By that definition the "Nation" is the area under the jurisdiction of our sovereign government. Oops!
In all of this, what Art 1, 2 & 3 do now is remove the authority of the State to enact and administer laws in the territory of NI and instead bestows such a entitlement to all of the people born (save 27th amendment) to determine the political and economic future in whatever form they choose. Currently, that is in the form of two separate States, one governed by a foreign State.
Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in again!You lasted a hour!
You are trying to peddle some stuff that The Nation is conceptual, but The State isn't.
The state has a jurisdiction, legislation, legal recognition, and borders, the nation does not.
Ok, we are in danger of falling into ambiguous genius of the GFA, it being all things to all people, so its possible we all have different interpretations
You're wasting your time, as am I.The state has a jurisdiction, legislation, legal recognition, and borders, the nation does not.
You're wasting your time, as am I.
You're wasting your time, as am I.
You're wasting your time, as am I.
Was our constitutional claim on Northern Ireland not removed as part of the Good Friday agreement and subsequent referendums?
Was our constitutional claim on Northern Ireland not removed as part of the Good Friday agreement and subsequent referendums?
Do I consider Northern Ireland to be a foreign country?, yes. After all, the majority of it's citizens consider themselves as belonging to a foreign country called the UK.
Should the Green Party members in Northern Ireland have a say in our Govt, no, absolutely not
This is like talking to a creationist about evolution.
Everyone bar Wolfie is talking about the legal position but he's conflating aspiration and law.
So NI is a separate state but not a separate country?? And I'm a "extremist, flag-waving, table-thumping politics, more commonly found in fringe republican / loyalist gangsters" ??? Gee thanks
true democrat would respect the wishes and beliefs pf the majority
I have no say in Stormont so why should someone living in Coleraine have a say in the Dail?
We may have a moral obligation
or any legal basis as to why NI be considered a foreign country.
No, claiming ownership of places that you have no legal entitlement to claim is the oxygen for these groups.But the politics of exclusion and division is the oxygen for these groups.
In a consultative capacity only.Our government has legal obligations to participate and involve itself in the affairs of NI. See the British-Irish Agreement Act, 1999.
There is also no provision for Uganda being a foreign country nevertheless Uganda is a foreign country.I'm merely pointing out that under the Constitution, there is no provision for NI being recognised as a foreign country.
claiming ownership of places that you have no legal entitlement to claim is the oxygen for these groups.
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