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LoyalViews
Guest
Oh, look, let’s run through the history if you really want. I can make a shot at justifying English/Scottish/British policy in Ireland over the past 800 years if you like, but I’d really rather not, my heart isn’t in it. The history isn’t your problem, it’s the weight on the shoulders of the people who live there: leave it be, it’s bad enough already.
As to self-serving, well where did you get that from? Self-serving to me would be if Britain no longer had to subsidise NI so heavily, if British soldiers no longer had to die for public order in NI, if my very close relatives in the armed forces were not likely to be the target at any minute of the latest splinter of the IRA, if my friends who were within inches of death in the London bombings no longer face that threat. Don’t give me self-serving: what do you know about it? Why do you think the British government didn’t manage to get out of Ireland a hundred years ago when it tried? We’re attempting to prevent civil war, we in Britain and our close friends in the Republic, so don’t play St Patrick’s Day games with me.
As to your points about how much the Catholic faith means to its holders in terms of their identity, I agree with you absolutely. If it didn’t matter, the difference in faith wouldn’t also be a difference in communities. No one is trying to take it away. They are trying to save the lives and futures of its children. You’re 25 per cent (or is it 12.5 per cent?) Irish? Ask your distant relations a few thousand miles to the east. I suspect they may agree with me rather than with you.
How much do I agree.