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Thread: Discussion on a United or re-partitioned Ireland

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    Nice needless bumping
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    So JFK done wrote this about Partition in the Milwaukee Sentinel on 29 July 1945:

    https://news.google.com/newspapers?i...7357%2C3508302
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    Apropos nothing, what is a dissident republican ? I hear this term used a lot for offshoots of the IRA who are continuing the terrorist campaign. It's as if only the IRA were republicans and if you didn't like them giving up their arms, you are a dissident republican. I am a republican and would love to see a 32 country republic achieved by consent as would be the majority (I believe) of most people in the Republic, although I was surprised when I discussed this with some friends recently they weren't too bothered about a united Ireland. Should the dissident republicans not be called "dissident IRA" rather than using the word republican which has become almost synonymous with the IRA or Sinn Fein? Fianna Fail used to describe themselves as the "Republican Party" while Fine Gael was the party which founded the Free State and declared the country a Republic. It's as if the word "republican" is a dirty word and is associated with violence.
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    Capped Player nigel-harps1954's Avatar
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    I think the idea of a United Ireland is a cool thought.

    I don't see what benefit it is to either state though.
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    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OwlsFan View Post
    Apropos nothing, what is a dissident republican ? I hear this term used a lot for offshoots of the IRA who are continuing the terrorist campaign. It's as if only the IRA were republicans and if you didn't like them giving up their arms, you are a dissident republican. I am a republican and would love to see a 32 country republic achieved by consent as would be the majority (I believe) of most people in the Republic, although I was surprised when I discussed this with some friends recently they weren't too bothered about a united Ireland. Should the dissident republicans not be called "dissident IRA" rather than using the word republican which has become almost synonymous with the IRA or Sinn Fein? Fianna Fail used to describe themselves as the "Republican Party" while Fine Gael was the party which founded the Free State and declared the country a Republic. It's as if the word "republican" is a dirty word and is associated with violence.
    "Dissident" is a politically-loaded term used by the establishment and those supportive of the northern peace-process, including the Provisional republican movement (Sinn Féin), to discredit militant republicans in the north who've decided to prolong an armed struggle they see as continuing through the decades from 1916 and in pursuit of putting the proclaimed or "theoratical" republic of 1916 into practice. The so-called "dissidents" (although that's not how they self-refer obviously) believe they are inheriting legitimacy from 1916 and would actually in turn accuse Sinn Féin and other republican entities, such as Fianna Fáil, of having dissented from the "authentic" or "legitimate" republican line. To suggest someone is a "dissident" is obviously a rhetorical means of suggesting they're anti-consensus or on the outside of accepted/valid doctrine or convention, or on the "wrong path", in other words.

    This Wiki article generally outlines pretty well the main developments and splits along the line of Irish republican thought from 1916 up until the Provisional/Continuity split in 1986: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_...n_legitimatism

    The next major split along the "legitimatist" line was when the "Real" IRA (also referred to as the "New" IRA) splintered from the (P)IRA in 1997 in the run-up to the (P)IRA committing to a cessation of their struggle and Sinn Féin signing the GFA.

    In the south, I do sense that "republican" (and even "nationalist") are traduced terms (although I have no qualms or reservations in identifying with either; I'm a democrat too, importantly). There's a reason for this sense of "dirty baggage" being attached to the words. These words are popularly associated with Sinn Féin and Sinn Féin now pose a very serious and pressing threat to the southern establishment. According to Dr. Pat Walsh, who has written about what he sees as the southern media's pursuit of Gerry Adams, this sort of re-framing of the meaning of words that might be connected to or of benefit to Sinn Féin - as "dubious" or somehow "suspect" - serves the purpose of tarnishing the growing party's image, despite the fact Sinn Féin are fully committed to peace and have been for quite some time: https://drpatwalsh.com/2016/04/23/th...f-gerry-adams/

    Quote Originally Posted by Dr. Pat Walsh
    The principal thing driving the ‘Get Adams’ campaign in the South was the fear of a Northern contamination of the cosy Partitionist Southern body politic. Adams went South to capture the Louth seat and the people put a Northerner in the Dail. But Adams as the leader of an all-Ireland party crossed the line which no Northern Catholic is supposed to cross—unless they have become harmless, and fully integrated cogs of the party system of the South, like Frank Aiken and Austin Currie.

    Adams, in coming South, was confronting the 26 Counties with the fact that the issue of the Northern Catholics was not put to bed in 1925 or indeed 1998 and that there was still unfinished business in the North. Jack Lynch is praised by all shades in the South for having kept the North at bay but the presence of Adams and the rise of Sinn Fein in the Opinion Polls was a sharp reminder that Lynch failed.



    There is a complete absence from the Irish National press of any publication sympathetic to the predicament of the Northern Catholic community. Such sympathy is seen by the social stratum that produces the media as sympathy with Sinn Fein.

    The fact that Sinn Fein was produced out of the situation in which the Northern Catholic community was placed, not by Partition as such, but by the political arrangements made by Britain as the means of enacting Partition and maintaining it, is denied. The implications of admitting it are too awful to contemplate for those in control of the media. This is an issue which goes beyond careerism and is connected to the basic orientation of the State. It is a remarkable fact that there is no mainstream media organisation which fully reflects the true national interests of the Irish state. There was one newspaper in the past which represented native Ireland, the Irish Press. It was brought down in 1995 and has not been replaced. Martin O Muilleoir, the Belfast publisher, attempted to establish a newspaper on an all-Ireland basis, but was blackguarded by the Southern Establishment, with the Progressive Democrat Minister for Justice, Michael McDowell, in the lead. It started publication in January 2005 and closed down in September 2006.

    In the Irish media dispassionate description of British political conduct, whether in ‘Northern Ireland’ or in the world, is put down as Anglophobia, a product of the bad old world of backward, independent Ireland. A phobia is defined as a groundless, irrational fear or hatred of something. But, in Dublin a strictly accurate, rational and factual account of how Britain managed the Six Counties is decreed to be Anglophobic and not helpful. In short, the truth cannot be told in Dublin about the North because the truth might be of benefit to Sinn Fein. So the conflict ‘up there’ needs to be presented as a campaign of murder and mayhem against lawful activity.

    That Britain is not responsible for the political condition of the ‘Northern Ireland’ region of its State is held as an article of faith, in defiance of all fact and reason. But, if that is the case, it rules out all understanding of the problem and all effective solution.
    Quote Originally Posted by nigel-harps1954 View Post
    I think the idea of a United Ireland is a cool thought.

    I don't see what benefit it is to either state though.
    Pooling the island's resources, labour and services would surely be beneficial and much more efficient for everyone on the island. Even present-day unionists would have more of a say in an all-Ireland parliament than they have in Westminster as they'd make up about a fifth of the national population.

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  9. #66
    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    I should have also added that there are some "dissidents" who aren't militant at all. I think Éirigí (classed as "dissident" because they oppose the GFA), for example, are committed to peaceful methods. Other than that, I'm not sure what their strategy for achieving unity is.

    I think it's fascinating how language is used generally to legitimise and delegitimise certain ideas, concepts and entities, but I should clarify I'm pro-GFA myself and see it as an imperfect means to an end. Hopefully.

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    Coach BonnieShels's Avatar
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    There is a dispassion that had crept in towards the end of FF's last foray into power with RTÉ (and it seemed southern media-wide took their lead in sudden referencing of "police in Northern Ireland" as opposed to "authorities/police in the North" and similar "slips" of the tongue. It signaled to me the final nail in the coffin of real Southern will to end partition. I complained to RTÉ about this and obviously received no response.

    The North? The North-East? Of Ireland? Louth and Meath? GAH!

    ---

    It's a bit much to have Pat Walsh state that "The Butcher of Altnaveigh", Frank Aiken was harmless! He was a scumbag of the highest order and completely contemptuous. How he can possibly be mouthed within the same sentence of benign Austin beggars belief.

    "Jack Lynch is praised by all shades in the South for having kept the North at bay but the presence of Adams and the rise of Sinn Fein in the Opinion Polls was a sharp reminder that Lynch failed."

    Come off it Pat. Lynch would put Bertie and CJ to shame for populism. An absolute cur of a man with his attitude towards Northern-nationalists. An ostrich if anything! Isn't it a good thing thing that he didn't stand "idly by"?
    I honestly know of very few people that praise Lynch. In fact the last decent thing I remember said of him was when he kicked the bucket.
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    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    David McWilliams with a pretty crushing dissection of northern (economic) unionism: http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2016/0...t-write-it-off

    Quote Originally Posted by David McWilliams
    Up to now, there has been a significant number of Northern Irish Catholics who might have felt that staying with the UK was the right thing to do for their back pockets. But when you look at the numbers you can see clearly that this is a bizarre choice.

    A cursory glance at the performance of the Northern Irish economy since 1922 would suggest that the Union has been an economic disaster for the people of Northern Ireland. They have been impoverished by the Union and this shows no sign of letting up. The only solace the Northerners might hold onto is the fact that all British regions have lost out income-wise to Southern England; however, “we’re all getting poor together” is hardly a persuasive chorus for an ode to the Union. Indeed, the relative under-performance of the once-rich Scottish economy was (and is) a central argument of the Scottish Nationalists in the last referendum.

    However, forget the other British regions: the contrast between the economic performances of the North and South is shocking.

    If we go back to 1920, 80 per cent of the industrial output of the entire island of Ireland came from the three counties centred on Belfast. This was where all Irish industry was. It was industrial and innovative; northern entrepreneurs and inventors were at the forefront of industrial innovation. By 1911, Belfast was the biggest city in Ireland, with a population of close to 400,000, which was growing rapidly. It was by far the richest part of the island.

    In contrast, the rest of the Irish economy was agricultural and backward and the only industrial base we had could be termed a ‘beer and biscuits’ economy, dominated by the likes of Guinness and Jacobs.

    Fast-forward to now and the collapse of the once-dynamic Northern economy versus that of the Republic is shocking. Having been a fraction of the North’s at independence, the Republic’s industrial output is now ten times greater than that of Northern Ireland. Exports from the Republic are €89 billion while from the North, exports are a paltry €6 billion. This obviously reflects multinationals, but it also underscores just how far ahead the Republic’s industrial base is. Producing 15 times more exports underscores a vast difference in terms of the globalisation of business.

    The total size of the Republic’s economy is now four times of that of the North, even though the labour force is not even two and a half times bigger. In terms of income per head, the Republic is now almost twice as rich per person as the North. The average income per head in the Republic is €39,873, while it languishes at €23,700 up North. The differing fortunes of North and South can be easily seen in the fact that, having been smaller than Belfast at the time of partition, the population of the greater Dublin area is now almost three times bigger than the greater Belfast metropolitan region.

    Obviously there are significant differences in terms of prices, access to public services and housing between the two parts of the island, but the fact remains that the Union has been an economic calamity for everyone in the North. The contrast is made more significant by the fact that economically the North was, at one stage, so far ahead of the South. So where does that leave us?

    Well, in the distant past, there was good reason to believe that the Union preserved living standards in the North, but this is a myth and has not been the case since 1990. Indeed, the end of the Troubles, which should have marked the resurgence of the relative performance of the North, has actually delivered the opposite.

    Relative to the South, the Northern economy has fallen backwards since the guns were silenced. If there was an economic peace dividend, it went South.

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    But this has been obvious to all and sundry especially to those of us who visit ulster regularly from the Pale or those who are from there.

    Nice article though it must be said. I like adding facts to my anecdotes.

    I have many friends from in and around Dungannon and Armagh and they all scarpered South as soon as the degree was acquired from QUB. Every last one of them.

    But how do you explain that (you know, logic?) to entrenched northern Unionists?

    I could well end up in QUB (It's looking likely at present) for my masters, but I sincerely doubt I'll stick around when I'm done.

    ---

    One of the things I think we all have noticed over the last two decades have been the role-reversal in road quality and how you almost long to be hitting the border going south bound. Which I'm sure wasn't always the case.
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    Like the Fonz. Only a dog. Mr A's Avatar
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    Unionists might well argue that the Troubles played a massive part in holding the economy back, and that probably takes a long time to overcome. There is a still an aftermath of poverty, gangsterism and sectarian hatred there that is damaging also. No other part of the UK or Ireland had such an impediment and it's a bit unfair of McWilliams to underplay it.

    As noted above though the difference to someone brought up near the border in how our infrastructure has improved while that on the other side has hardly changed is remarkable. There was a time when going to Dublin from Donegal the aim was to spend as much time on the good Northern Ireland roads as possible- now it's the opposite.
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    Seasoned Pro backstothewall's Avatar
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    The troubles have been over for over 22 years. There has to come a point when you can't blame a particularly low level conflict any more.

    To put it in context consider how the German economy was performing in 1967? Then consider how badly damaged Germany was in 1945, and compare that to the north in 1994.

    The future to this is dynamic nationalism starting to make the case made by David McWilliams above. It is as plain as the nose on your face that the North is being very badly held back by the union. There is no reason why the people of the Republic should be doing so much better than people in the North. This would be to everyone's benefit, north and south. The north would obviously benefit, but the south would also surely benefit from the extra capacity, and from the economies of scale.
    Last edited by backstothewall; 17/05/2016 at 7:27 PM.
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    Like the Fonz. Only a dog. Mr A's Avatar
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    Much of what you say there is true, but the North's politics has been stuck in the sectarian headcount / bunfight for much of that time. Note East Germany had a crap government and they weren't exactly flying it. Even yet the the hard questions at Stormont are often fudged or avoided. And that won't suddenly disappear if there is a United Ireland. Indeed a new Loyalist insurgency would be quite possible if that happened. Lots of things that may seem blindingly obvious from a southern nationalist perspective are not so from outside it.

    I'm not saying the Union has been a massive success- it clearly hasn't. But the alternatives may not have gone much better.
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    Seasoned Pro backstothewall's Avatar
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    Indeed East Germany did have a crap government. The solution here would remarkably similar to what worked there!

    I'm not saying it would be a panacea, but it would be hard to do much worse in the North.

    It wouldn't all be one was though. We have things up here that you guys could benefit from (e.g. we have all the structures in place to support single national health and fire services. Why would you build new ones when you could just use the structures already in place up here. It's as much bother to running a fire service to cover 32 counties as it is to cover 6).
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    International Prospect NeverFeltBetter's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr A View Post
    Much of what you say there is true, but the North's politics has been stuck in the sectarian headcount / bunfight for much of that time. Note East Germany had a crap government and they weren't exactly flying it. Even yet the the hard questions at Stormont are often fudged or avoided. And that won't suddenly disappear if there is a United Ireland. Indeed a new Loyalist insurgency would be quite possible if that happened. Lots of things that may seem blindingly obvious from a southern nationalist perspective are not so from outside it.

    I'm not saying the Union has been a massive success- it clearly hasn't. But the alternatives may not have gone much better.
    I think this is something that certainly deserves a great deal of consideration. A likelihood of violent resistance to unification would certainly put me off the idea.
    Author of Never Felt Better (History, Film Reviews).

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    I think too much stall is put in potential loyalist violence. In fact it's this threat that has hampered any realistic discussion about reintegration further last 90 years. It also is this threat that brought about partition in the first place.

    Loyalism only exists to threaten. I think it's time that the weight of their concerns at a united Ireland are given the weight they deserve. No more no less.
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    Seasoned Pro backstothewall's Avatar
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    If loyalist violence was to be an issue in the event of a successful referendum it would have to be faced down. Anything else would be nothing short of cowardice and would be an appalling affront to democracy.

    In any event the army have conducted peacekeeping operations in the some of the most difficult regions in the world. I'm sure they would be fit to restore law and order in Ballymena and Newtownards.
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    Peacekeeping isn't counter-insurgency, or counter-terrorism. They're very different things. The Irish Defence Forces has neither the numbers, training or practical experience (right now) to fight an asymmetric war in the north, and the idea of Irish reunification coming into being with soldiers patrolling the streets isn't very appealing (Can you imagine the outcry if the Irish Army starts killing Irish citizens?).

    But I'm not deaf to the laudable idea that violent threats to democratic will should be combated against. But I do think that the conditions in the north before any potential vote on unification is contemplated should be very carefully considered. No one wants any blood spilled over Irish politics anymore.
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    Capped Player DannyInvincible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr A View Post
    Unionists might well argue that the Troubles played a massive part in holding the economy back, and that probably takes a long time to overcome. There is a still an aftermath of poverty, gangsterism and sectarian hatred there that is damaging also. No other part of the UK or Ireland had such an impediment and it's a bit unfair of McWilliams to underplay it.
    McWilliams does mention that all of the regions within the UK are trailing behind London and presently suffering. Wales and Scotland never had conflict, so you could argue the north would be relatively impoverished regardless if the other regions are any indication. The UK is Anglo/London-centric.

    Quote Originally Posted by NeverFeltBetter View Post
    I think this is something that certainly deserves a great deal of consideration. A likelihood of violent resistance to unification would certainly put me off the idea.
    I think gestures will have to be made to pre-empt possible loyalist insurrection. We want a united Ireland that will be stable, enduring, peaceful, prosperous and welcoming for all. That will entail nationalists/republicans making compromises in advance, so it's something we need to start thinking about. What compromises are we prepared to make in order to achieve what we desire? Are our present flags, anthems, symbols and institutions sacred or are they secondary to unity of people? If we expect parity-of-esteem to be applied in the north, surely we must accept the application of similar principles (for the benefit of the unionist minority) in a 32-county arrangement. These sorts of things are almost taboo or heresy within republican discourse, but they're something we need to face up to.

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    International Prospect bennocelt's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DannyInvincible View Post

    I think gestures will have to be made to pre-empt possible loyalist insurrection. We want a united Ireland that will be stable, enduring, peaceful, prosperous and welcoming for all. That will entail nationalists/republicans making compromises in advance, so it's something we need to start thinking about. What compromises are we prepared to make in order to achieve what we desire? Are our present flags, anthems, symbols and institutions sacred or are they secondary to unity of people? If we expect parity-of-esteem to be applied in the north, surely we must accept the application of similar principles (for the benefit of the unionist minority) in a 32-county arrangement. These sorts of things are almost taboo or heresy within republican discourse, but they're something we need to face up to.
    I wouldnt mind as long as Ireland Calls isn't our national anthem!

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    International Prospect NeverFeltBetter's Avatar
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    I certainly can't imagine our current anthem being acceptable to northern unionists, anymore than God Save The Queen would be for us.

    I've often wondered if Irish unification would have to be bought with some kind of federalised system wherein the north gets a healthy chunk of local government powers - what could we call it? Home Rule? - with even the retention of Stormont as a devolved administration underneath Dublin as it is to London currently.
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