butters
High on a Hill
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Posts
- 85,813
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There are underwhelming events as well.
I have read that Ireland is seriously considering a unification referendum . . .
What's this all about? I have read that Ireland is seriously considering a unification referendum, which the Good Friday Agreement provides for, as a solution to NI being pulled out of the EU by Brexit, creating a "hard border" between NI and the Republic -- is it that?
There are underwhelming events as well.
And then Brexit ripped open a lot of wounds deemed long healed both in Northern Ireland and in the Republic as well as along the Irish Border and in the relations between the two countries. Something that some on the island of Ireland had warned about ahead of the Brexit vote but the vast majority of the British voting public - both "Leave" and "Remain" - did not consider a major factor in the Brexit debate until years after the vote when Ireland related issues seemed to turn into the dominant issue of Brexit. Sadly, old patterns of discussion are reappearing in this issue - British politicians, particularly Tories and pro-Brexit voices accuse Ireland of being "in cahoots" with the EU and needlessly making life difficult for all involved to "get back at Britain" whereas Irish politicians feel as if the UK Tories treat them like they still rule (or "should" rule) the place. Meanwhile those in Northern Ireland - both Nationalists and Unionists - feel ignored and misunderstood by Westminster and feel like they have to suffer for something England decided on a whim without thinking of the consequences.
^^^
You can tell it's a sick burn when some Deplorable hack meanders into a thread like this, and feels compelled to give an effete poke of the stick.![]()
I have also heard that a unification referendum could lead to a revival of terrorism, just because so many parties on both sides have a vested interest in the status quo -- career Republicans, career Unionists, all out of a job if the issue is resolved once and for all.
and a woman who literally wrote the book on the topic.
She wrote a book on the topic. Her take on it. What makes her the authority on the good friday agreement, something arranged between the British and Irish governments?
It's the Vetteguide way...
Why would he or any American give a shit about what happens in Ireland, right now?
When the IRA was a thing, it had a lot of Irish-American donors. Possibly even some volunteers.
Because there are about ten times as many Irish-Americans as Irish-Irish. During the Troubles, when the IRA was a thing, it had a lot of Irish-American donors. Possibly even some volunteers.