The dreamers in their perfect world V The hard-core realists

What’s the story with this wan if she is returned to Oireland, can she be charged with membership of an illegal organisation, or is there actually any offence she can be charged with here?

@anon7035031 is making clean shit of you on this thread. He’s refuting things you didn’t say and making good counter arguments to points you didn’t raise. You’ve shown nothing in return.

4 Likes

I wish, he can’t even make good counter arguments to the points he made up I made :smile:

Thank you

So that’s the point the two headcases won’t address. They keep referencing the rule of law, except there are no laws in Ireland dealing with this situation. Is it a crime in Ireland to go fight for or support ISIS and what laws are you specifically breaking?

What @glasagusban and @Sidney want is to allow these people back, and also allow in any jihadist that wants to base themselves in Ireland, and then pray that when they blow people up it will be somewhere else.

1 Like

He has no points mate, other than referencing laws that don’t exist. It’s the standard Irish solution to an Irish problem, cover ones ears and sing la,la,la and hope it goes away.

1 Like

If any of these ISIS sympathizers are sent back here their punishment should be made read this thread & the US politics thread, repeatedly.

Worse than any water boarding.

13 Likes

Bacon burgers all round

1 Like

@glasagusban whats the Craic with deportation so? We’ve had issues here in the past with not being able to deport people who have been refused asylum because their own country refuses to allow them back. They’ve ended up in a shitty legal limbo for years. Is that just certain states refusing their responsibilities?

@glasagusban Can I get some service round here please!

What are you suggesting here? Some countries whose citizens applied for asylum here haven’t wanted to take responsibility for taking their citizens back, so the rules apply to Ireland, or something?

He asked you a question. You do know, saying I don’t know is an option.

Read it you numpty. It’s a question I was hoping you could answer. I get what the law is. Im saying that Ireland has had problems before with being unable to deport people we wanted to deport (asylum seekers) as their countries of origin refused to accept them. I’m asking you whats the story with that. Do they not have to accept them if we pay for the flights or are they shirking responsibilities under international law?

I’m not aware of these examples. If you send me a link I could look into it I suppose.

If what you describe happens and they refuse to accept them then yes they are shirking their responsibilities.

1 Like

Ah here ffs, you are being deliberately obtuse on this to deflect from legitimate concerns. Syria is in no shape to be trying people for anything and nor should we really trust them to be doing anything as of right now.

I think she should be let back but this is classic shitetalk.

1 Like

Careful now, that makes you an ISIS supporter according to @anon7035031.

Christ, what a load of utter gibberish.

3 Likes

That’s one raw nerve touched.

Exactly. So Ireland not anyone else can expect them to take responsibility for our citizens.

Thank you for making my point for me.

1 Like

I don’t think that’s what he said. I think she should be let back, similar with the UK woman, but I completely understand why people do not want them back. That goes from a cultural, financial and security perspective.

However when someone says that, you have headcases like yourself who scream racist and even more bizarrely misogyny at them.