Deary me. Gary McAllister has blocked me from following him on Twitter. I can still view his tweets and contact him, mind. He'd have to make his profile private otherwise. Maybe he doesn't realise...
Anyway, the point I've posed to him is as follows. He claims to accept the right of Irish nationals to declare for the FAI, but just so long as they haven't had any dealings with the IFA prior to this. Obviously, I also accept/welcome this right. However, he consequently accuses me of seeking to undermine the cross-community nature of IFA teams and of disregarding community relations because of this. Admittedly, one of the fundamental differences in our stances is that I'm tolerant, as per FIFA's rules, of a player switching association even if he has already played for the IFA.* This causes Gary's visage to go red with fury and, on occasion, even steam has been witnessed emanating from his ears.
Whether a player declares for the FAI from the outset or switches after having played for the IFA, however, makes no difference here in principle and should have no varying bearing on community relations that I can see, or am I overlooking something? Of course it doesn't disregard the spirit of tolerance, acceptance, recognition and choice that is fundamental to community relations anyway, but, for the sake of argument, if a player switches from the IFA to FAI after having lined out for the IFA and this apparently undermines community relations, then why would the impact upon community relations be any different in the case of the same player having initially rejected any advance from the IFA and instead declared for the FAI from the outset? Ultimately, he's still opted to play for the FAI and not the IFA.
In essence, McAllister is being a hypocrite and his logic is shown to be faulty. His postured pleas for somebody to please think of the community relations(!) are shown up to be a sham; a veneer to conceal the fact his real interest is to boss individuals who don't happen to conform to his world view about.
*Although, I wouldn't object in principle if FIFA re-introduced an age cap by which a player had to switch or if they removed the right to switch once altogether, just so long as the original choice remained.
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