The Official TFK Ireland 1912-1923 Thread

for something as shitty as this, this would be plonked on their desk. ive bigger fish to fry

That was in breach of Dail standing orders.

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If this is how the CS works, this explains a lot

the attack by the blueshirt wasnt on the basis of standing orders

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The TD was sitting down.

I didn’t say it was.

oh right, didnt know you were just going for a random non sequitur

There you are now.

image

its good, but its not quite right

Commemorate as per Cambridge dictionary.

I think that the Irish people who reacted understood the meaning of the word.

What does the more reputable Oxford dictionary say on the matter?

Ask google

Things are bad when the Oxford Dictionary is directing you to Google.

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Correct - Pat Kenny asked Flanagan this morning if that applied to Daffodils worn on cancer day and Flanagan said it did, Kenny of course never pursued it further and asked if he objected to them after that, as he didn’t want to land him in it for fear of upsetting the poor minister.

Flanagan is a bit mad. That same interview this morning he tried to blame Mary Lou on it being cancelled because she said that people will go out and protest about it. I think Charlie might sniffing some charlie.

This is understandably causing a lot of concern in the Unionist community.

The Irish government has cancelled plans for an official commemoration of Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) personnel killed by the IRA during the War of Independence.

Due to take place next week at Dublin Castle, the event was described by Taoiseach Leo Varadkar as a “commemoration … not a celebration” of the hundreds of men who died in the years preceding partition.

“It’s about remembering our history, not condoning what happened,” he said on Tuesday morning in response to the fierce backlash from republicans.

Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin described the event as an “error in judgment” that had caused “unnecessary controversy,” while Sinn Fein branded the commemoration “an insult to those who fought for Irish freedom”.

Confirming the cancellation on Tuesday night, Justice Minister Charlie Flanagan said: “I know that, regrettably, this decision will be a cause of hurt and upset to many people. As a next step, I will consult further … with a view to organising an event that is inclusive and fully respectful of all the traditions and memories on this island.”

Former police officers on both sides of the Irish border have expressed disappointment at widespread opposition to what they viewed as an important milestone in the reconciliation process.

Members of the Dublin Metropolitan Police (DMP) who lost their lives were also to be commemorated.

Stephen White, chairman of the RUC George Cross Foundation, said: “I find it disappointing, that in a post-conflict situation, there are those who appear not to be able to recognise that the individuals concerned were simply police officers doing their duty.”

The former assistant chief constable added: “It is a shame that in this day and age there are still people who want to politicise the sacrifice of ordinary men and women.”

Gerry Lovett of the RIC and DMP Commemoration Committee, a retired Garda officer, said the backlash was a “great disappointment” considering that “Angela Merkel and French President Macron can stand side by side and commemorate the dead of France and Germany”.

TUV leader Jim Allister said: “The climbdown by the Dublin government over commemorating the RIC is a telling signal to unionists as to how they and their history would be treated in an all-Ireland.”

Mr Allister added: “If a predominantly Roman Catholic state police force from the south is so vilified by republican agitators, in a supposedly enlightened and modern state, that its government toadies to such bigotry, we can all imagine how unionist culture and traditions would fare in such a republican Utopia.”

In a Twitter post, DUP MP Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said branded the decision a “retrograde step,” and added: “We managed to get through the WW1 centenary, Somme and Easter Rising centenaries without this happening. Clearly there is a long way to go on reconciliation when we can’t even agree to commemorate those who died on either side 100 years ago without this.”

Ulster Unionist MLA Doug Beattie tweeted: “I think this is a real shame & throws up questions about how unionists would be welcomed in any UI (United Ireland).”

Mr Beattie’s party leader Steve Aiken later issued a statement, expressing disappointment at what he called the “deeply regrettable” comments made by Fianna Fail and Sinn Fein representatives.

“Describing members of the Royal Irish Constabulary as ‘colonialists’ and ‘oppressors’ when the vast majority of these men came from the island of Ireland, and served their communities with dedication, is an insult to their memory and their descendants.

“These types of comments do nothing to build reconciliation and demonstrate that some elements of society with the Republic of Ireland remain openly hostile to the British identity or those perceived to be associated with it.”

Gobshite

Unionists now worried about how they will be welcomed in a United Ireland.
A step in the right direction from No Surrender.

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Sweet mother of fuck. Has his son no shame? What a strange family.