by brendywendy » 17 May 2007 17:17
BehinduIan RoyalBehindu I think the idea that the Irish and Northern Irish are 'the same people' is jaw dropping !
Are you unaware of the 30 years of civil war that has finally been ended in recent weeks ?
hmm, you may want to consider the meaning of civil war. Also that is largely religious and political. Or would you say Celtic fans are not the same people as Rangers fans?
Republicans - essentially Irish Catholics and in the minority (historically) in the North
Loyalists - essentially Protestant Scots and in the majority in the North.
Two pretty different peoples who ended up in the same place and have fought each other ever since.
If you define 'people' as 'members of the human race' then they are the same, but to assert that the Southern and Northern Irish are 'the same' and therefore all our Southern Irish players are near enough British is a pretty unconvincing arguement...
You could argue that the Scots and (say) the Norwegians are near enough the same, and therefore Norway is 'local' !!
by SpaceCruiser » 17 May 2007 17:18
Royal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
by brendywendy » 17 May 2007 17:19
Behindubrendywendy [if its a civil war then they are the same people!
.
Tosh !
Civil war is fought between people of one country, but plenty of countries are made up of groups of peoples of different religions, ethnicity etc.
See Rwanda, Yugoslavia, Iraq .....
by SpaceCruiser » 17 May 2007 17:20
brendywendyBehindubrendywendy [if its a civil war then they are the same people!
.
Tosh !
Civil war is fought between people of one country, but plenty of countries are made up of groups of peoples of different religions, ethnicity etc.
See Rwanda, Yugoslavia, Iraq .....
but people of one country could definately be construed as meaning one people
by M Brook » 17 May 2007 17:21
SpaceCruiserRoyal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
Mmmmmmmmm, I always thought the NI was part of the UK, not Britain.
by rabidbee » 17 May 2007 19:09
M BrookSpaceCruiserRoyal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
Mmmmmmmmm, I always thought the NI was part of the UK, not Britain.
Correct. the United Kingdom of Great Britain and (bits of) Northern Ireland.
by brighton_royal » 17 May 2007 19:10
by East Stand Ste » 17 May 2007 20:18
by Gav » 17 May 2007 23:59
by Horsham Royal » 18 May 2007 00:32
by Compo's Hat » 18 May 2007 02:15
by papereyes » 18 May 2007 09:41
SpaceCruiserRoyal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
Mmmmmmmmm, I always thought the NI was part of the UK, not Britain.
by Doyler » 18 May 2007 10:20
They are indeed, if you've seen Billy Connolly's stand up show in New York, he says the Scots were a mentally ill Irish tribe and the Chief said 'Look lads, I've found an even rainier place, let's go!Ian RoyalBehinduIan RoyalBehindu I think the idea that the Irish and Northern Irish are 'the same people' is jaw dropping !
Are you unaware of the 30 years of civil war that has finally been ended in recent weeks ?
hmm, you may want to consider the meaning of civil war. Also that is largely religious and political. Or would you say Celtic fans are not the same people as Rangers fans?
Republicans - essentially Irish Catholics and in the minority (historically) in the North
Loyalists - essentially Protestant Scots and in the majority in the North.
Two pretty different peoples who ended up in the same place and have fought each other ever since.
If you define 'people' as 'members of the human race' then they are the same, but to assert that the Southern and Northern Irish are 'the same' and therefore all our Southern Irish players are near enough British is a pretty unconvincing arguement...
You could argue that the Scots and (say) the Norwegians are near enough the same, and therefore Norway is 'local' !!
They are both Irish though. I don't think you could argue that about the Scots and Norwegians.
Besides, the Northern Irish arn't Scots, it's more half the scots are of Irish descent
by VOR » 18 May 2007 11:09
papereyesSpaceCruiserRoyal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
Mmmmmmmmm, I always thought the NI was part of the UK, not Britain.
Geographically, Ireland (the island) is part of the British Isles (archipeligo of island off the Atlantic coast of Europe), but you tell someone from the Republic that they're British and its a whole world of trouble.
That said, I genuinely doubt that there's any significant genetic/ethnic difference between Northern and Republican Irish. Maybe there is. The difference is going to be the cultural/religious one.
The really oxf*rd pointless one.
by SpaceCruiser » 18 May 2007 11:13
VORpapereyesSpaceCruiserRoyal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
Mmmmmmmmm, I always thought the NI was part of the UK, not Britain.
Geographically, Ireland (the island) is part of the British Isles (archipeligo of island off the Atlantic coast of Europe), but you tell someone from the Republic that they're British and its a whole world of trouble.
That said, I genuinely doubt that there's any significant genetic/ethnic difference between Northern and Republican Irish. Maybe there is. The difference is going to be the cultural/religious one.
The really oxf*rd pointless one.
'Loyalists' in Northern Ireland associate themselves with Great Britain for political reasons but Ireland is NOT part of Britain and never has been. It was for some time part of the British empire but then so was India. To suggest that someone from Ireland is British makes as much sense as saying a Brazilian is Portuguese.
The term 'British Isles' was a political construct and has been an anachronism for over 80 years and one that the Republic is justified in pushing to have removed from atlases etc.
by papereyes » 18 May 2007 11:13
VORpapereyesSpaceCruiserRoyal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
Mmmmmmmmm, I always thought the NI was part of the UK, not Britain.
Geographically, Ireland (the island) is part of the British Isles (archipeligo of island off the Atlantic coast of Europe), but you tell someone from the Republic that they're British and its a whole world of trouble.
That said, I genuinely doubt that there's any significant genetic/ethnic difference between Northern and Republican Irish. Maybe there is. The difference is going to be the cultural/religious one.
The really oxf*rd pointless one.
'Loyalists' in Northern Ireland associate themselves with Great Britain for political reasons but Ireland is NOT part of Britain and never has been. It was for some time part of the British empire but then so was India. To suggest that someone from Ireland is British makes as much sense as saying a Brazilian is Portuguese.
The term 'British Isles' was a political construct and has been an anachronism for over 80 years and one that the Republic is justified in pushing to have removed from atlases etc.
by MartinRdg » 18 May 2007 11:26
SpaceCruiserRoyal With Cheese Northen Irish = British
Mmmmmmmmm, I always thought the NI was part of the UK, not Britain.
by SpaceCruiser » 18 May 2007 11:34
papereyes Spacey - one name that I got told was "Iona" Isles of the North Atlantic.
Quite nice.
by Behindu » 18 May 2007 11:41
papereyes [
Spacey - one name that I got told was "Iona" Isles of the North Atlantic.
.
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