I've been observing but have resisted the urge to post up to now. This whole thing of "irishness" is a bit of a red herring as far as i'm concerned. Most people who are born in Ireland would consider themselves Irish, but there are people born in plenty of other places who are entitled to call themselves Irish too. For me, Irishness can be defined as someone knowing what it is to be Irish. its not about having a wolfe tones cd or a celtic jersey, its about not feeling out of place when you're among other Irish people. Take the Ireland team now- Kevin Kilbane was born in England, yet he lines up in Landsdowne, sings the anthem and gives 100%. Clinton Morrison on the other hand makes pathetic and lame gags about drinking guinness.
As for the whole Celtic thing- I consider myself a Celtic fan, insofar as I look out for their results. This is because i am a big fan of Martin O'Neill not because I think I'm showing solidarity with knuckle dragging neanderthals who drag this country's reputation thru the mud. What I would say is that there's no problem being a Celtic fan if its for the right reason- i.e. Anything other than the emabrassingly childish "cos they're Irish. What are you? A ****in hun?" proferred by barstoolers up and down the country. I have no objection to any real football fan supporting any team, be it rangers, celtic, bARSElona, man utd, linfield- whoever. The people I object to are the people who hijack a club for other purposes and think they have the right to strut around having a go off others over who they support. Real football fans respect each other and respect people's right to support whoever they want.
Bookmarks