You have largely misconstrued my point, which is not a new phenomenon, possibly my bad.
I was pointing out the understandable reasons why protestants in the 6 counties were extremely fearful of an independent republic in 1912.
I don't think I did, I think I understood it clearly. It would help however if we could agree on some realities.
In 1912 there was no push for an independent Republic. Home Rule was positively underpinned by Irish nationalist support to remain within the kingdom of richest and most powerful nation on earth. The figures speak for themselves, in the 1910 UK general election political support for an independent Republic was an oddity at best.
Queen Victorias visit to the thronging streets of Dublin peasantry waving Union Jack's and media gushing in 1909 provides good insight. The tens upon tens of thousands (40,000?) that would fight Britain's cause in Europe would dwarf anything ever assembled by Collins and crew in GOIRA.
Irish nationalism was firmly in the camp of remaining in the UK.
Protestants had a rational fear of a Catholic dominated parliament. But with an effective 25% block, it would remain to be seen how rational that fear would have become.
Personally, I consider that conversative Unionist and Conservative nationalist views have more in common than not.
The emergence of a typical right v left parliamentary democracy would have been more likely in a HR parliament rather than the cold houses for Catholics and Protestants North and South that did emerge as a consequence of partition.
The fact that they are as resistant to a UI today as 100 years ago is because SF have weaponised the debate - e.g. pantomime displays of pigeon Irish in the NI Assembly.
With respect, this is puerile thinking. Basically anything SF espouse is "weaponising".
The Irish language has broad support across the political spectrum. It is recognised officially in the South. It is recognised as an official language of the EU. The UN Economic, Social and Cultural committee has called for an Irish language Act. Britain has language Acts for Wales and Scotland. Anyone interested in the language will know that there is vibrant support and resources available to support the language.
There is a significant body of Irish language literature dating back hundreds of years that is of major interest and value in the field of linguistics around the world.
The only "weaponising" is of the narrow-minded Gregory Campbell type too ignorant to not recognise that Irish language is very much a part of his culture and heritage also. That he choose not to recognise it is his business. But to actively oppose Gaelic culture, in Ireland, any part of it, is the weaponising of the issue.
Gregory needs to come down of his monumentous wooden pallet space rocket - another debasement of heritage and culture - and accept that as much as he lights up the night sky 'them' uns' aren't going away and Ulster is far, far from "British".