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Originally Posted by
Gather round
Harsh, Bonnie. I agreed on this very thread that NI Nationalists' aspiration to a united Ireland was valid. I notice you don't (can't?) actually answer any of the reasoned criticisms I offered of how it tries to achieve that aspiration.
Your constant sniping in and around various aspects of nationalism loses you any empathy towards what you may have initally stated. Your "Eddie Coll" statement par example.
Irish Nationalists will never achieve their aims until there's a political structure in place for it to be achieved.
As it stands the political structure in place is what we have and in order for it to take place it needs to be shown that there is a likelyhood of a border poll succeeding.
The only thing that Nationalists can do right now is show how a United Ireland is in the best interests of every Irish person regardless of his or her political beliefs in the hope that if a poll was to take place it would succeed.
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Such as? I mean, which areas particularly matter? To what extent is that foothold growing in them? How will this affect something that matters tangibly, like election results?
You see, the thing is- as I mentioned above- that all this supposed greater influence isn't getting Irish nationalism in NI any new support from the only people who they right rationally want to attract, ie Unionists.
Again I think you are misreading what I am saying and are being deliberately awkward.
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Make your mind up, Bonnie. If you're going to convince Unionists that we're running scared, you'll need to offer something slightly more spine-chilling than, effectively 'there MIGHT be a vote, but we might not win it: although don't worry, we've logically re-defined politics!'
Of course there won't be a vote. Not in NI, because we know from every election for decades the strength of support for nationalism (ie, it rose sharply when SF stopped abstaining, then began to tail off because- as I said- there are no floating voters, and because migration rates and family size are roughly the same).
Again it is up to Nationalism to promote the idea of United Ireland > United Kingdom.
In order for this debate to occur we have to start it somewhere. GA has done this.
In fairness the next big question was always going to be this. I'm only surprised it took so long.
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And not in the Republic, because it would be embarrassing for the entire political set-up if and when support wasn't overwhelming.
Embarrasment from a hypothetical referendum that may or may not need to happen?
The aspiration of a united Ireland is a strong fact of life amongst the majority of people on this island.
That some believe in it more than others is moot. You'll be surprised how ferevent the will will be come when the opportunity arises.
Again, nothing to worry about until the north of Ireland decide that they want to secede from the UK in order to join with the rest of Ireland politically.
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Are you Rip Van Winkle, just awoken from a kip that began in 1922? For the entire period since then, Unionists have been able to rely on Britain providing an economic safety net. For almost all of it, Britain has been a more affluent country than the Irish Republic. Even the credit-fuelled boom of your Celtic Tiger years has been largely wasted on a property bubble rather than investing in infrastructure.
What? You are saying that one of the major economic powerhouses of the planet that we seceded from in 1922 was a more affluent nation than Ireland over the course of the last 90 years? Get out of town.
The talk of safety-nets shows the height of ambition...
I mean countries of approx 6.5million people are generally basket cases economically...
The less said about anything FF did over the last 20 years the better. In a United Ireland they wouldn't have ever gotten next to near to what they did over the years. :P We need our staid northern brethern to rescue us from the gombeen.
Heaven forbid any other country in the world may have ended up in a credit crisis and had to bail out it's banks... Thank god for that safety net for NI's banking 'system'.
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Are you seriously suggesting that there is some hidden source of support for a united Ireland in NI that doesn't already vote Nationalist? If so, let's see some evidence?
I don't think I was. My phraseology could have been better I suppose.
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Given that its main opposition in NI is basically its mirror image in the us-and-them stakes, that discomfort might not be as terminal as your wishful thinking hopes.
Compare like with like. The Buckfast brigades bricking each other and the Police around the Short Strand aren't at all articulate. Mainstream Unionist and Nationalist politicians aren't that different in their fluency, or lack of it. See my example above, Gerry Adams waffling on TV last week about the budget deficits, something he clearly knows next to nothing about.
Ya what? Who are the people always peddled out to play poormouth? Never usuallly your typical SDLP member or middle class Shinner.
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There were numerous Presidents of (part-) Irish descent before Kennedy, not just Jackson. As for the delay in electing a Black equivalent, I imagine a century of slavery followed by another of systematic racism, Jim Crow laws and the like might just have been a bigger factor than innate laziness and self-pity.
I was using that vague quote to demonsrate a point. I wasn't stating it as an entirely accurate summation of the Irish in America for the last 100 years. If you choose to be literal, I can't help it.
Always!