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Poppy

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 498 ✭✭zapitastas


    More a case of behaving as a mature country, putting aside the hate and conflicts of the past, and through our shared history, commemorate those who made the ultimate sacrifice.
    The poppy is a great symbol of this progress in these more enlightened and cooperative times.

    A diabolical shared history .

    As for this ultimate sacrifice rubbish, a generation of young men slaughtered and disfigured in war games.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,874 ✭✭✭Edgware


    None whatsoever. Why would I? I supported one side in an armed conflict, and therefore do not believe that the opposing side should be supported. How is that ironic?

    The bombing of Birmingham was a great Republicanv victory in your eyes so. Maybe the Wolfe Tones will write along about it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,806 ✭✭✭BalcombeSt4


    Aegir wrote: »
    So you have no issue with a poster naming themselves after cold blooded murdering scum bags?

    Ok.

    Like B-Specials throwing bombs on to top of school children in a playground & then finishing them of with gunfire. https://treasonfelony.wordpress.com/2016/02/04/the-weaver-street-bombing-and-not-dealing-with-the-past/ That's like something the Nazi's would have done.

    The Provo's, INLA & Sticks did a lot of scumbag things, but I don't remember them targeting school children who were playing in a playground.
    After the Reavey/O'Dowd & Kingsmill massacres in 1976 the UVF drew up plans to blow up a Catholic primary school & to kill 30 children, but called it of at the last minute because they were afraid of the backlash & security forces stamping down on them, because before that the police & army let them do whatever they liked. - http://www.nuzhound.com/articles/irish_news/arts2007/jul9_UVF_planned_kill_30_children.php

    Intentionally targeting school children has been a feature of loyalist scumbagery over the years. During the Holy Cross dispute they targeted little girls with graphic insults, stones, balloons filled with urine, pipe bombs & rifle fire. Yes, the pictures that flashed across the world were horrific but this was pretty much a weekly occurence for the great loyalist "culture". - https://www.irishtimes.com/news/school-considers-legal-action-over-protests-1.331363

    The UDA tried to kill Catholic women & children on a bus during the height of Mad Dog Adairs sectarian madness


    Well I could be here all day doing this.

    Point is I could pick out any war or conflict over the last century and I could find "cold blooded murder" all over it, war is cold blooded murder. Of the top of my head American soldiers massacred over 600 old men, women & children at Mi Lai & burned the village to the ground.
    And that's not a feature specific to the US Army, it's just a plain cold feature of war.

    And I'm not a die hard Republican either. (not that it's anyones business anyway)
    I think it would have been a much better idea if SF & the IRA had taken a back seat during the "War of Independence" & the Labour movement had taken control & encouraged the Catholic & Protestant working class to unite & supported actions like the 1919 Belfast general strike, the workers taking over of mills, factories, fisheries, lands of absentee landlords and encourgaed the setting up of more Soviets along with Limerick & Arigna Mines. Working class unity might have saved decades of sectarian warfare. The conservatives in the Republican movement were not only unsupportive of militant workers running the show but actively tried to stop them by using the Irish Republican Police to try make them stop. http://www.academia.edu/22067087/The_Irish_Working_Class_and_the_War_of_Independence


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,409 ✭✭✭corner of hells


    Like B-Specials throwing bombs on to top of school children in a playground & then finishing them of with gunfire. https://treasonfelony.wordpress.com/2016/02/04/the-weaver-street-bombing-and-not-dealing-with-the-past/ That's like something the Nazi's would have done.

    The Provo's, INLA & Sticks did a lot of scumbag things, but I don't remember them targeting school children who were playing in a playground.
    After the Reavey/O'Dowd & Kingsmill massacres in 1976 the UVF drew up plans to blow up a Catholic primary school & to kill 30 children, but called it of at the last minute because they were afraid of the backlash & security forces stamping down on them, because before that the police & army let them do whatever they liked. - http://www.nuzhound.com/articles/irish_news/arts2007/jul9_UVF_planned_kill_30_children.php

    Intentionally targeting school children has been a feature of loyalist scumbagery over the years. During the Holy Cross dispute they targeted little girls with graphic insults, stones, balloons filled with urine, pipe bombs & rifle fire. Yes, the pictures that flashed across the world were horrific but this was pretty much a weekly occurence for the great loyalist "culture". - https://www.irishtimes.com/news/school-considers-legal-action-over-protests-1.331363

    The UDA tried to kill Catholic women & children on a bus during the height of Mad Dog Adairs sectarian madness


    Well I could be here all day doing this.

    Point is I could pick out any war or conflict over the last century and I could find "cold blooded murder" all over it, war is cold blooded murder. Of the top of my head American soldiers massacred over 600 old men, women & children at Mi Lai & burned the village to the ground.
    And that's not a feature specific to the US Army, it's just a plain cold feature of war.

    And I'm not a die hard Republican either. (not that it's anyones business anyway)
    I think it would have been a much better idea if SF & the IRA had taken a back seat during the "War of Independence" & the Labour movement had taken control & encouraged the Catholic & Protestant working class to unite & supported actions like the 1919 Belfast general strike, the workers taking over of mills, factories, fisheries, lands of absentee landlords and encourgaed the setting up of more Soviets along with Limerick & Arigna Mines. Working class unity might have saved decades of sectarian warfare. The conservatives in the Republican movement were not only unsupportive of militant workers running the show but actively tried to stop them by using the Irish Republican Police to try make them stop. http://www.academia.edu/22067087/The_Irish_Working_Class_and_the_War_of_Independence

    Why would you call yourself BalcombeSt4 ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,213 ✭✭✭bobbysands81


    Aegir wrote: »
    but you see no irony in supporting an army that harassed, tortured and killed Irish people, or carried out some of the worst atrocities these islands have seen in the last 100 years?

    He doesn’t support the British Army.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,845 ✭✭✭timthumbni


    timthumbni wrote: »
    You could set your watch every year by the poppy thread mostly populated by armchair provos who have never set foot in Norn Iron. I will be wearing mine but then again I live in NI. I would think it’s a very small number who actually wear one down Mexico way. But where there’s a rant there’s a way I suppose.

    Genuinely interested, would the money from the poppies going to former British soldiers, such as the guys who murdered Aidan McAnespie and the innocent people in Ballymurphy, not be a good enough reason not to buy one?

    Yes, straight into their pockets chum.......


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,845 ✭✭✭timthumbni


    Aegir wrote: »
    but you see no irony in supporting an army that harassed, tortured and killed Irish people, or carried out some of the worst atrocities these islands have seen in the last 100 years?

    He doesn’t support the British Army.
    Hey booby. A banquet by Irish Americans in honour of your namesake and others ( the also rans)

    Makes you proud I’m sure ,....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,213 ✭✭✭bobbysands81


    timthumbni wrote: »
    Hey booby. A banquet by Irish Americans in honour of your namesake and others ( the also rans)

    Makes you proud I’m sure ,....

    Booby?

    That’s hilarious! Is it Ulster Scots?

    You win the argument.

    Just like you did all these times too...
    timthumbni wrote: »

    Aw well at least Mary Lou remembered Booby just as he always should be, what?

    timthumbni wrote: »
    Nope. I quite enjoy the fact that an Irish terrorist like wee booby has a street named after him in IRAN..... And also a burger bar... It gives me loads of laughs. As I said everyone gets what they deserve...
    timthumbni wrote: »
    Not in vain Mary. He got a street named after him in that well known bastion of democracy Iran. And a burger bar.... (And I'm serious here) I'm not actually taking the piss out of terrorist booby but there is an actual burger bar in Iran named after him.

    Scrumptious...... And not disrespectful at all......
    timthumbni wrote: »
    Booby. Drinking this early on an old firm day is not good for you. Especially on an empty stomach like yours.

    Celtic acting like Celtic does. Maybe they could fly famine flags whenever their Palestinian ones start to fray.
    timthumbni wrote: »
    All I wonder is what booby sands (per Mary Lou) would think about it???

    Poppy sellers in Scotland harassing you??? Hmmmn...
    timthumbni wrote: »
    No, I mean booby... ask Mary Lou... and its not a very serious name at all. I'm sure most people snigger at it tbh.

    Cringe.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,806 ✭✭✭Sunny Disposition


    timthumbni wrote: »
    Yes, straight into their pockets chum.......

    https://www.britishlegion.org.uk/get-involved/ways-to-give/fundraising-appeals/poppy-appeal/

    100% they are entitled to the money.

    Leaving the predictable whatabouttery of both sides out of it, surely that’s a good enough reason not to contribute?
    If those incidents had been taken very seriously there could be an argument for contributing, but surely it’s inappropriate when the money goes to people on the basis of being part of an institution that not only slaughtered innocent people, but has covered it up and refused to punish those responsible?
    I’m not an IRA sympathizer by any means but contributing to the poppy appeal is obscene in Ireland, given the slaughter on Bloody Sunday and at Ballymurphy.
    It’s a shame it has got tied up with Irish guys, my own relatives included, who fought in the World Wars. They’re not around to benefit, the guys who shot up Ballymurphy will.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Bricriu wrote: »
    Absolutely true, and another result of our being colonised.

    Liadh Ní Riada, before she talked about wearing the Poppy on 'Clare Byrne Live', talked about being modern and mature. God, this mental malaise has even infected Republicans.

    Well said. And I note from this thread people are bending over backwards to "prove" how enlightened they are by saying Irish-born people who fought in the British Empire's forces in WWI deserve to be commemorated by an independent Irish state. Eh, why? They were, for the day, very highly paid mercenaries, using violence to achieve the aims of the very same British supremacist/imperialist cult which was keeping Ireland subjugated. They were British soldiers, fighting for the interests of that state which were predicated upon suppressing the wishes of the Irish for independence. Let unionists/imperialists/jingoists/Brexiters honour these people who fought for their political interests.

    It is preposterous that any Irish person who is grateful for the existence of a sovereign Irish state would honour any person for their role in the service of the same British Empire that has always resisted Irish independence. If one is going to commemorate thugs in British uniform because they were born in Ireland, you might as well honour every other thug on the planet who is Irish-born. The Irishman who fought for the freedom of this small nation is worthy of honour. The Irish-born British soldier who fought to maintain British rule over non-British persons will never, ever be worthy of honour. Oh, and just because the person in question was one's "great, great, great grandfather" and you want to get all emotional about somebody you never knew does not make their actions either moral or excusable. Duh.



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I think it's a bit harsh to call them mercenaries TBH, for a lot of men it was a way to make a few bob and send it back to the wife and kids.

    The vast majority went at the behest of Redmond for what they ultimately thought was for eventual Home Rule.

    Eh no, no they didn't. This is one of the most common of the myths peddled in the attempts to make the thugs of the British Empire and their crimes acceptable to Irish people.

    A paltry 24,000 of the c. 120,000 Irish-born 'Catholics' who fought in WWI did so under the banner of Redmond's National Volunteers. And overall, despite the incessant propaganda, the total "Irish" (the propaganda figure loves to inflate the contribution by putting the self-declared British loyalists in Ireland under the description "Irish") contribution to the British Empire's forces even before the Easter Rising was far inferior to the contribution of England, Scotland or Wales, never mind to Australia's 420,000 people who fought for it at a time when Australia had a similar population to Ireland. How often would that not-so-flattering reflection on Irish enthusiasm for fighting for the British Empire see the light of day in the Dublin media? Never. A bit of education right here.

    This reality, like the reality of the comparatively high wages for joining (not so noble, so it's ignored in favour of a more flattering representation of their motivations), doesn't fit in with the "The Irish were so happy with British rule" narrative of the Anglo-Irish/West Brits who hark back to the glory days when their colonial class had every single one of the top jobs in every single one of the banks, insurance companies, breweries, distilleries and all the rest and the natives got the menial jobs like the hired plebeian thugs in the RIC or British Army, while the leadership was reserved for the colonial class - the same one in the British Army which mutinied in 1914 when democracy ran into their plans.

    But heaven forfend that anybody would mention all that reality in this attempt to portray British rule as some sort of popular thing with the natives who were oblivious to the myriad and exceedingly creative facets of the British colonial boot on them (it was only, for instance, when Sinn Féin became the largest party in 1918 that the British decided to change the entire voting system to PR-STV as that favours smaller parties). And, yeah, when talking about the supposed "democratic mandate" of supposedly "non-violent" politicians like John Redmond don't mention the minuscule number of (well-off and therefore conservative) people who had a right to vote, or that most HR MPs were not even challenged at "election" time, or indeed that Redmond was decidedly keen to embrace violence and glorify blood sacrifice when it was Irish-born British soldiers who were dying for the British Empire (most notoriously in his letter after Gallipoli).

    Like the long disproven rubbish about the 1916 rising allegedly being universally unpopular at the time - that view was peddled by the unionist press in Dublin - the twist has much more to do with the Unionist need to portray support for Irish freedom as "marginal" and their colonial boot on us as "acceptable".


  • Registered Users Posts: 66 ✭✭AdrianLM


    Anyone Irish person thinking of wearing the poppy should listen to this first:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbre5Fs9m8I

    Go on Sinead!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,409 ✭✭✭corner of hells


    AdrianLM wrote: »
    Anyone Irish person thinking of wearing the poppy should listen to this first:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbre5Fs9m8I

    Go on Sinead!!

    If I stuck the Poppy's in my ears , would it block out the sound.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,538 ✭✭✭droidman123


    I think the israelies should become more mature too,maybe they could welcome some of the far right nazi supporters from eastern germany,maybe even contribute some funds to the far right political party in germany,heck why not go the whole hog,make a collection in israel to erect some statutes of hitler,himmler,and goebels,show the world how they have moved on and how they have matured as a nation


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,874 ✭✭✭Edgware


    Roll on November 12th and we will be done with this ****e for another year


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    I think the israelies should become more mature too,maybe they could welcome some of the far right nazi supporters from eastern germany,maybe even contribute some funds to the far right political party in germany,heck why not go the whole hog,make a collection in israel to erect some statutes of hitler,himmler,and goebels,show the world how they have moved on and how they have matured as a nation

    Well that would be just dumb. But welcoming the supporters and communication could not but be positive. A shared understanding always helps both sides improve and defuse tension.
    And as Ireland, indeed Israel has some maturing to do but is in a difficult position to do so by its flawed very existence.
    A problem Eire does not have today. It indeed very closely intertwined with the UK, with no fundamental issues or differences. And perceived issues are only ones held on to be those unable to see that times have changed.

    You are either part of the solution, or part of the problem - you either leave the past behind and forge a better future, or remain mired in and never move on from the mindset and conflicts of history.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    A problem Eire does not have today...

    Hehe. You try way, way too hard. One of your soulmates in the British Crown's DPP did that in 1989 in the British request to extradite Dessie Ellis. When the case arrived in the High Court the judge refused to extradite because "Éire" was not the name of the state in the language that the request was made. Dessie walked free. Keep cutting off your nose to spite your face there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,409 ✭✭✭corner of hells


    Hehe. You try way, way too hard. One of your soulmates in the British Crown's DPP did that in 1989 in the British request to extradite Dessie Ellis. When the case arrived in the High Court the judge refused to extradite because "Éire" was not the name of the state in the language that the request was made. Dessie walked free. Keep cutting off your nose to spite your face there.

    Much better than the good old Kangaroo court where judge ,jury and executioner's were provided and if they really liked you they'd provide funeral services and grave.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,311 ✭✭✭✭weldoninhio


    Two wrongs don’t make a right.

    It’s not so much their aims that I have a problem with. It’s their barbaric methods.

    Your grandfather took the British coin to murder Germans. 2 wrongs eh?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Eh no, no they didn't. This is one of the most common of the myths peddled in the attempts to make the thugs of the British Empire and their crimes acceptable to Irish people.

    A paltry 24,000 of the c. 120,000 Irish-born 'Catholics' who fought in WWI did so under the banner of Redmond's National Volunteers. And overall, despite the incessant propaganda, the total "Irish" (the propaganda figure loves to inflate the contribution by putting the self-declared British loyalists in Ireland under the description "Irish") contribution to the British Empire's forces even before the Easter Rising was far inferior to the contribution of England, Scotland or Wales, never mind to Australia's 420,000 people who fought for it at a time when Australia had a similar population to Ireland. How often would that not-so-flattering reflection on Irish enthusiasm for fighting for the British Empire see the light of day in the Dublin media? Never. A bit of education right here.

    This reality, like the reality of the comparatively high wages for joining (not so noble, so it's ignored in favour of a more flattering representation of their motivations), doesn't fit in with the "The Irish were so happy with British rule" narrative of the Anglo-Irish/West Brits who hark back to the glory days when their colonial class had every single one of the top jobs in every single one of the banks, insurance companies, breweries, distilleries and all the rest and the natives got the menial jobs like the hired plebeian thugs in the RIC or British Army, while the leadership was reserved for the colonial class - the same one in the British Army which mutinied in 1914 when democracy ran into their plans.

    But heaven forfend that anybody would mention all that reality in this attempt to portray British rule as some sort of popular thing with the natives who were oblivious to the myriad and exceedingly creative facets of the British colonial boot on them (it was only, for instance, when Sinn Féin became the largest party in 1918 that the British decided to change the entire voting system to PR-STV as that favours smaller parties). And, yeah, when talking about the supposed "democratic mandate" of supposedly "non-violent" politicians like John Redmond don't mention the minuscule number of (well-off and therefore conservative) people who had a right to vote, or that most HR MPs were not even challenged at "election" time, or indeed that Redmond was decidedly keen to embrace violence and glorify blood sacrifice when it was Irish-born British soldiers who were dying for the British Empire (most notoriously in his letter after Gallipoli).

    Like the long disproven rubbish about the 1916 rising allegedly being universally unpopular at the time - that view was peddled by the unionist press in Dublin - the twist has much more to do with the Unionist need to portray support for Irish freedom as "marginal" and their colonial boot on us as "acceptable".

    You've written an awful lot there but you haven't really said anything either.

    A lot of men went as Irish volunteers but not ALL Irish men fought under that banner.

    Most Irish men believed going to war was the right thing to do for Ireland in the long term, Volunteer or no.

    Many other's went because they needed the money to put food on the table back home.

    And then many more (usually younger) men went for a bit of adventure with the general consensus being the war would be over by Christmas.

    And the Rising was patently unpopular at the time, we all know the reasons why it did become popular after, but lets not kid ourselves here, the Rising or rather support for insurrection had, at best, middling support throughout the country even if Eoin McNeill's countermanding order was never issued it would have been a pretty middling affair.

    The general populace of Ireland, like most British colonies at the time, were just getting on with their life with a fairly sound infrastructure in place. I know for hard-line republicans that's a bitter pill to swallow but there you go.

    You also make mention of Redmond being keen to "embrace violence and glorify blood sacrifice", this is really nothing new for the time frame and the general moral thinking of the time. Pearse, after all, wrote of the Great War as a "blood sacrifice" and the spilling of blood in fields as a good thing. That was the general mindset of how war should be at the time.

    Honestly I really cannot understand the continued demonization of the brave Irish men who fought in WWI, hopefully the younger generations coming up will be given a more balanced discourse in this particular and proud aspect in Irish history - over the last few years, 2014 to present and it has been heartening to see the beginnings of that discourse been played out in the public arena.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,946 ✭✭✭✭Zebra3


    The general populace of Ireland, like most British colonies at the time, were just getting on with their life with a fairly sound infrastructure in place. I know for hard-line republicans that's a bitter pill to swallow but there you go.

    Yeh, life under British occupation was just grand for most people across the globe.

    Makes you kinda wonder why they didn't stay in all those colonies for ever to continue their mission to civilising the savages.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Zebra3 wrote: »
    Yeh, life under British occupation was just grand for most people across the globe.

    Makes you kinda wonder why they didn't stay in all those colonies for ever to continue their mission to civilising the savages.

    I said most British colonies.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,946 ✭✭✭✭Zebra3


    I said most British colonies.

    Which ones?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Zebra3 wrote: »
    Which ones?

    I think we all know the colonies were infrastructure was fairly sound versus the colonies were certain liberties were taken.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,137 ✭✭✭Odhinn


    ...............

    The general populace of Ireland, like most British colonies at the time, were just getting on with their life with a fairly sound infrastructure in place. I know for hard-line republicans that's a bitter pill to swallow but there you go.

    ..............


    Like the "jewel in the crown"?



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orissa_famine_of_1866



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Famine_of_1876%E2%80%9378



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengal_famine_of_1943


    Or Kenya, where land was systematically seized from Africans and given to ex-officers and colonists up until the 1960's.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Odhinn wrote: »
    Like the "jewel in the crown"?



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orissa_famine_of_1866



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Famine_of_1876%E2%80%9378



    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengal_famine_of_1943


    Or Kenya, where land was systematically seized from Africans and given to ex-officers and colonists up until the 1960's.


    Again, I said most colonies.

    You should take care to read every single word in a post and not just knee jerk react to the first thing that sticks out.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,137 ✭✭✭Odhinn


    Again, I said most colonies.

    You should take care to read every single word in a post and not just knee jerk react to the first thing that sticks out.




    Any colony with a non-european/anglo saxon majority was run along racial and sectarian lines. That would be the majority of British run territories - "most colonies".


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,015 ✭✭✭✭NIMAN


    Edgware wrote: »
    Roll on November 12th and we will be done with this ****e for another year

    You serious?

    Not in the UK, poppies will be on show LONG after that date. Long after it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    Every thing must be taken in context, and of its time. In WWI, 1.1 million of our fellow countrymen died. To dismiss that fact, those men, and ignore, or even complain about their commemoration, is utterly ugly and disrespectful.

    People dont have to wear the poppy, and I wouldnt advocate or expect all to do so. But it should be respected for what it is, a significant proportion of Irish people in the south probably should be wearing them, and the vast majority should be generally supportive of the commemoration whether they actually wear it or not.
    No one should be against it. Anyone who does, needs a serious think about who they are as human beings.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Odhinn wrote: »
    Any colony with a non-european/anglo saxon majority was run along racial and sectarian lines. That would be the majority of British run territories - "most colonies".

    You know perfectly well the point I'm making and being pedantic for the sake of it.

    The French were just as bad as the British for pillaging those particular countries.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 498 ✭✭zapitastas


    Every thing must be taken in context, and of its time. In WWI, 1.1 million of our fellow countrymen died. To dismiss that fact, those men, and ignore, or even complain about their commemoration, is utterly ugly and disrespectful.

    People dont have to wear the poppy, and I wouldnt advocate or expect all to do so. But it should be respected for what it is, a significant proportion of Irish people in the south probably should be wearing them, and the vast majority should be generally supportive of the commemoration whether they actually wear it or not.
    No one should be against it. Anyone who does, needs a serious think about who they are as human beings.

    How is the irexit campaign coming along? Is the return of the empire in sight yet or is it still just over the horizon. Tally ho old Chum


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,137 ✭✭✭Odhinn


    You know perfectly well the point I'm making and being pedantic for the sake of it.




    I'm aware of the point you were trying to make and am explaining how its totally wrong.


    The French were just as bad as the British for pillaging those particular countries.


    And when we are expected to buy goods that go to French soldiers who engaged in those acts we can go into that in detail.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Odhinn wrote: »
    I'm aware of the point you were trying to make and am explaining how its totally wrong.






    And when we are expected to buy goods that go to French soldiers who engaged in those acts we can go into that in detail.

    Nobody's expecting you to buy anything, relax.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    zapitastas wrote: »
    How is the irexit campaign coming along? Is the return of the empire in sight yet or is it still just over the horizon. Tally ho old Chum

    Irexit has no chance. Breunion is the viable option, but being kept in a holding pattern for the moment, to see how the Brexit deal progresses.

    The timing is askew, and we didnt move quickly enough post June 23rd 2916, but imaging the symbolic strength if a new relationship with the UK was being forged, and we were to have had the 11/11/2018 closing poppy display at Dublin Castle as the companion piece, end of the war one, to the 2014 Tower one :

    tower-of-london-poppy-tribute1.jpg


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,301 ✭✭✭Snickers Man


    Aegir wrote: »
    I live there.

    , only joking

    And in all your life living there have you ever, ever, in your life ever heard any local person say "totes morto"?

    If you did, it was probably a visiting northsider.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    JayZeus wrote: »
    If you actually want to be an Irish citizen, you can live in, get a job in, pay your taxes in and contribute your fair share to the Republic of Ireland, at least for some part of your life.

    Otherwise you can stay in Northern Ireland and be a British Citizen with an Irish passport, huffing and puffing blowhard, bitching about royal this that and the other.

    Only in your idiosyncratic conception of 'Irish citizen' is this definition the reality. You keep dreaming,while the rest of us can accept the international reality that Raghnall Mac Dónaill of the Glens of Antrim, a son of natives of that place, is as entitled to Irish citizenship as Eoghan Ó Murchú of west Cork, a son of natives of that place, is. Even as unionist/partitionist wishful thinking goes, it's patently silly to deny this reality.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    JayZeus wrote: »
    Do whatever you like. My issue is with Northern Irish nationalists who think their views and aspirations are representative of the people of the Republic of Ireland, when they’re generally not. Times have changed.

    Em, Given that "Northern Irish nationalists" are a tiny section of British loyalism which, as the description suggests, believes there should be a separate Northern Ireland "nation", I would be fairly certain they wouldn't believe their views to be representative of many people, if any, in the 26 Counties.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    In WWI, 1.1 million of our fellow countrymen died. To dismiss that fact, those men, and ignore, or even complain about their commemoration, is utterly ugly and disrespectful.... But it should be respected for what it is, a significant proportion of Irish people in the south probably should be wearing them, and the vast majority should be generally supportive of the commemoration whether they actually wear it or not.
    No one should be against it. Anyone who does, needs a serious think about who they are as human beings.



    What a glorious piss take that was. Anybody who wears the British poppy is supporting/"honouring" centuries of British mass murder, colonial occupation and cultural genocide in this country and across the world. So, yeah, you're going to find as many supporters for your poppy in Ireland as you'll find supporters of your above "Ireland must rejoin the UK" campaign, which is apposite.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    A lot of men went as Irish volunteers but not ALL Irish men fought under that banner.

    The figure is a paltry 24,000 National Volunteers answered Redmond's call and volunteered for WWI. The total figure for the entire war. Nothing to do with fighting under a "banner". You're just filling in blanks with what you'd like to be the case.
    Most Irish men believed going to war was the right thing to do for Ireland in the long term, Volunteer or no.

    Your evidence for this nonsense is what, precisely? You have no evidence, of course, because it's out of the same Fantasy British Empire playbook all the apologists use.
    And then many more (usually younger) men went for a bit of adventure with the general consensus being the war would be over by Christmas.

    Actually, that was not the "general consensus" - just another myth. If you bothered to read the Myles Dungan book I linked to, you'd find this remark: 'Contrary to popular mythology few actually believed that the war would be "over by Christmas", though many thought it would end within 12 months.' (Enlighten yourself)
    And the Rising was patently unpopular at the time

    Wrong again, another myth. This time read the link please, starting on the paragraph: 'Public opinion in Ireland was reported hostile to the Rising...

    Honestly I really cannot understand the continued demonization of the brave Irish men who fought in WWI

    Eh, maybe because they fought for an Empire, and thus for the subjugation of other peoples? And for the Empire that was occupying Ireland? And as for "brave", they could have stayed at home and fought for Irish independence but they figured joining the biggest empire in world history would be a safer bet, and one for which they would be very well paid. Not sounding very "brave" now, is it.

    That you cannot understand moral and political opposition to such people is a quite remarkable disconnect.
    hopefully the younger generations coming up will be given a more balanced discourse in this particular and proud aspect in Irish history

    Nothing proud about imperialism and just because you think beating the shíte out of some "backward" natives under the guise of "civilisation" is worthy of commemorating doesn't mean it's anything like a mainstream view.


  • Registered Users Posts: 16,500 ✭✭✭✭DEFTLEFTHAND


    Irexit has no chance. Breunion is the viable option, but being kept in a holding pattern for the moment, to see how the Brexit deal progresses.

    The timing is askew, and we didnt move quickly enough post June 23rd 2916, but imaging the symbolic strength if a new relationship with the UK was being forged, and we were to have had the 11/11/2018 closing poppy display at Dublin Castle as the companion piece, end of the war one, to the 2014 Tower one :

    tower-of-london-poppy-tribute1.jpg
    Is that Windsor?

    Absolutely stunning picture.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,658 ✭✭✭✭OldMrBrennan83


    Em, Given that "Northern Irish nationalists" are a tiny section of British loyalism which, as the description suggests, believes there should be a separate Northern Ireland "nation", I would be fairly certain they wouldn't believe their views to be representative of many people, if any, in the 26 Counties.

    Go away with that toss, you know exactly what they meant.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Patww79 wrote: »
    Go away with that toss, you know exactly what they meant.

    Eh, if you want to contend that 'Irish nationalists in Northern Ireland' and 'Northern Irish nationalists' are the same thing then go for it. Most of the rest of us, who understand the language, can see that the last thing the former are is the latter.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,658 ✭✭✭✭OldMrBrennan83


    Eh, if you want to contend that 'Irish nationalists in Northern Ireland' and 'Northern Irish nationalists' are the same thing then go for it. Most of the rest of us, who understand the language, can see that the last thing the former are is the latter.

    So you honestly think that the poster meant what you interpreted it as? Like **** you did.

    He's right though anyway. A lot of "Irish" Nationalists in Northern Ireland need to realise that a lot of real Irish people don't give a tiny rats arse about them or what they want.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    And in all your life living there have you ever, ever, in your life ever heard any local person say "totes morto"?

    If you did, it was probably a visiting northsider.

    Aah come on, you need to keep up with the lingo bud.

    https://www.collegetimes.com/entertainment/d4-slang-146097


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Patww79 wrote: »
    A lot of "Irish" Nationalists in Northern Ireland need to realise that a lot of real Irish people don't give a tiny rats arse about them or what they want.

    Given you're clearly not a "real Irish person" in the commonly understood meaning of Irishness how would you know that?


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Given you're clearly not a "real Irish person" in the commonly understood meaning of Irishness ?

    Which is what?


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Aegir wrote: »
    Which is what?

    Eh, I don't know but perhaps the one where Irish people are from, eh, that little island called Ireland?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,658 ✭✭✭✭OldMrBrennan83


    Eh, I don't know but perhaps the one where Irish people are from, eh, that little island called Ireland?

    Incorrect, islands aren't automatically countries. You lot can never seem to get that (or don't want to most likely).


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Eh, I don't know but perhaps the one where Irish people are from, eh, that little island called Ireland?

    And have the same views as you do, obviously.

    Which from your posting history tells me that they must

    Never speak English
    Never listen to anything other than traditional Irish music
    Be able to trace their Irish heritage back to the Stone Age
    Play no sports not governed by the GAA
    Only to go Catholic state schools with no fees

    Have I missed anything?

    Oh yeah, hate the Brits and everything British.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Aegir wrote: »
    And have the same views as you do, obviously.

    Which from your posting history tells me that they must

    Never speak English
    Never listen to anything other than traditional Irish music
    Be able to trace their Irish heritage back to the Stone Age
    Play no sports not governed by the GAA
    Only to go Catholic state schools with no fees

    Have I missed anything?

    Oh yeah, hate the Brits and everything British.

    That's some extraordinary chip on your shoulder to create all that in response to a straightforward question. All this poppy glorification for your crowd of warmongering mass murdering British colonial thugs is evidently putting your anti-Irish/republican defences on a high.


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