T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1327.1 | Let's try to be positive | SIOG::DPSW04::poconnell | | Tue Feb 08 1994 12:13 | 25 |
| Well said, Tiger
I fear, however, that you will draw down the wrath of our greener brothers
who are so completely informed on the subject that they do not need to
listen!
Good luck in your future career.
I think that the 'diaspora' effect is common to many races, not just to the
Irish.
I would like to see a positive, forward looking approach to the problems of
the island and its people where people recognise that hurt, wrong and
injustice was inflicted by ALL sides (at one time or another), and moves on
from there.
People have claimed that the Declaration is ambiguous and requires
clarification. Show me any statement between the extremes of 'I love you' and
'I hate you' which isn't ambiguous! Life, people and their beliefs are
ambiguous, ambivalent and contradictory. The challenge we all face is the
accomodation of all these conflicting views within ourselves and others.
Good luck
Pat
|
1327.2 | Good note! | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Feb 08 1994 13:28 | 5 |
| >I'll be leaving DEc in two weeks. Before I go I would like say how much
>I've enjoyed this conference, mainly on a Read Only Basis.
I think it's a damn shame you haven't written sooner.
|
1327.3 | yet another 2 cents | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Tue Feb 08 1994 14:00 | 42 |
| Tiger,
some answers first:
I've lived in the Republic of Ireland all my life until last September,
except for an 8 Month period when I lived in California and a 9 month
period in the Netherlands. I currently live in New Hampshire, a member of
the diaspora thanks to the closure of GAO.
I suppose I could be termed a Lapsed Catholic.
I have visited the North on many occasions over the past 10 years and
know a good number of people from there.
>>Given the answers to 1) and 2) above, why do you feel that
>> your opinions are more valid than other opinions?
To answer this I suppose I have to examine why I started noting in
CELT. The main answer to this was that when I first started reading
CELT it was full of entries expounding extreme nationalist propaganda
in a very, as you say, black & white and from afar stand-point. I began
to respond to these in the hope that I could show that in the Republic
of Ireland at least there is another viewpoint.
I care little for the IRA and/or Sinn Fein or Loyalist extremists for
that matter. I do know that much of the Nationalist cause has validity,
but my view is that in the late eighties/nineties there is a peaceful
democratic path for resolution of these problems and that resolution must
take into account the Unionist majority in the North. My visits to the
North have revealed in my opinion a huge middle ground on both sides of
the religious divide that are more interested in a normal lifestyle and
the economy than in any Nationalist/Unionist Ideology. This is often
overlooked by the international media (including that of the South),
who often only focus on the extremes (e.g. look at how much coverage
John Hume got in New York last week as opposed to Gerry Adams).
To say that your opinions are more valid than others would smack of the
black & whiteness you ridicule in .0. So I won't claim any such thing.
I just would like them to be considered before anybody makes an overall
opinion for themselves.
Joe.
|
1327.4 | Farewell. | AYOV25::JDOOLEY | | Wed Feb 09 1994 07:40 | 9 |
| I'd just like to use this note to wish Tadhg all the best in the future
in his life after DEC. It is ironic that I find myself also leaving in
two weeks time, given the fact that I received support and sympathy from
people here and in other notesfiles who have, in the course of time,
also found themselves being let go, with a lot less notice.
Such is life in the uncertain nineties.
|
1327.5 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Feb 09 1994 11:00 | 24 |
|
re. .0
Let people draw their own conclusions from the facts presented.
Let people read the reports of human rights activists, and
independent human rights organizations, so they can make up
their own minds. Let's be positive for an end to censorship,
an end to human rights abuses, an end to state collusion with
death squads, an end to jury-less trials, an end to
oppressive legislation, and an end to tortured confessions.
I don't live in Ireland or Northern Ireland. I've only lived in
London, Rochester, Boston, Mexico City, and now New Hampshire.
My opinions are no more valid than anothers, though I do tend
to form them from the reports of independent human rights activists,
human rights organizations, my own trips to Ireland and Britain,
and my family and friends in both Ireland and Britain.
I know that the human rights abuses reaped upon the nationalist
community by the British is wrong.
Mark
|
1327.6 | Hmmm... | XSTACY::DROSS | | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:41 | 10 |
| Religion.
What a bummer eh?
(sorry if it was said before, but it causes such despair / doom / destruction /
despondancy / degredation / disaster and death that I thought it worth
mentioning again).
Power.
|
1327.7 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:51 | 3 |
|
Brings joy and self-knowledge to many people too.
|
1327.8 | Oh yeah? Well.... | XSTACY::DROSS | | Fri Mar 11 1994 04:25 | 18 |
|
True. Very true.
Or is it?
"Joy" ..... yes, perhaps.
"Self Knowledge" ..... in a sense.
Don't get me wrong - if it makes you/them/us/me happy and/or fullfilled
then I'm right behind it. Just why do people feel they have the right to stomp
all over anyone who "unbelives"? C'mon - you know what I'm saying....
|