Sad point but true 😢. I was trying to be positive but I'm deflated now. Let's hope the new generations can make that step that others could not.How many generations has there been since the battle of the Boyne, and even before that?
Sad point but true 😢. I was trying to be positive but I'm deflated now. Let's hope the new generations can make that step that others could not.How many generations has there been since the battle of the Boyne, and even before that?
Would you consider a United Kingdom of Britain? Scotland, Wales and England becoming one country. Britannia? Would that solve our differences too?
Hardly.
That is basically how it's run anyway London gets everything the rest of the country gets scraps.
So bitter. 😂🤣😂
I’d avoid the Rugby too lad.🤯😄
NI has a large Budget Deficit, i suspect Ireland would have to pay that back if it where to take "Back " NI??Brexit certainly makes it much more palatable now that even more of the population of NI hates the British government but no one ever seems to ask I’d Dublin even really wants Northern Ireland.
but you could end up with Sinn Fein in power both sides of the border, what happens then?I don't see a route to a united Ireland at the moment.
Sinn Fein doing well might bring it onto the agenda, but the hurdles in Belfast and London will not be jumped easily.
Perhaps in decades to come, the numbers might be such that there is a clearer majority of Irish nationalists in the North and it might be that sufficient numbers who lived through the troubles have died. But given the text in the Belfast agreement, the way the Stormont government is formed (with the 2 largest parties) and the electoral arithmetic in NI, it has no chance of getting seriously onto the agenda.
but you could end up with Sinn Fein in power both sides of the border, what happens then?
As a lapsed Catholic, I cannot imagine religious considerations even entering the discussion as to whether a united Ireland is a good idea or not.
Whether it's a good idea or not, and I sure as hell wouldn't know, I'm sure the intent won't be to create a new theocracy.
I would hope that economic and cultural considerations would decide the issue, with the overall standard of living and quality of life for all concerned being the primary issue.
NI has a large Budget Deficit, i suspect Ireland would have to pay that back if it where to take "Back " NI??
Ye Gods... the silence is deafening..... dib ,dib, dob dob.... come out come out where ever you are!!As big as Scotland's?
I imagine that if the UK agreed to allow NI to become part of Eire there could be a lot of trouble.
As big as Scotland's?
I imagine that if the UK agreed to allow NI to become part of Eire there could be a lot of trouble.
Ballymena hi!Being a Ballymena man now living in not so sunny Essex for the last 17 years; I can't really say I know the thoughts of many people back in NI with regards a United Ireland. However, I would guess that there will be many p*ssed off people with very entrenched views that may take arms up again if the Island was to be united. It's a very fine balance, that I think could be tipped either way very easily.
No chance!When you look at how many times Stormont has been suspended since the Good Friday Agreement was signed, and why, I'm inclined to think that a United Ireland is a million miles away.
Would NI going it alone, as an independent state, be that half way house that goes some way to satisfying both sides? The republicans would no longer be under Brit rule, and the Unionists, although no longer in the Union, wouldn't be under rule from Dublin. Would being part of the Commonwealth be enough for the Unionists?