So Sinn Fein have voted to recognise and co-operate with the police in Northern Ireland - just after MI5 built a lovely new HQ there.
Perhaps Martin McGuiness's handler swung the deal after getting a smart new office!
Now won't it be interesting to see how Republicans on the ground react...
Seems the pro-abortion, gay-rights and feminist lobby aka Sinn Fein have got what they wanted: plush offices in Stormont from which to wave their flags of equality for the "irishmen" just of the planes from Nigeria!
What bizarre times we live in...
No doubt the drug-dealers and gangsters in Northern Ireland - in both 'communities' - can now fully co-operate with the police. That is if they're not already run by Special Branch!
For the embarassment of Mr. Adams et al tonight on the RTE1 tv channel is a documentary in the Hidden History series all about two films made by Goebbels promoting/defending the IRA.
Might be worth a watch...
Tuesday 30 January 2007
Sinn Fein and MI5
Posted by Final Conflict at 8:52 pm
Categories: Government, Nationalism, Politics
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8 comments:
Quote:
"Seems the pro-abortion, gay-rights and feminist lobby aka Sinn Fein have got what they wanted: plush offices in Stormont from which to wave their flags of equality for the "irishmen" just of the planes from Nigeria!"
Well put, Mr. FC
Love what you've done with the blog. Keep it white!
Your article is very informative and helped me further.
Thanks, David
I wonder if your concern about the anti-patriotic, politically correct nature of Sinn Fein extends to recognising genuine Irish Republican beliefs in Irish independence and unification. I doubt it. Prove me wrong.
The future of Ireland and the situation in Northern Ireland in particular can only really be resolved by the people there - funny how lefties and others on the "mainland" think they should dictate policy to the people of Belfast or Dublin.
Radical patriots in Ulster and in Eire pretty much recognise that any solution to 'the problems' is going to have to work with "the other side" at some stage.
Of course this is more likely to be resolved by people who have more than a passing knowledge of Irish history and 'the troubles.'
The most pleasing aspect of recent years is the fact that Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland are beginning to realise that coloured immigration and attacks on Christian values (by abortionists, homosexuals and more) are more of a risk to them than other Christians...
But I'm sure MI5 and their agents in loyalist AND republican groups will try and stir things up to keep patriots at each others throats.
Thanks for the interesting reply.
No-one in Ireland is advocating genocide... but it's interesting that no "Unionists" in England call for 'the Pale' around Dublin to be returned to British rule, nor for the re-occupation of "British" Calais which was ruled by the English for many years!
It's time that patriots kept their patriotism to their OWN country and stopped trying to grab or retain parts of other nations.
after all, weren't the jingoists waving Union Jacks over the Falklands Islands?
How would they like the Argentinians to occupy the Isle of Sheppey, or the French to keep the Isle of Wight...
There are Protestants in Ulster - yes. But Ulster's 9 counties make up one of four Irish provinces.
If French Huguenots settled predominantly in Kent, would that make Kent "French"?
No Surrender! ;-)
I know that some believe that Irish republicanism is a sort of "imperialism", seeking to gain a Northern part of the island which doesn't rightfully belong to it. It's a line one often hears. I don't think it's true, though. Those who use this argument ignore that the North (and other parts of Ireland) were seized by the English/British settlers over the centuries in a way that was clearly and violently imperialist.
So if someone argues that Republicans are imperialists for advocating unification, one can point to the earlier violent imperialism of the British. I notice that Unionists/British tend to be very quiet about their blatantly imperialist past, but have no problem attacking others for something they were doing themselves for ages.
Anyway... I think unification should be put to a referendum. I don't want to see a civil war in the North. Independence for Northern Ireland might also be a good interim solution.
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