Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 02 Mar 19 - 03:23 AM Medieval history - Ireland was reluctantly colonised for eight centuries - religion divided the world and burned its opponents alive - Henry VIII bulti the biggest bonfires so he could get his leg over - which sums pup the clonisres rather than their victims Try reading up The deliberately mishandled famine which wiped out a million and drove out another million over five years Your remarks were racist and inexcusable Please don't repeat them - there's already too much of that Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Bonnie Shaljean Date: 01 Mar 19 - 09:04 AM > Meanwhile, The US repeats what it hopes to get from a trade deal and Britain socks it back: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-47418505 The US wants "comprehensive market access" for its farmers' products that would see more US-made food on British supermarket shelves. European Union rules currently limit US exports of certain food products, including chlorine-washed chicken and hormone-boosted beef. If free of EU trade rules, the US wants the UK to remove such so-called "sanitary and physiosanitary" standards on its farm exports. Yeah, that always ends well. Trump "also demands that the pound not be 'manipulated' to improve trade income or make UK products cheaper in the US." The pounds that are really going to get manipulated are those that measure body-weight. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 01 Mar 19 - 08:46 AM And what do the English make of all this? Well, I won't generalise, but I do recall at the height of the troubles people saying angrily we should just nuke the lot of them. But I think that might be going a tad too far :)_ |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 01 Mar 19 - 08:42 AM Wolfe Tone? Robert Emmet? Descended from incoming 'planters'. And the 'celtic revival' was largely brought about by wait for it writers of a protestant or Anglo Irish background. So now who's over-simplifying? Not to mention being a tad patronising eh Jim lad? |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 01 Mar 19 - 08:32 AM And I have read a fair bit of Irish history, which is how I know that in Medieval times there was a collection of warring chieftains and not a united country. There was a warrior aristocracy. Plus of course the bits ruled by Vikings who founded quite a lot of towns. There may have been some sort of 'high king' but this seems dubious and the position was contested at the time. I think I have this right. In so far as the country was Catholic (and at one time it was at odds with Rome about the form of Christianity) then it cannot complain about the Pope giving it to Henry VIII of England and I don't suppose many did so at the time. Not sure whether Jim would count descendants of the Anglo-Normans as Irish, they used to be called the 'Old English'. etc etc etc |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: DMcG Date: 01 Mar 19 - 08:12 AM Meanwhile, The US repeats what it hopes to get from a trade deal As I said earlier, this in line with what Raab and co published as characterizing the ideal trade agreement. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 01 Mar 19 - 07:28 AM And I stand by my point: if there is a return to what JIM has called 'sectarian violence' on a large scale (because I am not convinced it ever completely went away) then this will not be 'because' of Brexit or 'because' of some failure of the Good Friday agreement but 'because' some people, maybe 'bigots', as JIM described loyalists but I think Catholics can be just as bigoted, CHOOSE violence. And I for one don't think they should. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 01 Mar 19 - 07:21 AM Just a bit of evidence https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omagh_bombing https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Real_Irish_Republican_Army_actions https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milltown_Cemetery_attack https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loyalist_Volunteer_Force |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 01 Mar 19 - 07:14 AM I'm another fairy. Pointing out that Irish tendency to murder eachother isn't racist. Poet Seamus Heaney did it. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Bonnie Shaljean Date: 01 Mar 19 - 06:42 AM The government has already settled, to the tune of £33 million. They can't defend the case, and they know it. More money hemorrhaging out, over asshattery that never should have happened. https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47414699 |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: DMcG Date: 01 Mar 19 - 04:30 AM Euro tunnel start legal challenge to ferry deals It seems the Government has set aside 800K for this. When they talked about money being set aside to address no-deal issues, this was not what I had in mind. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 28 Feb 19 - 11:21 AM Nor have I insulted anybody personally - certainly not you and I am the christmas fairy that fell off the tree! |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 28 Feb 19 - 07:10 AM "I am merely responding in kind to your posts." I have never imn my life racially attacked anybody - there id no excuse for your behaviour here Karen Nor have I insulted anybody personally - certainly not you Finis Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 28 Feb 19 - 06:47 AM Jim I am merely responding in kind to your posts. If you cannot take it do not dish it out. You yourself referred to sectarian violence. Talk about having your cake and eating it. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 28 Feb 19 - 06:09 AM "Pretty sensible line to draw given the Irish tendency to murder eachother" THat's an indredibly racist statement Karen - The wars in Ireland can all be traced back to rid themselves of an Imperial power - on the whole, the people in general get on with one another, no matter what their different religions Any sectarian violence that occured arose from the creation of an unequal secrtarian State by Britain - the first shots were fired Loyalists and the major violence broke out when Civil Rights protest marches for equality were diverted thought stone throwing mobs made up of the same bigots Regarding your very revealing foot in mouth about aspiring to be "British" - the majority 'British-linked' people of Northern Ireland have their roots in Scotland, a country that was treated similarly by the empire I think we're finished here - I can get most of this sort of thing from a Tommy Robinson site - please take your anti-Irish hatred eslewhere - we've already got one of them Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 28 Feb 19 - 05:31 AM And, while I am enjoying myself thinking and arguing outside the box, this dual citizenship stuff ought to go to. Pick one or the other, none of this two passports rubbish, especially for people expressing hatred of the 'British'. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 28 Feb 19 - 05:29 AM No it most certainly will not be - it will be the fault of whoever drew a line across Ireland designation a large slice of it to be British - how unnatural is that Pretty sensible line to draw given the Irish tendency to murder eachother on religious grounds and the wishes of the majority of those in Northern Ireland. And I think they designated it 'Northern Ireland'. There was never a political entity called 'Ireland' before the Normans/Welsh went in. It was a collection of squabbling petty chiefdoms, rather like much of Europe at that time. I can only hope that they crack down hard on any sectarian violence and on those who justify it through emotive nonsense like 'unnatural'. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 28 Feb 19 - 05:25 AM "Lots of Irish think of themselves as British." You know that - o course ? Not in my part of Ireland they don't - can't think of one Those who do, do so because their Britishness was either forced upon them 100 years ago as a "temporary measure" to gain a peace that was never fulfilled, or to dominate in a deliberately created sectarian Protestant State The most artificial thing you could possibly do is draw a line across a country and call part of it it somewhere else - it robs people of their national, cultural and historical identity and is guaranteed to creat a permanent industry of body-bag manufacture I'm afraid Frank Harte's words are being borne out by your own display of both British arrogance and a lack of knowledge of the Irish people, who they actually are and who you appear to wish them to be. Jim |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 28 Feb 19 - 05:23 AM We had to start bombing teagues/prods/pubs in Brum because the Uk voted to come out of the EU? I don't buy it. I still don't buy it, and thank you for the recap on Good Friday and DUP policies but I knew about that and I still don't buy it. "Yes I bombed them, I killed/kneed-capped/mutilated/punishment shot various young people/women/children but HISTORY MADE ME DO IT. It's your fault for not keeping to the Good Friday agreement and for voting for Brexit' Geddit? I don't buy it. It's a choice, not history. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 28 Feb 19 - 05:09 AM Ah, over-simplification criticised and then a good example of it given, an example from Frank Harte (whoever he is). This word 'British'. Lots of Irish think of themselves as British. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 27 Feb 19 - 01:53 PM Perhaps, as Israel is now being accused by American Rabbis of colluding with a group described as being equivalent to the KKK, there's a name that should be added to your list Bobad You can throw these in FOR GOOD MEASURE Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: bobad Date: 27 Feb 19 - 01:31 PM is it possible to be a communist and a terrorist? See; the Soviet Union, China, North Korea, Cambodia, the Red Brigades, the Front Line and the Red Army Faction. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 27 Feb 19 - 01:27 PM I don't believe that is cricket! |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 27 Feb 19 - 01:15 PM "Does it have pastels as well" Game, set and match, I think Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 27 Feb 19 - 01:13 PM Will be interesting to see if Cohen's massive dump on Trump - "Conman, racist, liar - forged cheques, collusion with Russia, conspiracy over Clinton e-mails.... will have any effect on BRITISH/AMERICAN RELATIONS Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 27 Feb 19 - 01:08 PM Are you speaking double dutch above. the apple does not fall far from the tree does it? Do like the new paint box! Does it have pastels as well? |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 27 Feb 19 - 12:52 PM Good if you put upan unopenavble link and miss out the important bits Article well worth reading Whatever you might think of armed intervention in Syria, by states or citizens, Hemming's warning illustrates the arbitrary nature of our terrorism laws, the ring they throw around certain acts of violence while ignoring others, the risk that they will be used against brown and bearded people who present no threat. The non-intervention agreement of 1936 was not the last elaborate system of official humbug the British government devised." |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 27 Feb 19 - 11:50 AM is it possible to be a communist and a terrorist Franco thought so. Thousands of british Communists went over and were regarded by Franco the same as we regard ISIS. That is why the Brirish security forces distrusted and kept tabs on them. Even the lefty rag the gruniard agrees: Today they would be arrested under section five of the Terrorism Act 2006. If convicted of fighting abroad with a "political, ideological, religious or racial motive" – a charge they would find hard to contest – they would face a maximum sentence of life in prison. That they were fighting to defend an elected government against a fascist rebellion would have no bearing on the case. They would go down as terrorists.(and quite rightly so). https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/feb/10/orwell-hero-terrorism-syria-british-fighters-damned |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: peteglasgow Date: 27 Feb 19 - 09:37 AM i've seen many ridiculous and abusive points on here - and i know we should ignore them but..... is it possible to be a communist and a terrorist? perhaps if you are resisting occupation by a ruling military force....otherwise a communist is usually as pro-establishment as you can get. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 27 Feb 19 - 04:59 AM "We had to start bombing teagues/prods/pubs in Brum because the Uk voted to come out of the EU? I don't buy it." Please don't siplify a complicated and very dangerous situation Permanenet peace in Ireland depends on the Good Friday agreement being seen through to a satisfactory conclusion The DUP, in supporting Brexit, is drawing away from that solution, its main reason being maintaining British rule Trivialising it really doesn't help understand it This morning's announcement from Westminster that it is finally admitted that Norther Ireland will be far more severely hit by Brexit that will Britain will almost certainly add fuel to an already sensitive situation Crashing out and leaving a hard border will just about clinch it Singer Frank Harte once gave a talk on Irish political songs to a group of rather staid English Folkies at Loughborough around the time of 'The Troubles' He began his talk: "The British have never understood the Irish" Pregnant pause "But the Irish have always understood the British" Never seen so many squirming bottoms Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 27 Feb 19 - 04:41 AM We had to start bombing teagues/prods/pubs in Brum because the Uk voted to come out of the EU? I don't buy it. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: KarenH Date: 27 Feb 19 - 04:25 AM https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-birmingham-47377548 |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 27 Feb 19 - 03:47 AM More thread drift from the usual cabal.Obviously nothing sensible to contribute as usual. Here is a little gem from your favourite source the illustrious guido: Commie Corbyn refuses to support hezbollah ban https://order-order.com/2019/02/26/labour-refuses-support-hezbollah-ban/ Aesop: “A man is known by the company he keeps” I presume if you support corbyn you support the terrorist organisation hezbollah. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 27 Feb 19 - 03:09 AM Stop prodding the ants Steve - everything his says is an inane contradiction Jim |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Steve Shaw Date: 26 Feb 19 - 05:24 PM yo = to. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Steve Shaw Date: 26 Feb 19 - 05:23 PM Whilst I have no wish yo engage with you, I would suggest that you re-read your last two posts, which are at odds with each other. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 26 Feb 19 - 04:57 PM “When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.” “The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.” “The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master—that's all. In my own case to describe corbyn as clever would be deceitful. To describe corbyn as duplicitous would be in the alternative sense of someone who always lies to get their way. nowt insincere in any of my posts I can assure you. and Orwell is on another thread. Best kept there otherwise a few get confused |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: mayomick Date: 26 Feb 19 - 03:18 PM "I could think of many descriptors to define corbyn. Clever is not one that could easily spring to mind. In fact it would be duplicitous of me to associate such a word with the leader of the opposition." .............Iains "The great enemy of clear language is insincerity." ............. George Orwell |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 26 Feb 19 - 02:25 PM "Or boxing very clever of course" I could think of many descriptors to define corbyn. Clever is not one that could easily spring to mind. In fact it would be duplicitous of me to associate such a word with the leader of the opposition. The great guido has the measure of the man, and some of the accompanying comments pull no punches. Corbyn is totally unfitted to be a future PM. https://order-order.com/2019/02/26/labour-refuses-support-hezbollah-ban/ |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 26 Feb 19 - 02:06 PM Or boxing very clever of course Perfect timing to demand a second vote Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 26 Feb 19 - 02:02 PM Corbyn has either seen sense or had a change of heart Whatever is correct, he still has my vote (if I had one) Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 26 Feb 19 - 02:02 PM Corbyn has either seen sense or had a change of heart Whatever is correct, he still has my vote (if I had one) Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Bonnie Shaljean Date: 26 Feb 19 - 01:12 PM And if May runs true to form via her usual bait-&-switch, and breaks her word at the last minute? She could just be playing My Deal Or No Deal poker, using the nation's ass as a bargaining chip, and wasting still more time. I trust her promises exactly as far as I can throw a 44-ton lorry. I'm not thinking Remain-vs-Leave. Just Deal-vs-Crashout. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Dave the Gnome Date: 26 Feb 19 - 11:46 AM Great btexit news at last! The pound is climbing against the Euro :-) Oh. Hang on. Seems to be because it looks like brexit will be delayed. Ah well. I suppose we will just have to wait for the unicorns after all... |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: DMcG Date: 26 Feb 19 - 08:08 AM Apparently Farage has said if there is another referendum with a choice between May's deal and remain, leavers should boycott it. Suits me. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Dave the Gnome Date: 26 Feb 19 - 07:38 AM The fault is squarely on the shoulders of Cameron who would not stand up to the bully boys of the right wing. He was shit scared of losing power so caved in to the right within his own party and in the likes of UKIP. Any politician worth his salt would have demolished the xenophobic little Englander arguments and sent them packing but he played his little populist game and lost big time. All subsequent moves by May and this useless bunch of tossers has been trying to get out of flushing the country, along with their careers, down the pan while trying to play down the fact that they dropped us in this shit in the first place. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Raggytash Date: 26 Feb 19 - 05:41 AM "And if a hard Brexit will result in sectarian violence, then in so far as the Irish government plays a part in demanding a backstop leading to a bard Brexit, it will be the fault of the Irish government and its political choices." Karen you seem to overlook the fact that this whole debacle was brought about by the UK decision to leave the EU. The UK Government knew, or should have known, the ramifications of such a decision so if any blame is to be laid it should firmly be at the door of the UK Government. |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Iains Date: 26 Feb 19 - 04:50 AM In another referendum this country will vote remain The laddie has a hotline to God I suppose, or is it merely whimsy, or perhaps his delusions let him think his bizarre views are sufficient to bully the electorate? Fact: Poll 23.2.19 Leave 41% Remain 45% Undecided 13% Level of uncertainty? well don't ask a bookie. They were hopelessly wrong last time around. I would imagine if we go down the road of another referendum and betray democracy then whoever has the best soundbite prior to polling will win the day. After all it is a well known fact on this forum that the people are sheep. It is also a well known fact that if you want the sheep to go in a certain direction and your dog is having an off day, then rattling a bucket is all you need to do. Question: does the leave or remain bucket contain the sheep nuts? |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: Jim Carroll Date: 26 Feb 19 - 04:49 AM "t will be the fault of the Irish government and its political choices". No it most certainly will not be - it will be the fault of whoever drew a line across Ireland designation a large slice of it to be British - how unnatural is that As it stands, Brexit has already begun to eat into the economy of Ireland, both north and South - installing a hard border would accelerate that substantially Britain has deliberately used the DUP to push Brexit through - how on earth do you expect the Irish people to react to that ? There really is a chance of a reawakening of the old conflicts and once again that can be laid squarely at the doors of Westminster The British don't seem to have the slightest concept of the continuing effects of colonisation on the victims of that long dead means of dominating entire nations JIm Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: Brexit #3: A futile gesture? From: The Sandman Date: 26 Feb 19 - 04:10 AM The above is more likely to happen if a labour or liberal government were elected rather than the conservative paRty relying on the support of the DUP |