So you still haven't pointed to a single state (or country if you wish) who do not officially recognise NI as a separate state.
Why would I?
I also recognise NI as a separate State to the Irish State.
So you still haven't pointed to a single state (or country if you wish) who do not officially recognise NI as a separate state.
I also recognise NI as a separate State to the Irish State.
Thankfully, such thought, it is contained in the fringes of Irish political thought, North and South. Let's hope it stays that way.
I'm out.
Far from "fring" numbers
If you are willfully misrepresenting their views you can certainly see things that way.Yes, that's true, but I was talking about NI being regarded as a foreign country across the political spectrum.
Joe and Josephine Public can think what s/he wants on any given day. One day it's "a big problem" having people from NI have a say in the formation of our government, a few days later, the same people are "happy to see the new government formed" with people from NI having a say!
I'm surprised that you are happy to see that the UK considers us not to be fully free, but rather still part of their country.From the UK side, they even have a law that expressly refers to this State as "not a foreign country".
Agreed. I hope this can happen and the parties who have opposed such a course do not get into power in this country as they are in the Uk's regional government in Northern Ireland.A United Ireland is aspirational and can mean many different things to many different people. I'd l like to see Ireland united politically and dissolution of the NI State. But as it stands, I accept matters as they are. But there is more than one way to achieve this . I think there is greater scope to forge closer economic and social ties between Ireland and Britain that, in time, will make NI effectively an irrelevance or a footnote in history - crucially, without as much a bullet fired.