Duke of Marmalade
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Because they weren't asked if they need it or have an interest in it, they were asked if they had the ability?
B/S you have an amazing knack of stirring it considering that most of your utterances are B/S.
I note now that you do not regard it as a "right" that Irish speakers can communicate in Irish with the organs of the State. Rather you believe they have the "right" to lobby for that facility. That rather neatly deals with the Polish question but do you not get a slight stench of B/S from that odd nuance.
B/S I believe that the support for the Irish language has broad consensus across the Republic - no need for forensic analysis of the census to assert that.
I think I started this Irish thing in the context of NI which is an entirely different kettle of fish as explained in my previous post.
B/S you have an amazing knack of stirring it considering that most of your utterances are B/S.
I note now that you do not regard it as a "right" that Irish speakers can communicate in Irish with the organs of the State. Rather you believe they have the "right" to lobby for that facility. That rather neatly deals with the Polish question but do you not get a slight stench of B/S from that odd nuance.
Look, I understand the obsession down here with promoting the Irish language. It has a slight linkage to anti British sentiment but it is not really maliciously targeted at any section of the Southern populace.
In the NI however the Irish thing has nothing to do with protecting the "rights" of 1,500 folk who use it as their first language but is all about rubbing the noses of one community in the manure, showing them who won the war. Just as the Flags thing has nothing to do with paying homage to Her Majesty but all to do with rubbing the noses of the other community in the manure, showing them that they didn't win the war.
The Polish language, the last time I checked, was not in danger of extinction anytime soon.
Certainly, if there was an attempt, to wipe Poland, its people and culture off the face of the earth, save for the last remaining Poles living in Ireland, then Im sure that would change. I would certainly support such a campaign.
That is a fair point. But I suspect that the Alliance idea of an ILA is quite different from the Shinner idea. My guess is the former would support funding education programs and things like that whereas I suspect the Shinners are looking for a far greater "rub their noses in it" version. It's about time, if NI wants to think of itself as a transparent democracy, that the detailed differences of opinion by the parties on this issue, which seems to be the stumbling block, were made known to the people at large.It is not a SF project, it is supported by the SDLP and Irish Government and the Alliance Party and the Green Party. It has broad-based support.
if NI wants to think of itself as a transparent democracy, t
It's very existence is predicated on one thing, the refusal of Unionists to accept to live in equal partnership with their neighbours.
And that is exactly the problem - the assumption that it is all the other sides fault.
You are talking about the rights of the language/culture itself rather than of its speakers.
Thus if Polish as a language found that Ireland was its last bastion you yourself would campaign for its survival.
I was more referring to the rights of people who speak Irish being able to engage with the organs of the state in their first language. From that perspective Polish speaking people have much greater claim than Irish speaking people in NI.
As I understand your perspective, even if, indeed especially if, nobody at all spoke Irish in NI you would want an ILA.
So if only one person spoke Irish in NI (in practical terms that is the case) you would support an ILA. But if she got run over by a bus the need for an ILA disappears?No, one without other is superficial.
So if only one person spoke Irish in NI (in practical terms that is the case) you would support an ILA. But if she got run over by a bus the need for an ILA disappears?
What about socialists? Do you think they are in danger of extinction at this stage?
B/S you have an amazing knack of stirring it considering that most of your utterances are B/S.
I note now that you do not regard it as a "right" that Irish speakers can communicate in Irish with the organs of the State. Rather you believe they have the "right" to lobby for that facility. That rather neatly deals with the Polish question but do you not get a slight stench of B/S from that odd nuance.
Look, I understand the obsession down here with promoting the Irish language. It has a slight linkage to anti British sentiment but it is not really maliciously targeted at any section of the Southern populace.
In the NI however the Irish thing has nothing to do with protecting the "rights" of 1,500 folk who use it as their first language but is all about rubbing the noses of one community in the manure, showing them who won the war. Just as the Flags thing has nothing to do with paying homage to Her Majesty but all to do with rubbing the noses of the other community in the manure, showing them that they didn't win the war.
Yeah, but look at all the value-added jobs it created!
Absolutely. The idea that doing your Leaving Cert Maths or whatever using Irish, Polish, Chinese or whatever gains you bonus points seems so unfair to me.TheBigShort said:So here is a question for you.
If Polish, or Chinese people began a campaign for language rights, equal to Irish language rights, would you object?
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