United Ireland?

Started by Blakemore3 pages

United Ireland?

Starting this thread early because I think a referendum might be on the cards soon. The questions are:

What does president Biden mean for the good friday agreement?

https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/president-biden-will-be-powerful-ally-of-good-friday-agreement-say-ni-politicians-39718723.html

What is the good friday agreement?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-northern-ireland-54380051

And wtf is going to happen?

Lets wait for expert Irish Man and alt righter Computing Forever.

Then pick exactly the opposite of his opinion.

iirc, Biden's family is originally from Ireland, and he's spoken at length about at the very least, maintaining the GFA. Whether Biden will have an impact on any negotiations about a deal in Ireland though, is one of those "wait and see" things.

I don't like Biden personally, but he does genuinely seem to give more of a **** about it than Trump ever did.

Well, Brexit complicates things. Some argue a trade border in Ireland ruins the agreement, and others argue a border in the sea ruins the agreement.

So wtf.

Of course the racist Biden likes Ireland. it's almost entirely white.

House of Lords block Brexit deal cos Northern Ireland. 😬

Chill bruh. We murdered Natives and enslaved Blacks to get away from all this European barbarism....

In all seriousness, this is what all that Anglo-Extremist shit gets. There's no more brown people to belittle because the EU is gone, so now it's a fight for which group of whites has the might, right, and worst plight...

Not to say these tensions were never serious, but Brexit exacerbated the need for national pride, so now said nations are drawing lines in the sand.

Well God says a kingdom divided cannot stand so if you form a triangle out of Ireland it might unite.

Would a united Ireland be a good idea or a bad idea?

Let's unite Ireland.

Originally posted by -Pr-
iirc, Biden's family is originally from Ireland, and he's spoken at length about at the very least, maintaining the GFA. Whether Biden will have an impact on any negotiations about a deal in Ireland though, is one of those "wait and see" things.

I don't like Biden personally, but he does genuinely seem to give more of a **** about it than Trump ever did.

Excuse my ignorance of the Irish, but do the Irish want N. Ireland back in the fold still and do the N. Irish want to be back in the fold?

Originally posted by Robtard
Excuse my ignorance of the Irish, but do the Irish want N. Ireland back in the fold still and do the N. Irish want to be back in the fold?
Some do, some don't. It's complicated.

Originally posted by Blakemore
Some do, some don't. It's complicated.

I do understand it's complicated considering the long history there. But wouldn't seeing if the majority of all the Irish want a united Ireland to begin with be a good first step?

Originally posted by Robtard
I do understand it's complicated considering the long history there. But wouldn't seeing if the majority of all the Irish want a united Ireland to begin with be a good first step?
Well, I'd be in favour of a referendum. Choices being:

1. Should NI be a part of Ireland?
2. Should NI remain in the UK?
3. Should NI be an independent country?

Something like that. NI has a great tourist factor that the UK benefits from...

Originally posted by Robtard
Excuse my ignorance of the Irish, but do the Irish want N. Ireland back in the fold still and do the N. Irish want to be back in the fold?

A majority of voters in Northern Ireland would oppose the region leaving the United Kingdom to form a united Ireland if a referendum were held tomorrow, according to a poll published by the Belfast Telegraph newspaper on Tuesday.

Irish unity would be supported by just 29% of voters, with 52% against, the poll of 2,000 people organized by Liverpool University and Britain’s Economic and Social Research Council found. The remaining 19% said they did not know how they would vote.

If ‘don’t knows’ are excluded, the figures show 65% to 35% in favor of remaining within the United Kingdom, the survey showed.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-nireland-poll/poll-shows-northern-ireland-majority-against-united-ireland-idUSKBN20C0WI

dadick douche needs to ruin everything!

Originally posted by Blakemore
Well, I'd be in favour of a referendum. Choices being:

1. Should NI be a part of Ireland?
2. Should NI remain in the UK?
3. Should NI be an independent country?

Something like that. NI has a great tourist factor that the UK benefits from...

Yeah, my whole point was to start with 'do the Irish even want it?', if so, go from there. No real point if the Irish themselves are happy with the way it is now.

Originally posted by Robtard
Yeah, my whole point was to start with 'do the Irish even want it?', if so, go from there. No real point if the Irish themselves are happy with the way it is now.
economically NI will be a burden to the Republic of Ireland.

NI as an indy cuntry then.! Progress!