We are indeed in danger of going off tangent here. You seem like a reasonable person but that is such a distortion of what was happening I feel I have to correct it.
After weeks of hooligans from West Belfast nightly engaging in an orgy of burning, looting and rioting in the city centre it got out of hand and elements of the RUC lost control and were briefly backed up by the Protestant mobs. Believe me if the same thing was happening from the far more disadvantaged areas of West Dublin the reaction of our own security forces would have been far more firm and decisive, more Egypt style than Belfast style.
As it happened the British Army moved in quickly to impose some sort of order and Catholics were mighty glad for their intervention. By the time Charlie and his mates were arming the Provos it had nothing to do with protecting Catholics (total myth that Provos protected Catholic communities anyway). It was a mixture of wanting to vent their own bigotry and hatred against the unionists and also promoting their ultimate aim of a united Ireland, which they saw as possibly flowing from undermining completely the Northern State.
Please, please no T&R. I just couldn't stomach the cringe making spectacle described by Betsy.
The answer is no. Is this is an attempt to close down this discussion? Which particular assertion of mine do you suspect of being a troll? I think the Boss may have to put Norn Iron on the banned list.No offence but are you trolling? You can't be serious with a post like that. And you accused Purple of distorting events!
that has to be the most simplistic and ridiculous version of the troubles I ever heard in my life!We are indeed in danger of going off tangent here. You seem like a reasonable person but that is such a distortion of what was happening I feel I have to correct it.
After weeks of hooligans from West Belfast nightly engaging in an orgy of burning, looting and rioting in the city centre it got out of hand and elements of the RUC lost control and were briefly backed up by the Protestant mobs. Believe me if the same thing was happening from the far more disadvantaged areas of West Dublin the reaction of our own security forces would have been far more firm and decisive, more Egypt style than Belfast style.
As it happened the British Army moved in quickly to impose some sort of order and Catholics were mighty glad for their intervention. By the time Charlie and his mates were arming the Provos it had nothing to do with protecting Catholics (total myth that Provos protected Catholic communities anyway). It was a mixture of wanting to vent their own bigotry and hatred against the unionists and also promoting their ultimate aim of a united Ireland, which they saw as possibly flowing from undermining completely the Northern State.
Please, please no T&R. I just couldn't stomach the cringe making spectacle described by Betsy.
Having lived in both Northern Ireland and in South Africa for many years during the apartheid era, I can say that the treatment of the catholics in Northern Ireland, while not on a par to that meted out to the non-whites in South Africa, was characterized by a hate-filled campaign of segregation and discrimination where they were subjected to some of the worst social injustices in the Western world.NI Catholics were suffering like the black people in South Africa (note Purple's remarks) There was a popular uprising ruthlessly suppressed by Protestant reactionaries supported both by the RUC and the British Army. They reacted by arming themselves in defence and resistance and the rest is history.
Please, when I see the pictures of SA and its shanty towns and its "Whites Only" signs in recent days, I cannot but reflect that conditions of NI Catholics should not even be mentioned in the same sentence. People in the South may like that comparison but it is an utter travesty. Let's have a T&R session to compare the two regimes, maybe we should delegate that module to the South Africans.Having lived in both Northern Ireland and in South Africa for many years during the apartheid era, I can say that the treatment of the catholics in Northern Ireland, while not on a par to that meted out to the non-whites in South Africa, was characterized by a hate-filled campaign of segregation and discrimination where they were subjected to some of the worst social injustices in the Western world.
In a nutshell, indigenous catholics were treated as second class citizens in their own country.
++1Though I know this is Troll feeding, Hume could well be the best politician ever to grace this island. If there was anyone of his equal on the other side a lot of bloodshed might have been avoided. Definitely an Irish Mandela - he was slagged for his 'single transferable speech' - I think that is because there is no point repackaging commonsense. He may or may not have been the person who called the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement -'Sunningdale for Slow Learners', but he would have been well within his rights to do so.
The island owes a great debt of gratitude to Hume, Mallon & Co.
++1
..... before Grizzly and his buddies caught up with the rest of the class?
While you're entitled to your opinion, quite frankly you're not qualified to reflect on either as you obviously have no experience of growing up in the North at the height of the 'troubles' as a Catholic living in a 'Protestant town' nor have you experience of the segregation in South Africa during the apartheid era.Please, when I see the pictures of SA and its shanty towns and its "Whites Only" signs in recent days, I cannot but reflect that conditions of NI Catholics should not even be mentioned in the same sentence. People in the South may like that comparison but it is an utter travesty. To compare the voluntary segregation in NI with the imposed Apartheid regime frankly nauseates me.
While Grizzly is quite rightly being taken to task for his comments, people like Ian Paisley, while professing to be a man of God, with his vile, hate-filled rhetoric incited more riots and murders in my hometown than anyone else, walk away chuckling.If unionism had responded reasonably at the outset the bloodshed could have been spared, but no doubt reasonable men were shouted down by Big Ian. He or his direct associates my not have pulled a trigger but his incitement to hatred and strangulation of any accommodation towards a significant minority of the population of the North more or less ensured that two communities would be pitted against each other. Of course when he's good and ready he's one half of the chuckle brothers with an IRA leader, cheers Ian, but 35 years too late.
I am not trolling. Hume deserved his Nobel. He was no Mandela because NI was no SA by a long shot.Also, about 3 posts ago you said Hume was no Mandela, now you're ++1??, conclusive proof of trolling???
You are missing my point about Sunningdale. Yes, in the end it was Paisley brought it down. But my point is that Sunningdale failed miserably to bring peace. That was because the IRA were electoral pariahs at that time. A fair dispensation in NI was absolutely the last thing they wanted. /QUOTE]
I'm not convinced of that argument, or at least there wasnt the opportunity to put the thesis to the test. Isnt it a big supposition to say that if the Ulster Workers strike hadnt destroyed Sunningdale then Republicans would?? I dont doubt that in the end they found it hard to support the PSNI and enjoyed their social control/domination of their heartlands, but to say they were so bloodthirsty and/or craving power that they would have wrecked that agreement is, I think, going a bit far - surely they would have alientated themselves (a la RIRA) if they were going against the obvious best interests of nationalists?
Definitely in danger of being closed down as we have long surpassed the boredom threshold.I'm not convinced of that argument, or at least there wasnt the opportunity to put the thesis to the test. Isnt it a big supposition to say that if the Ulster Workers strike hadnt destroyed Sunningdale then Republicans would??
While I agree with your general point about, I suppose, Republicans pursuing 'the long war', wasnt it the Ulster Workers Strike that 'did for' the Sunningdale Agreement?
Also, about 3 posts ago you said Hume was no Mandela, now you're ++1??, conclusive proof of trolling???
As regards MOPE (Most Oppressed People Ever) - the view that Nationalists overegg it - calls for basics like One Man One Vote, equal rights to housing, end to gerrymandering, some form of parity of esteem, were met with State violence (RUC on Derry march), then sectarian violence (most of burning was of Catholic areas of Belfast), army brought in under unionist government control, internment, Bloody Sunday (all in the first 4 years or so).
So I'd say for a few years there it felt every bit as bad as SA (& once the narrative is set its very hard to change it). As regards republican blame, there was never going to be a victory, so once the 'pogram' style sectarianism abated, and any defensive role receeded, there should have been a winding up of operations (along with army withdrawal) - then re-enter the impartial policeforce to restore law & order.... Of course by that stage any number of relatives had been killed, communities further marginalised & radicalised, and the movement was on the road to a 32 county socialist republic (never going to happen). Cue decades of bombing for no rime or reason.
Such a tragic pointless conflict, the end solution that we now have (&I do believe it is more or less the final position) was always going to be the solution because institutionalised inequity on that type of scale will always be overcome. If unionism had responded reasonably at the outset the bloodshed could have been spared, but no doubt reasonable men were shouted down by Big Ian. He or his direct associates my not have pulled a trigger but his incitement to hatred and strangulation of any accomodation towards a significant minority of the population of the North more or less ensured that two communities would be pitted against each other. Of course when he's good and ready he's one half of the chuckle brothers with an IRA leader, cheers Ian, but 35 years too late.
++1Cue decades of bombing for no rime or reason.
Indeed I am.++1
Purple also appears to be ++1
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?