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- #181
f***ing quality.
f***ing quality.
How happy would you be if parliament decided to only fly the Union Jack over other British towns on 'Special occasions', having said that there's no excuse for violence like this.
Like at many London Borough Town Halls you mean?
I'm not avoiding anything, I've alrteady given you my answer.
perhaps you can send me a link to troops defending catholics in 1966, i'll be amazed if you can.You gave me an example of simultaneous attacks in 1969?... 3 years after the time im talking about...maybe you have different meaning to the word simultaneous?
What a coincidence, that was the first thing I found when I googled it too. Trouble is all he talks about is inter-marriage. He doesn't refer to that giving any understanding of 20th century politics in N.Ireland. You can go on all you want about your ancestors being displaced but your knowledge of aboriginal persecution gives no better insight into the particular history of Irish displacement any more than I can claim to understand the Lithuanian diaspora because us Brighton fans were also made homeless once upon a time.
Even that day trip as a kiddie to County Clare counts for diddly squat in regards to this debate about Belfast. The mass emigration from Clare occurred in the 19th century, by which time Ulster and particularly Belfast had already been a Protestant majority for centuries - unlike County Clare which was overwhelmingly Catholic. Belfast was even then an industrial city, Clare was largely rural. What happened and is happening in Belfast was and is different to what happened in the rural southern Ireland and is geographically (sic) a world away from what the abo's have had to put up with from your fellow countrymen. The only common factor is that people were displaced and persecuted.
You didnt give me a single example from 1966/7 , and like I said before , the protestants have woeful PR , both sides were at it, but you carry on swalllowing/peddling the " to be sure we're just out for the craic " style bullshit which suits you and your support anyone but my own country stance.The question was about protestants burning catholic communities.....you said it was being done by both sides...i gave you examples in 1966/1967 and asked you to show me evidence of catholics burning out out protestants at the same time...ill concede there has been a cross of communication here...however the main point of this, is that the protestants started the shit.... were the British troops sent to NI to protect the Protestant community?
Well you've blown me out of the water with that one, a petrol bomb and graffiti, no doubt emergency cabinet meetings were called and spearhead battalions were mobilised for such momentous unrest, whilst not very nice for the people involved, hardly the protestant pogroms that you're trying to ilustrate is it ?I didnt...maybe the large post there is an illusion? Again, youre avoiding.
Heres the non example you are referring to...
page6
'Link me up bushy with tales of protestants being burned out by catholic mobs, and we will compare the dates...im not bullying you...dont run away...let me see some evidence of simultaneous attacks.
Ill start...you counter eh?
The UVF is an illegal loyalist paramilitary organization that formed in response to a perceived revival of the IRA at the time of the 50th anniversary of the Easter Rising. That month the UVF began a campaign of intimidation against a Catholic-owned off-licence on the Shankill Road. Its members painted sectarian graffiti on the neighbouring house and threw a petrol bomb through the window, killing a 77-year-old Protestant widow.On 21 May 1966, the UVF issued a statement:'
I do support my country Bushy, but also have the mental agility to recognise its wrong doings.
oh, btw....this says so much about you
'the " to be sure we're just out for the craic " style bullshit'
The shame of it is that there are a lot of young people with nothing better to do than cause disturbances, a lot of the ringleaders are ex paramilitaries who have been marginalised so are using this issue to flex their muscles. On both sides there are gangsters & thugs utilising the situation to their own ends.
I dont think the general public as a whole on either side would ever show the same level of support to the paramiltaries , tacit or otherwise , to allow a return to the troubles, they've had a taste of living their lives in some semblance of normality, and they are in no hurry to return to the bad old days.I think this is it, youngsters who have grown up since the ceasefire and therefore have no real memory of the last cycle of violence are being exploited by those opposed to that ceasefire in the first place. And it's not just the loyalists, on the Republican side the rise in activities of the paramilitaries is in part explained by the same process.
Pol Pot, Stalin, Castro, Mao...all atheists. So in answer, yes..if we were all atheists then bad things would still happen.