Originally Posted by Donal81
I'll be honest, I don't know the ins and outs of the GAA's constitution as it relates to the North but it was always meant to be a symbol of pride in the 32 counties and defiance of Britain. However, in supporting a 32 county Ireland - as do probably about 80% of the Republic - they are by no means supporting the IRA. I would love to see a united Ireland but I'm not going to merrily bomb anyone who disagrees with me. By supporting a united Ireland, I am most definitely not supporting the IRA and there is no connection there whatsoever and, to be honest, I'm a bit offended by what I think you're implying.
Again, I don't know if you're referring to some specific reference by the GAA to armed resistance that I don't know about, I'm genuinely open to correction.
As far as I know, the GAA doesn't support the IRA. The actions of individuals in the GAA shouldn't really be taken into account. Tom 'Slab' Murphy may have played for Crossmaglen GAA. Plenty of other IRA members may have played for Crossmaglen. However, that doesn't mean anything. If a Catholic supports the IRA, that doesn't mean the Catholic Church support the IRA. If Peter Canavan supports the IRA - and I'm not saying he does - that doesn't mean the GAA supports the IRA.
The GAA and the Catholic Church have a similar reach in Ireland, culturally and physically, that's why I'm connecting the two.