in world history, unless you're saying it had more than "very little support" among the natives who suffered from its plunder and dispossession across the world?

    At any rate, I reject the claim that the Rising had "very little support" (although I accept you were probably wrongly taught that in school). See this extract from J.J. Lee, Politics & Society 1912-1985 (start on p. 28). Essentially this legendary "opposition" to the Rising was in most cases manufactured by the pro-Unionist and pro-Redmond media in Dublin. Lee mentioned the intense hostility in many parts of working-class Dublin to the British Army, and instances the little-known massacre in North King Street as an example of resistance among Dubliners to the British army during Easter Week: "We tried to get the women and children to leave North King Street area. They would not go. Their sympathies were with the rebels."

    Not disagreeing with any of this. But by the definition of the word "terrorism" it was terrorism. What the British Emprie did or didn't do changes no bearing on this and skews off on a massive tangent we don't need to go on.

    Also it ridicules the idea of the poster you quoted being "bigoted and jingoistic".
    "Someone"? You mean one person, a person who has a long record of anti-Irish, anti-republican and pro-British and pro-Unionist rhetoric?

    You did the same thng to a poster called Ricipico in post 1459. But wther you do it once or often, I'll rehrase the question: why do it at all? Why not stick to the topic? Have you any interrest the language at all? If so, what is your opinion on it's future? How is this relevant to you previous posts?
    Of course, you know this isn't the issue. If Jeremy Corbyn or Ken Livingstone stated their "British heritage" or indeed Protestant Irish republicans from Antrim like John Robb or Jack McDowell declared their "Unionist heritage" this is obviously not a problem. If, however, they were to laud the jingoism of the British Empire and demonise those who resisted it, this dovetailing between their "heritage" and their current views is merely a matter of their being ensconced within their tribal prejudices.

    ... but when someone posts about it here, it is?
    Please desist with the disingenuousness. In the same puerile, feigned style, "being anti-Irish seems to be more important to you than being pro-British".

    Moral high ground doesn't work on me. I still tend to notice the fact that you don't actually counter the points I make, or express any opinion whatsoever on the langauge itself.

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,069 ✭✭✭✭LordSutch


    British Empire?

    How did we get from the failing Irish language to > the British Empire :confused:

    I presume its you again Fuarnanach trying to stir things up?

    Every bloody thread . . . . . .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,809 ✭✭✭Speedwell


    Don't have a dog in that there hunt, as they say in Texas.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,770 ✭✭✭The Randy Riverbeast


    LordSutch wrote: »
    British Empire?

    How did we get from the failing Irish language to > the British Empire :confused:

    I presume its you again Fuarnanach trying to stir things up?

    Every bloody thread . . . . . .

    I think it's something to do with the whole if you dont want to speak irish then you hate ireland spiel that usually comes up.


  • Posts: 2,352 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    The Danes are thinking of escalating English to an official langauge alongside Danish.

    What??? And "forcing" their kids to learn it? What about their human rights?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 10,087 ✭✭✭✭Dan_Solo


    What??? And "forcing" their kids to learn it? What about their human rights?
    Why don't you tell us about it as nobody else has mentioned human rights in the entirety of this thread thus far?


  • Posts: 2,352 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    "Our" indeed.

    You're a member of the Royal British Legion and the Orange Order? Or just the RBL? You're definitely on record many times as describing the Irish struggle for independence as "terrorism" - like this gem: "the 1916 rising was a terrorist operation" - and the British Empire as laudable and, if I recall, you're one of the biggest cheerleaders for their Empire every time the annual two-month long poppy war glorifications get going. You also never miss an opportunity to mention your hatred for, well, anything Irish and get upset when people don't say "British Isles" or even when you cannot see the Union Jack flying from Irish ports. You compose posts telling the Irish to "Be British, be proud", as you are of your "Unionist/British" identity.

    It all sounds just so, well, desperate.


    As someone else once pointed out, you can use Irish to say "tiocfaidh ár lá", but you can also use it to say "ní ghéillfimid".


  • Posts: 2,352 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Dan_Solo wrote: »
    Why don't you tell us about it as nobody else has mentioned human rights in the entirety of this thread thus far?

    I'm not the one banging on about "forcing" Irish kids to learn a particular language while being happy to see them "forced" to learn others. Let them explain their stance; I don't have to.

    The government should not base its policy decisions on the fact that some people aren't all that good at something and need to make excuses for their lack of ability by "hating" it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,779 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    What??? And "forcing" their kids to learn it? What about their human rights?


    The implication here is that you believe that teaching life skills to kids is an infringement of their human rights...? :confused:
    I'm not the one banging on about "forcing" Irish kids to learn a particular language while being happy to see them "forced" to learn others. Let them explain their stance; I don't have to.

    The government should not base its policy decisions on the fact that some people aren't all that good at something and need to make excuses for their lack of ability by "hating" it.

    The stance is simple: let teenagers who have attained an ability to operate in the real world in a certain subject choose whether or not they wish to continue learning it. It's that simple.

    The government's policy isn't what's up for debate here, it's the student's choice. We have an education system that should be serving the needs of the student, not that of the langauge.

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 10,087 ✭✭✭✭Dan_Solo


    I'm not the one banging on about "forcing" Irish kids to learn a particular language while being happy to see them "forced" to learn others. Let them explain their stance; I don't have to.

    The government should not base its policy decisions on the fact that some people aren't all that good at something and need to make excuses for their lack of ability by "hating" it.
    But you brought up human rights, yes? This reply just switches back to talking about "forcing" as if you never said it. Wonder why? Almost as if even you realise it was a pretty rubbish argument to be making and you prefer if everybody ignored it.
    So your contention is that people "hate" Irish because they are no good at it? Anything to back this up? Thought not...
    I'm happy to see children "forced" to learn one language properly. The one everybody in Ireland speaks. English.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 16,575 ✭✭✭✭dr.fuzzenstein


    The implication here is that you believe that teaching life skills to kids is an infringement of their human rights...? :confused:



    The stance is simple: let teenagers who have attained an ability to operate in the real world in a certain subject choose whether or not they wish to continue learning it. It's that simple.

    The government's policy isn't what's up for debate here, it's the student's choice. We have an education system that should be serving the needs of the student, not that of the langauge.

    +1, Irish is all well and good, but maybe some people want to learn things relevant to the 21st century. Other European languages, computer skills, commerce, law, etc...
    There are 2 very clear choices:

    1: Irish should feature in education, but to have it compulsory above age 10 really doesn't serve a useful purpose, so leave it up to the individual student if they want to keep learning it. It's usage should remain at it's current level. To think that suddenly Irish would become the main language here is deluded at best.

    2: Spend hundreds of millions or even billions to force it on everyone, make it compulsory at all levels of school and university, when dealing with the authorities (county council, social welfare, health service, Irish water, the tax office, the courts, customs and the Gardai for example), compulsory courses and testing for immigrants, all state radio, TV, publications and websites in Irish only as well as giving businesses grants for dealing in Irish ONLY and keep at it for decades until English has become the second language. I'm sure within 2-3 generations, when English only speakers have all died out this can be accomplished. This would hurt commerce and companies would think twice about settling here, especially when takeup for European languages would plummet, besides the difficulties with finding an Irish-Lithuanian interpreter.
    You have to think international here, the Ireland of pure Gaelic speakers that exists in splendid isolation and Dev's imagination in the 1940's cannot and will not work in a world that is interconnected and mainly English speaking. Or maybe in a few generations time, because right now everyone can get by on English. But if the whole country is Irish only, everyone will HAVE to learn a few European languages as well (2-3 will do), because everyone speaks English, but no bugger outside Ireland speaks Irish.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,809 ✭✭✭Speedwell


    I'm just glad there is no Irish language requirement for citizenship. I technically qualify to claim Hungarian citizenship through Dad, but I must apply to the embassy in Hungarian and pass a Hungarian language test. And you know, what, I don't disagree with that. (Why haven't I done it? Because the current state of Hungarian politics can, well you know, PMT.)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,499 ✭✭✭Carlos Orange


    Speedwell wrote: »
    I'm just glad there is no Irish language for citizenship. I technically qualify to claim Hungarian citizenship through Dad, but I must apply to the embassy in Hungarian and pass a Hungarian language test. And you know, what, I don't disagree with that. (Why haven't I done it? Because the current state of Hungarian politics can, well you know, PMT.)

    Apparently the situation with Russian in Hungary was quite similar to Irish in Ireland. It was mandatory in school but quickly forgotten afterwards.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,809 ✭✭✭Speedwell


    psinno wrote: »
    Apparently the situation with Russian in Hungary was quite similar to Irish in Ireland. It was mandatory in school but quickly forgotten afterwards.

    That's what my father told me. I don't recall Russia trying to eradicate the use of Hungarian altogether though, so Hungarian never had the issues that other languages are having today with trying to undergo a general revival. Not within comparatively recent memory, anyway.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,499 ✭✭✭Carlos Orange


    Speedwell wrote: »
    That's what my father told me. I don't recall Russia trying to eradicate the use of Hungarian altogether though, so Hungarian never had the issues that other languages are having today with trying to undergo a general revival. Not within comparatively recent memory, anyway.

    I read somewhere that when I'm from (and where I live,2 different places) Irish hasn't been a working language for more than 5-10% of people since the mid 1700s. Well before Hungarian got official status after the Hungarian Revolution.


  • Posts: 31,828 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Map of extent of Irish as spoken by people over 60 in 1911, so it was mainly in the middle of the 19th century that the language "shifted".
    http://www.100objects.ie/wp-content/gallery/empty-cooking-pot/disp-d1n-copy.jpg


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,069 ✭✭✭✭LordSutch


    Very interesting.

    More or less an east-west divide . . . .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,406 ✭✭✭DyldeBrill


    LordSutch wrote: »
    Very interesting.

    More or less an east-west divide . . . .

    Completely and it all boils down to various different factors. It would have seen its first real decline in late 18th century. Emigration and the Famine had a serious effect on the language. Ireland had 4 million Irish speakers in 1841 and was reduced to 680,000 by 1891. Just goes to show the effect the famine really had on the language as well as other key factors factors that followed suit.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,458 ✭✭✭OMD


    Map of extent of Irish as spoken by people over 60 in 1911, so it was mainly in the middle of the 19th century that the language "shifted".
    http://www.100objects.ie/wp-content/gallery/empty-cooking-pot/disp-d1n-copy.jpg

    The title on the map says it is "Pre-famine Irish speaking"


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,779 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    OMD wrote: »
    The title on the map says it is "Pre-famine Irish speaking"

    Bit confusing alright. I think it means the people who would have been alive at the time of the famine and were still alive in 1911.

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,458 ✭✭✭OMD


    Bit confusing alright. I think it means the people who would have been alive at the time of the famine and were still alive in 1911.

    I thought that at first also but it says those aged 60 and over in 1911. Someone aged 60 in 1911 was born after the famine.


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