Martin McGuinness hero or villian?

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Very much a man of two lives, how do you view this controversial character?
 
I think the way he turned his life around and embraced the peace process, especially with Paisley, towards the end of his political career was admirable and I am thankful that eventually he helped to bring Northern Ireland to the most stable and united position it has been in my life time.

Do I forgive his actions as part of the IRA? No, I certainly do not. Do I understand them? Yes I do.

I've seen him compared to Nelson Mandela and that is a fair comparison for me - both were involved in the killing of innocents that they felt were justified when battling the suppression or even subjugation of their culture and kin. I don't think everyone fully understands what it was like as a working class Catholic who felt they were Irish in the middle of the 20th century as it's part of the story that rarely gets told.
 
I think the way he turned his life around and embraced the peace process, especially with Paisley, towards the end of his political career was admirable and I am thankful that eventually he helped to bring Northern Ireland to the most stable and united position it has been in my life time.

Do I forgive his actions as part of the IRA? No, I certainly do not. Do I understand them? Yes I do.

I've seen him compared to Nelson Mandela and that is a fair comparison for me - both were involved in the killing of innocents that they felt were justified when battling the suppression or even subjugation of their culture and kin. I don't think everyone fully understands what it was like as a working class Catholic who felt they were Irish in the middle of the 20th century as it's part of the story that rarely gets told.
absolutely this

it's never as black & white, never as clear cut as portrayed by some
 
I think the way he turned his life around and embraced the peace process, especially with Paisley, towards the end of his political career was admirable and I am thankful that eventually he helped to bring Northern Ireland to the most stable and united position it has been in my life time.

Do I forgive his actions as part of the IRA? No, I certainly do not. Do I understand them? Yes I do.

I've seen him compared to Nelson Mandela and that is a fair comparison for me - both were involved in the killing of innocents that they felt were justified when battling the suppression or even subjugation of their culture and kin. I don't think everyone fully understands what it was like as a working class Catholic who felt they were Irish in the middle of the 20th century as it's part of the story that rarely gets told.

I think that sums it up very well

The comparison to Mandela is fair - when it comes to Mandela some saw him as Terrorist and some saw him as a freedom fighter. Is that the same with McGuiness
 
People mellow with age, maturity perhaps let him see the futility of terrorism as a means to achieve political aims. Hero or villain? - depends which flag you fly and if you have been directly or indirectly affected by 'the troubles' I would think, I have not so can't say.
Agree his good terms with late Rev Paisley was a surprise, but a welcome one, showed that compromise and dialogue can work.
 
I accept that he attempted to do good in later years but I'm afraid I can't move past his past.
This is my issue, he never once confessed or faced justice for the crimes he committed and I'm with Lord Tebbit, it's wrong to compare him to Mandella, Mandella lived in a country were blacks had no vote and no say, McGuiness chose bullets over democracy.
 
Democracy wasn't helping Catholics in Northern Ireland. Even the formation of NI was completely wrong in their eyes.
I get that, still different situation to SA, and there are still Catholic families who don't know where the bodies of there loved ones are, "The disappeared" it's not just the Unionists who suffered on his watch.
 
Both. Today I choose to consider NI as it is today and not how it was. And for both better and for worse McGuinness has been instrumental in NI being the community that it is today. An angry, violent and at times murderous NI existed before MMcG came on the scene. It is much less so today.
 
An angry, violent and at times murderous NI existed before MMcG came on the scene.

MMcG helped to create that anger and violence. He was at the heart of it. He may have dowsed the flames by the end but he created wildfires all over N.Ireland and the British mainland.

90-10 split for me but at least he got there in the end.
 
Or from another point of view, he was sick of seeing a massive proportion of Northern Irish people being treated like dirt by the government...
So it was ok to murder children (Warrington, Wildenrath) rather than using democracy?
 
So it was ok to murder children (Warrington, Wildenrath) rather than using democracy?

No, I don't believe so but obviously some people thought that a short term loss of life would be worth the many millions of lives that would be improved if they managed to gain an equal footing in society.
 
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