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BS: Peace in Ireland?

Dave the Gnome 09 May 07 - 10:08 AM
katlaughing 09 May 07 - 10:42 AM
PoppaGator 09 May 07 - 10:53 AM
skipy 09 May 07 - 11:19 AM
Schantieman 09 May 07 - 12:00 PM
Cats 09 May 07 - 01:51 PM
GUEST 09 May 07 - 06:05 PM
Jimmy C 10 May 07 - 12:59 AM
GUEST 10 May 07 - 05:08 AM
Dave the Gnome 10 May 07 - 05:10 AM
Keith A of Hertford 10 May 07 - 05:27 AM
Dave the Gnome 10 May 07 - 06:19 AM
Jimmy C 10 May 07 - 11:32 AM
Dave the Gnome 10 May 07 - 11:52 AM
PoppaGator 10 May 07 - 03:36 PM
ard mhacha 11 May 07 - 02:50 AM
Keith A of Hertford 11 May 07 - 03:24 AM
Dave the Gnome 11 May 07 - 04:02 AM
Dave the Gnome 11 May 07 - 04:05 AM
Dave the Gnome 11 May 07 - 04:16 AM
Big Al Whittle 11 May 07 - 04:25 AM
Keith A of Hertford 11 May 07 - 04:38 AM
Big Al Whittle 11 May 07 - 05:31 AM
Dave the Gnome 11 May 07 - 10:20 AM
Den 11 May 07 - 11:07 AM
ard mhacha 11 May 07 - 01:28 PM
Jean(eanjay) 11 May 07 - 02:19 PM
Dave the Gnome 11 May 07 - 05:54 PM
Jean(eanjay) 12 May 07 - 07:38 AM
ard mhacha 12 May 07 - 11:57 AM
Stringsinger 12 May 07 - 03:47 PM
Nickhere 12 May 07 - 09:14 PM
GUEST,JTT 13 May 07 - 05:28 AM
Big Al Whittle 13 May 07 - 06:33 AM
GUEST,JTT 13 May 07 - 07:27 AM
Stringsinger 13 May 07 - 11:15 AM
Alice 13 May 07 - 11:48 AM
ard mhacha 13 May 07 - 05:00 PM
Nickhere 13 May 07 - 07:44 PM
Jimmy C 13 May 07 - 10:16 PM
Big Al Whittle 14 May 07 - 04:33 AM
Dave the Gnome 14 May 07 - 06:17 AM
Keith A of Hertford 14 May 07 - 07:17 AM
Keith A of Hertford 14 May 07 - 07:54 AM
GUEST,Southern Man 20 May 07 - 05:15 PM
Keith A of Hertford 20 May 07 - 05:37 PM
GUEST,ib48 21 May 07 - 09:07 AM
GUEST,Big Mick 23 May 07 - 12:46 PM
GUEST 23 May 07 - 12:53 PM
The Sandman 23 May 07 - 01:50 PM

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Subject: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 09 May 07 - 10:08 AM

I must say I am very surprised a thread has not been started already. I feel very optomistic that this is the end of the troubles. Or at least the begining of the end. Anyone else got any other ideas?

On the darker light side a UK paper today showed a cartoon of Messrs. Paisley and McGuinness stood at the bar at Stormont.

"Fancy a Kneecap, or sorry, Nightcap, Ian?"

"Aye, Martin, I could murder a Guinness..."

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: katlaughing
Date: 09 May 07 - 10:42 AM

Here's hoping it will take: Read all about it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: PoppaGator
Date: 09 May 07 - 10:53 AM

God, let's hope this is finally the end (or at least the beginning of the end) of so many centuries of destructive behavior.

The ordinary working people of NI, or of any community anywhere, have many more common interests, and more important ones, than the differences between their religions.

I realize, of course, that the differences go far beyond theology and church affiliation. In Ireland, one's "religion" is really just shorthand for identifying the community into which one was born and its historic relationship to British rule. That's complicated, I realize, but sooner or later, the differences just have to be finally put to rest, and hopefully that time has finally come.

The British Empire is not the mololithic power it used to be, and none of the churches enjoy their formerly dominant roles in people's lives and minds. It's time for everyone to let go and quit living in the past. Appreciating the music and culture of one's history is fine, but enjoying such traditions should not prevent folks from living in the present and looking forward to a peaceful and productive future.

Peace, love, and best of luck to everyone.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: skipy
Date: 09 May 07 - 11:19 AM

"Peace" when is he flying over?
Skipy


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Schantieman
Date: 09 May 07 - 12:00 PM

I remember where I was and what I was doing when I heard that the Good Friday Agreement had been signed and thought then that it might be the beginning of the end. When I think back over the last I-dont-know-how-many years about all the violence, bloodshed, bereaved families and cripples created in the name of religion - OK, and politics, well principally politics - well, we can only hope that they will manage to work together in peace.   I had tears in my eyes last night as I listened to the report on the radio, and again now as I write.

If they can get over their differences, maybe there's some hope left?

Steve


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Cats
Date: 09 May 07 - 01:51 PM

We were in Belfast this Easter and it really is an amazing place. We did the city tour and went to all the places that saw the troubles and heard all the history but the overwhelming message from ordinary people we met out there was that they didn't want their children growing up like they had to. Good Luck to them. Give them all the support they need and want and go and visit.. you'll never regret it. I can let you know of some good pubs, good sessions and excellent food...


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST
Date: 09 May 07 - 06:05 PM

I hope it works.

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Jimmy C
Date: 10 May 07 - 12:59 AM

I sincerly hope so, all my family and my wife's family are still there. The events of the past few weeks were indeed very welcome and if things keep improving then the north of Ireland will reach it's full potential as one of the prettiest places in Europe with the friendliest people on earth. (with all due respect to the Newfoundlanders whom I love).
The time for vigilance is now and people there have to be on the lookout to guard against some radical group that will do it's best to wreck the power sharing agreement.
The anomosity and distrust between the two sections of the community has been built up over hundreds of years and will not disappear overnight. The real hope lies with the young people who have the power to make it a lasting peace. The older generation carry a lot of baggage which will be difficult to shred.
Hope springs eternal.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST
Date: 10 May 07 - 05:08 AM

What to the catters living in Ireland think about it ?


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 10 May 07 - 05:10 AM

I really am quite amazed at the lack of response to such an amazing event. If you look back on the threads about the troubles and other events in the north of Ireland they often went on for weeks!

Maybe good news is just not enough to fuel discussions and I am destined to be dissapponted by human behaviour forever:-(

Ah well.

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 10 May 07 - 05:27 AM

It used to be any excuse to start a thread on the subject of NI.
We have so many Irish contributors, yet no one has an opinion on this?
Someone said that they had seen it all before. Well there have been agreements between the moderates on both sides before, but nothing like this. Paisley, McGuinness and Adams laughing and joking together.
Who thought they would live to see that?
Historic IMO.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 10 May 07 - 06:19 AM

Agreed Keith.

Well - it's day 3 now and they are still working together. If this carries we could well have a Paisley/McGuinness team visiting the middle east to show them how it's done:-)

Fingers and everything else still crossed.

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Jimmy C
Date: 10 May 07 - 11:32 AM

Keith,

The problem is not with Paisley, Adams etc.
Paisley is 81 years old and wants to go down in history as a peacemaker ?. Adams and McGuinness want a unified country (all 32 counties) and will do nothing to destroy the reaching of that goal.
The real problem won't raise it's head until the day Nationalist do become the majority in the north. That day will not be too long in coming especially when Sinn Fein also make gains in the elections in the 26 counties. When hard line loyalists are faced with the real prospect of a United Ireland, then the riots will start and bombs and guns will come out again, believe me.
As a nationalist I hope and pray that I am wrong but I doubt it.

Only time will tell.

In the meantime let us enjoy the dream of a lasting peace.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 10 May 07 - 11:52 AM

Do you really think that the south want to take on the responsibility for all the problems in the north Jimmy? As much as a united Ireland is an admirable ambition it is not as straight forward as the north voting for it. I think the power sharing assembly will pave the way for a state goverened by neither England nor Ireland for a while. That way the egos of all the old protagonists will eventualy subside and a new assembly will, in not too many years, be able to accept rule by the government of the south and the south will be able to absorb a the six counties without taking on all the current problems. I hope so anyway.

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: PoppaGator
Date: 10 May 07 - 03:36 PM

Funny that the real Ulstermen, and NI exiles in the US, are yukking it up in this other thread while leaving us outsiders to take up this serious discussion here!


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: ard mhacha
Date: 11 May 07 - 02:50 AM

Jimmy C, I have to agree with your forecast, the Nationalists are going to be the majority party in the future and then the reality will strike home for the Unionists, will they quietly agree to democratic rule? I believe we all know the answer to that question.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 11 May 07 - 03:24 AM

So if as a minority they can not get their own way, they might try to impose their will on the majority by armed struggle?
I am sure that kind of dark ages logic is dead.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 11 May 07 - 04:02 AM

You could be right, AM, you are best placed to know what is going on. I sincerely hope not. After all you were wrong when you said "can anyone possibly believe that the Paisley Party will sit and debate with Adams and co like everyday normal governments,in view of the DUPs bigtory towards anything Nationalist, that is a forlorn hope.
" on the other thread. In the nicest possible way I do hope that you will be proved wrong once again! What would happen in the event of the predicted riots and civil unrest? Will Stormont ask for assistance from the UK government? Maybe get the army in? History does tend to repeat itself:-(

Everyone do whatever they can to stop it happening - even if it is only keeping your fingers crossed!

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 11 May 07 - 04:05 AM

BTW - In case anyone thinks I am lying or twisting the truth in some way the above statement about the Paisley Party etc. was made a mere 7 months ago here

D.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 11 May 07 - 04:16 AM

Sorry if this is turning into a one man thread - I keep remembering things. Like the old Columbo TV series - I keep popping back through the door:-)

Would it be possible that the Nationalist factions in the shared assembly would realise that a strong and quick move toward unification would cause these problems? They are, after all, clever people. They are also politicians and will do their upmost to ensure they stay as popular as they can to as many people as thay can - That is what politicians do! If so would the scenario I described above not be a serious option. Ie where a devolved 'state of Ulster' develops before any move is made toward unification? Much like the UK mainland, where Scotland has it's own government and Wales has its own assembly (and don't get me going on what England has!) we could then have seperate states - Eire and Ulster - sharing the same piece of land?

This is a serious question to those actualy living in the region. Is it possible?

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 11 May 07 - 04:25 AM

Does anyone remember that edition of Columbo, where the murderer was a personable Irish writer who was an amusing raconteur and author on one level - on another he was wild fenian monster raising funds for 'a terrorist organisation'.

Luckily Columbo caught him. I bet he's out by now, under the peace agreement.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 11 May 07 - 04:38 AM

Was he the one who would stride into a bar and demand " a pint of ale"?


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 11 May 07 - 05:31 AM

Got me there Keith. This is a serious question for anybody watching daytime television.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 11 May 07 - 10:20 AM

Anyone with a good handle on the region that can answer my question?

Please?

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Den
Date: 11 May 07 - 11:07 AM

Maybe we are all a little jaded, there have been many false dawns. I've spoken to a number of people on the street and the consensus seems to be "big deal let them get on with it". There seems to be an air of wait and see. Are the peace walls going to come down? Are people on either side going to all of a sudden get along? Are the predominantly protestant police force going to suddenly become nondiscriminatory? In answer to your question Dave, who knows, what has changed, what will change, who will change?


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: ard mhacha
Date: 11 May 07 - 01:28 PM

Dave sure I am wrong, but, hold fire until their asses warm the seats, any sane person wants peace, but with justice, this has still to be realised, I could point out many injustices that has still to be realised.
In the meantime we await to see the outcome.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Jean(eanjay)
Date: 11 May 07 - 02:19 PM

It's very much a step by step situation and hopefully, having come this far, any future problems could be sorted out.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 11 May 07 - 05:54 PM

Thanks guys - much appreciated. I can well understand the trepidation after all these years of living in hope. My big worry is that people in the region will see any move as doomed to failure before it starts and that will become a self-fulfilling prophesy:-( 3 out of 3 responses here have allayed those fears. I am getting the impression of 'hope for the best but fear the worse' - A healthy attitude in most situations! Is that the general mood in the area?

I have had no feedback about the possibility of the region becoming self governing - Not beholden to either England or Ireland, even if in the short term. Is that someting that you can see happening or am I away with fairies? Can we also put a timescale on when people feel that the peace does have a longer lasting chance? When, for instance, should we expect the predicted riots and bloodshed? Whan can we assume that the worst is over and it will not happen? Basically - how long do I have to hold my breath and cross my fingers for?

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Jean(eanjay)
Date: 12 May 07 - 07:38 AM

Dave, it's very hard to answer those questions.

As the move towards peace has progressed the economy has improved - things like more employment and rising house prices. Hopefully, people will enjoy the improvements and this will give incentive to continue in a positive way.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: ard mhacha
Date: 12 May 07 - 11:57 AM

A lot of you are forgetting the very low turn-out in the recent NI election 40 per cent of the people did not vote, that is rock bottom for the north.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Stringsinger
Date: 12 May 07 - 03:47 PM

I am a fan of Tommy Sands, the songwriter from Belfast area. His songs, "There Were Roses" and "Love Will Come Again" speak more deeply than all the rhetoric from both sides of the "troubles" can do.

It's time for Ireland to put away her differences and become whole again.

Frank


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Nickhere
Date: 12 May 07 - 09:14 PM

I was away on hoilidays or would have answered your question sooner, Dave.

Yes, I gather the guns etc., are finally silent. But in the 10 after the 1994 peace deal, there were some 2,000 plus punishment beatings, kneecappings etc., the majority of them by loyalist groups, plus a number of murders, several of them still unsolved. However, in the last last few years even this seems to have died down. That's a good thing at least. Some people will grow up and live out their lives that otherwise might not have done so. A generatuion will grow up that won't have firsthand experinece of the fear and tension living in such a situation brings, such as the fear of walking down the 'wrong' road at the 'wrong' time, drinking in the 'wrong' pub, having too-predictable a daily routine that might get you killed, etc.,

But i think those who posted here saying that it's time people forgot their differences are missing the key point. It was never about religious difference, even when religious difference was shorthand for different background and cultures. People didn't take up arms against one another because they went to different churches, or listened to a different type of folk music etc.,

The problems happened because one part of the community, who indentified themselves by origin, religion and culture wanted to have total dominance of the society in which they lived, at the expense of another part of the community who were different to them in some way or another. To this end, since the formation of the northern state in 1920 and especially from 1922 onwards, when the formation of the southern Free State confirmed this partition, the unionist section of the population worked hard to ensure the two communities were kept divided. Protestant proletarians learned to be thankful for the little they had because their catholic counterparts had even less. That left the ruling elites an ever freer hand to create in their own words "a protestant state for a preotestant people" They completley subverted and distorted the democratic apparatus of the state to serve this end. Electoral boundaries were rigged in order to provide protestnat dominated local councils and government even in areas where catholics were a majority. Catholics were thwarted from obtaining work at most protestant firms, found it impossible to get ANY job in the public sector and were discrimintaed against at every level in society from housing, to jobs, to social welfare etc.,

This state of affairs - an effective apartheid state - couldn't last forever. In the 1960s many people had access to TV, or news filtered through in other ways and could see what was going on in the USA with Black Civil Rights movement. The catholics of the north got 'uppity' and started demanding civil rights too. Note that the IRA campaign in the north had petered out by 1962, after a brief flurry in the early 1950s ("Sean South of Garryowen" fame). That didn't stop loyalists murdering two catholics for sport on Malvern Street in 1966. Nonetheless, what the catholic civil rights protestors wanted was equal rights as equal British citizens. Thoughts of a 'united Ireland' were forgotten (at leats for the moment) as unpractical. But even this was too much for unionists (remember also that the act of marching around waving placards has particular resonace in the north - think of the Orange Order: "where we march, we own") and so with worldly-weariness, they picked up their baseball bats, bricks and so on and laid into the catholic civil rights marchers (the UDA was formed about this time for just this purpose). The mainly-protestant police (the RUC) did nothing to stop them, and sometimes even joined in.

Now if unionists could have found it in their hearts to generously grant equal rights to the other human beings sharing their turf, there might have been no Troubles. But you can't expect a generation of articulate angry young people to put up with such treatment for long, and the IRA re-appeared to defend catholic areas (though they were woefully equipped to do so at the time, 1969 / 1970) from loyalist mobs. Hundreds of catholic families were burned out of their homes in what would now be called ethnic cleansing. (The IRA later split into different factions, the Provisional IRA, or 'Provos' as they became known being the more active and aggressive on the ground in general).

Anyway, I won't bore you all with history you probably already know, but just to remind that we are notr talking simply religious, or even cultural difference here.

One might as well have argued back in 1950 or 1960 that it was 'time for black people and white people in America to forget their differences and make peace between them'.

But Peace is nmot simply the absence of violence. Peace can only come about in a society where there is real justice, equality and fairness. Peace is not something that is legislated, constructed out of thin air. It comes about naturally when the above conditions are met. The northern state from 1920 up to recent times (and it still has some way to go) is a stern reminder of the danger of assuming a state is truly democratic simply because it has the veneer of democratic institutions and apparent democratic procedures. It is a reminder of how a state can call itself democartic and appear to the casual observer to be so, yet disenfranchise a whole section of the population.

Peace will come to the north if democracy works, discrimination ends, justice etc., are present. The only hiccup left then will be if nationalists vote to reunite with the south. As another mudcatter here noted, given the current unionist mindset that is likely to create some problems. Unionists have held a privileged position for so long that they simply cannot get out of that mindset to believe the 'other side' won't try and do the same thing if Ireland is reunited.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST,JTT
Date: 13 May 07 - 05:28 AM

The 'south' (the Republic of Ireland) will never 'take responsibility for' Northern Ireland. It may be that the two will unite again as one nation at some stage.

Northern Protestants are terrified that a united Ireland would mean that they were under the thumb of people who hate their religion and obey bigoted priests.

It will take a while for this image - which was horribly and sadly true as recently as 50 years ago - to die away.

North and south have been divided by the Border to the extent that most people in the Republic of Ireland now know few people from Northern Ireland, other than those who have migrated south.

What's needed now is what is actually happening: businesses expanding from one side of the Border to the other, and tourism encouraging people from either side of the Border to get to know their unknown neighbours on the other side.

No one in Ireland wants to talk about it because it's all too delicate right now.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 13 May 07 - 06:33 AM

The Northern Ireland protestants (unionists) that I have known have been decent respectable people, who wouldn't settle matters with guns and baseball bats.

I realise you were trying to give a potted history and the truth has to be compressed Nickhere. However it 's not fair to tar a whole community with the same brush.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST,JTT
Date: 13 May 07 - 07:27 AM

weelittledrummer, the Northern Ireland protestants (unionists) I have known have also been decent people, as have the Northern Ireland catholics (republicans).

But guns and baseball bats have been used by both unionists and republicans.

Hopefully they will never be used again.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Stringsinger
Date: 13 May 07 - 11:15 AM

it makes no sense to me to take the argument that religion plays no part in the "Troubles".
Why do Protestant and Catholic as opponents keep coming up in this history?

It's analagous to people from the South claiming that slavery wasn't an important factor in the US Civil War.

Religion is the nine-hundred pound gorilla in the room.

Frank


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Alice
Date: 13 May 07 - 11:48 AM

I have great optimism.

Whenever I sing Silent O Moyle, I think of that seemingly impossible day when peace would come and the suffering be over.
The verse in Silent O Moyle, the story of the children of Lir being turned into swans and the peace that will finally come after long years of children living in pain, tells of the release from that pain in some future day.

"Yet still in her darkness doth Erin lie sleeping,
Still doth the pure light its dawning delay.
When will that day-star, mildly springing,
Warm our Isle with peace and love?
When will heaven its sweet bell ringing,
Call my spirit to the fields above?"

One version of the day of peace in the folk tale would be when the bells of Christianity ring (both Protestant and Catholic bells!)
Another version I read was the day of peace would come and the children released from their swan shape when a woman from the South
lies with a man from the North.

Hopefully the day of peace has come and the children's suffering is over!

Alice Flynn


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: ard mhacha
Date: 13 May 07 - 05:00 PM

Just a reminder that once again the Protestant UVF have refused to dispose of their weapons, and you ask that we trust them.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Nickhere
Date: 13 May 07 - 07:44 PM

Frank - "Religion is the nine-hundred pound gorilla in the room."

Religion was an important factor once upon a time. But that was back in the time of the Reformation and Counter-reformation, in the 1500 and 1600s. The whole of Europe was convulsed in a religious 'civil' war at the time. Two factions of Christianity slugging it out: "Do you believe in God the way I do? No? Then take that! and that!" The devil must have really been enjoying himself. Religion was an important issue in the 1700s in Ireland when being a catholic barred you from most walks of public life, severely restricted your freedom etc., The Act Of Succession passed by King Billah (William of Orange) barred catholics from the throne of England - and is in force even today.

But catholic emancipation came with Daniel O'Connell in 1829 and it was an uphill climb to a better life for Irish catholics after that. It was in the north however that they tooka step backwards, as loylaists tried to drag their country into the late 17th century once more.

But at that stage religion itself had little or nothing to do with it. First of all, let me ask you - what are the differences between a protestant and a catholic? Not sure without checking Wikipedia? Then you probably have more idea than a number of the protaganists in the Troubles.

What 'Protestant' and 'catholic' really came to mean was a key to your cultural identity, origins, political outlook etc., If you were protestant it was probable -though not guaranteed (the protestant members of the IRA are often overlooked in this regard) that you had a certian view of the world order that had little to do with religion as such.

Some of these ideas are descended from the social Darwinism of the 19th century as 'scientists' seized on Darwin's theories to explain why Anglo-whites should rule the world. They divided the world into 'masculine' nations and 'feminine' nations and attributed characteristics to them according to their whim. Masculine nations included Germany, Switzerland, Holland and England - firm jawed, hardworking, rational, honest, sober, society-builiding etc., On the contrary, feminine nations such as Spain, Italy and Ireland (France hovered between) were the opposite: irrational, frivolous, lazy, dishonest, socio-pathic or clannish at best and so on. the same attributes were ascribed to men and women, and protestants and catholics in the same way. Underlying all this was the notion that the 'feminine' (Irish catholics) were incapable of self rule and needed the firm hand of masculine nations (English protestants) to rule them.

I'm sure there are many decent northern unionists, but up to more recent times, if you probed them on the subject, you'd find many had inherited these hand-me-down views of their catholic neighbours. "Don't employ a catholic - they're lazy and dishonest and they'll pack the place with other catholics" would be one kind of typical comment. Or "they don't want to work, they'd prefer just to get the welfare payments" etc., Indeed a number or Protestant firms in southern Ireland (I won't embarrass them by naming them) discriminated against catholics (probably for the same reasons) up to the 1940s with signs such as 'vacany - no catholics need apply' and moreover, were apparently able to get away with it.

So you see, it wasn't simply that northern (or some southern) protestants viewed their catholic neighbours with suspicion and condescion on account of religious difference alone, but on a kind of supposed perception of what kind of character accompanied that religious denomination.

Meanwhile catholics generally assumed that if you were protestant, it meant your ancestors came to the land as inavders, you discriminated against catholics, you supported political union with England. In fact it would make more sense to describe the Troubles as a fight between unionists / loyalists and nationalists / republicans than between protestants and catholics. This latter religious labelling only clouds the issue. It helps the powers that-be by presenting what is really a socio-economic struggle as a clash of two religions requiring no further explanation. That is how it was sold to the general public of both countries and abroad - especially by UK tabloids - so the real root causes and injustices were not tackled and the problem prolonged.

Weelittledrummer - yes, I agree, there are of course many decent unionists. But apparently not enough of them to have stopped the Troubles taking place in the first instance. They could have sent their more militant loyalist neighbours 'to coventry' and made such anti-catholic / nationalist behaviour socially unacceptable. Things happened because not enough decent people did enough to stop them happening that way, and because more people preferred to let them happen the way they did. They may be decent in their day-to-day interactions with friends neighbours etc., but yet they gave their support to a political system that favoured them over their catholic neighbours. I cannot account for every single decent unionist, but the general trend was to vote for governments that discriminated aginst catholics, reject those (like Terence O'Neill's) that tried to bring about some small measures of relief for catholics, and continue to support a system (either actively or passively) from which they benefitted, even if that system was unjust to their catholic neighbours.

ArdMacha - indeed, it's true. The UVF and UFF still have their guns and no-one is putting any pressure on them to disarm. They have no political ambitions in the south, unlike republicans, and so the southern politicians were only concerned with republican guns. Once the southerner's patch was secure and republican guns out of the equation, they forgot about any further decomissioning. The media share some of the blame here. they made a huge noise about certain murders committed by republicans since the peace deal (I won't mention any specifics) but hardly a whisper about several murders by loyalists over the same period.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Jimmy C
Date: 13 May 07 - 10:16 PM

Nickhetre,

You said it better that I could have described it. Thanks


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 14 May 07 - 04:33 AM

You are far from even handed Nickhere.

You don't have to go back to the reformation to find a time when the Roman Catholic Church had strange views on contraception and divorce. Furthermore these ideas were adhered to in Ireland in a fundamentalist way that they weren't adhered to in other Catholic countries - France, Germany, or Catholic communities in America. And they were held onto longer than in very catholic countries like Spain and Italy.

Small wonder some people had qualifications in their mind at getting involved. I'm sure you will say - it was never about that. Let me assure you it couldn't have helped.

You can't blame the protestant community for the UVF any more than you can blame Germans for the Nazis. We have a BNP councillor in our village - no one knows what to do about it. He wasn't elected - he just spotted a loophole in the electoral system - there were so many seats on the council and not enough people stood. the first thing we knew about it was when it made fromt page of the local papers.

Extremists have a way of getting through.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Dave the Gnome
Date: 14 May 07 - 06:17 AM

Thanks for the responses. Certainly food for thought. If I was to pick one up at random it's WLDs last point - You cannot blame a community in general for the actions of extemists, although it is very tempting at times. What you can do though is hold that community accoutable for not doing enough to prevent the extemists taking over - It is the old "They came for the ... but I was not ... so I did nothing".

If the only remaining stumbling block to lasting peace is what the Loyalists will do as and when the Nationalists lead Ulster back under Dublins rule then it is up to moderates ON BOTH SIDES to ensure that that does not happen in such a confrontational way. Stop the extremists from steering the country along that tightrope and, surely, no one will fall off. Or is that too simple?

Cheers

Dave


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 14 May 07 - 07:17 AM

To add to WLD's post.
Only a couple of weeks ago the Dublin government issued an order to prevent a 17 year old girl travelling abroad.
Her crime? To be pregnant with a diseased child who could not survive.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 14 May 07 - 07:54 AM

Link to above sad story.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/6610957.stm


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST,Southern Man
Date: 20 May 07 - 05:15 PM

Things are looking up: the sooner we have a united Ireland without interference from Britain, the better.

Tiochfaidh ár lá


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 20 May 07 - 05:37 PM

Amen to that Southern Man.
I have never met a body in England who did not wish it was someone elses problem.
The day that you can get a majority to vote for it, there will be some celebration here.
May it be soon.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST,ib48
Date: 21 May 07 - 09:07 AM

i am protestant,my wife is catholic,what the hell is the problem? neither of us go to church,and i believe that not a great amount of people do in ireland as well.Will they have total peace,i truly doubt it,too many bigots,but we can all live in hope.


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST,Big Mick
Date: 23 May 07 - 12:46 PM

Fair enough, Dave, here I am. If you would bother to check my posting history you would find that my support of the peace process goes back longer than you have been on Mudcat. That post is but one that I could point out. But that doesn't mean that I am willing to whitewash the actions of the UK government.

If you are happy about the peace process, then you owe a debt of gratitude to Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness and the rest of the Sinn Fein leadership. They have continued to insist on pursuing the political solution in the face of ongoing provocation. And it is instructive to note that the Orange/Loyalists are the ones refusing to disarm, not the Irish Republicans.

Frank, while religion is certainly a part of the troubles from the beginning, it is very important to understand that religion was introduced by the forces of the Crown, and reintroduced by the Capitalists in Ulster as a weapon to separate a people from themselves. When the workers in the Ulster shipyards and the Railways realized they had more in common than different, the Orange card was played. Religion has been used as a tool by those with an interest in keeping the conflict alive. But it is money that drives this, and focusing on the religious aspect just means that we are allowing ourselves to be used by the puppeteers.

But all that is a moot point. The day of the gun is over. For those of us in the States, and for those in the UK, we need to stay back and let this government of the people survive and prosper. The children of Ireland, ALL the children of Ireland, deserve no less.

All the best,

Mick


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: GUEST
Date: 23 May 07 - 12:53 PM

to quote Ian Paisley NEVER NEVER NEVER


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Subject: RE: BS: Peace in Ireland?
From: The Sandman
Date: 23 May 07 - 01:50 PM

any Irish patriot should vote for FINE GAEL AND LABOUR AND THE GREEN PARTY,in the election tomorrow.
FF call themselves a REPUBLICAN PARTY but are more concerned with taking brown envelopes,they are disgraceful.


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