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GinSoakedGirl wrote:Both sides were unpardonable bastards. Nationalism, [COMMA] clingy twitching to the past and religious bigotry at its most exasperasting.

coqui_chris wrote:GinSoakedGirl wrote:Both sides were unpardonable bastards. Nationalism, [COMMA] clingy twitching to the past and religious bigotry at its most exasperasting.
Yes. That is how I would classify the two sides of the Conflict as well.


Shane's Dentist wrote:Thatcher's period in office came before I was born, but she's not at all liked in Scotland. In fact, there will be parties in the street when she dies. Ergo booze.
Not wanting to reignite the debate, but it's important to recognise the reasons for the hunger strike. I'm basing my opinions on hindsight, of course, but I don't think that the British government dealt with the situation properly at all.



coqui_chris wrote:Shane's Dentist wrote:Thatcher's period in office came before I was born, but she's not at all liked in Scotland. In fact, there will be parties in the street when she dies. Ergo booze.
Not wanting to reignite the debate, but it's important to recognise the reasons for the hunger strike. I'm basing my opinions on hindsight, of course, but I don't think that the British government dealt with the situation properly at all.
As a person of the Irish Republican bent, I can say that a lot of the material I read on this side does indeed look at the Hunger Strike as a tragedy and a manipulation ... They feel that the Committee did indeed act disingenuously with the public and supporters and most importantly the Strikers to keep a deal secret.
However, they are not decrying the root struggle or the propensity to take up arms in the face of oppression and pursuit of freedom. Rather, they are vilifying a leadership that manipulated a situation not for the pursuit of Irish Freedom but as a means to become Partners With the British and Executors of English Rule Against the Irish.
And the more I read about the Troubles, the more I think this will be my tragedy to tell the history of English cunning and bastardness being the death of a noble Irish rebellion much in the way my grandfather recounted the Tan War and Dev's Statesman's Visit to America in 1919-1920 when he was hitting the Whiskey.
This will go down as another episode of frustration and pain and anguish and martyrdom and Sisyphean attempts at rolling back the rocks of tyranny.
And now not even 15 years after the Good Friday Agreement, Partition seems more solid than ever, the RUC was given a makeover and is more armed and dangerous and sectarian and powerful than ever, some of the most staunch and dynamic Irish Republicans ever have been co-opted and are now Castle Catholics are Shining the Queen's Boots for the English Shilling, more Peace Walls are corralling the working class Catholics into their Townships excuse me "Estates" than before the War, and those who hunger for justice, equal rights and Irish sovereignty are as likely as ever to be Felon-Setted and Interned without charge or trial see Martin Corey, Gerry McGeough and Marian Price McGlinchey.
And though I won't advocate a return to the Armalite or the Bomb, and I surely won't advise a seat in Stormont or Westminster and a "How's yer father?" for the Prince of Wales, I will say the following two tennets hold as true as they ever did:
"They will not criminalise us, rob us of our true identity, steal our individualism, depoliticise us, churn us out as systemised, institutionalised, decent law-abiding robots. Never will they label our liberation struggle as criminal."
"Generations will continue to meet the same fate unless the perennial oppressor-Britain-is removed, for she will unashamedly and mercilessly continue to maintain her occupation and economic exploitation of Ireland to judgment day, if she is not halted and ejected."

GinSoakedGirl wrote:To characterise one side as evil despots and the other as pure heroes is at best romantic and idealised and at worst dangerously unfair. The British have at times behaved appallingly, but let's not forget that the IRA murdered many people through appalling terrorist activities of their own in both Ireland and mainland Britain. I doubt very much that they won any hearts and minds behaving like murderous numbskulls. It is NOT OK that they did that, regardless of what the British did.



GinSoakedGirl wrote:Agreed - both sides behaved like ultraviolent bellends. As I said, I've got friends and family on both sides and all I can see is how much pain, misery and hurt it has caused everyone. What a bloody mess.

coqui_chris wrote:GinSoakedGirl wrote:Agreed - both sides behaved like ultraviolent bellends. As I said, I've got friends and family on both sides and all I can see is how much pain, misery and hurt it has caused everyone. What a bloody mess.
Agreed.
Next round's on me





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