T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1336.1 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Feb 21 1994 16:19 | 4 |
|
Looks like both Adams and Mcmanus have rejected this finally.
The problem of the "Loyalist veto".
|
1336.2 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 21 1994 17:16 | 8 |
|
re. .1
Not to mention the ambiquity of the British and Irish
government interpretations. Too bad the British
couldn't agree to sit down at the peace table,
without pre-conditions.
Mark
|
1336.3 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Feb 21 1994 17:22 | 7 |
|
Ohh right, so the IRA could set off a new bomb to make their point
every time the negotiations didn't go their way. Might as well not even
negotiate. Both the IRISH and the British govts agreed to that
declaration. Who are you to tell the elected govt of the Irish people,
or most of them, what to do?
|
1336.4 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Tue Feb 22 1994 08:50 | 23 |
|
Quite frankly I believe that Sinn Fein should reject
the Downing street declaration. There is no mention
of the British laying down their arms, or putting a
stop to their collusion with loyalist death squads.
There is no mention of an end to censorship of political
opposition, and there is no mention of an end to
false imprisonment and juryless trials. Why should
the loyalist minority have a say over the whole
future of the United Kingdom? Why should the loyalist
minority have a say over the whole future of the
Island? Why should British troops continue to die
for a minority opinion that is rejected by the
majority of people in the U.K.?
The British government has said one thing in the
Downing street piece of paper, and yet another thing
in parliament.
The only sensible thing now, would be for immediate
negotiations of all parties involved. Since the
British do not really want peace, they would reject
this.
|
1336.5 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Back on the nest | Tue Feb 22 1994 09:47 | 3 |
| My God, preserve us all...
Laurie.
|
1336.6 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Tue Feb 22 1994 09:57 | 4 |
| Re .4
Has it entered your head that Sinn Fein and their friends the IRA are a
minority opinion in Ireland?
|
1336.7 | | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Tue Feb 22 1994 11:12 | 8 |
| Mark,
Could you list for us the advantages (strategic, economic, perceived or
otherwise) that the Brits enjoy by being in Northern Ireland. You keep
rattling on about this army of occupation. Why, in your opinion do
they continue to occupy?
Joe.
|
1336.8 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Tue Feb 22 1994 12:01 | 19 |
|
re. .7
I can see no strategic, or economic advantage for the
people of Britain. Their young soldiers are constantly
returned in body bags. Whatever the reason, many wars
are not fought for strategic or economic advantage.
Unfortunately many of those who govern Britain see
both a political advantage of keeping the
"British stiff upper lip", "preserving the empire",
"All for Queen and country", and "not giving in to the
dirty rotters".
The majority of British people want British troops
out of north east Ireland. It's the British government
that refuses to listen to it's own people, at the
economic and social expense of the British people.
Mark
|
1336.9 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Tue Feb 22 1994 12:24 | 21 |
| Oh
That's a whole lot clearer now then Mark. It's only the British
Goverment that wants the troops in NI. Nobody else wants them there do
they Mark ??
Now lets see what else you tell us Mark. You believe that the IRA and
Sinn Fein want peace but the British Goverment do not. You can prove
how serious your pals are in this quest for peace by their actions. Oh
here comes a heavily fortified clothes store. Lets plant some fire
bombs in it therebye demonstrating to Holohead that we want peace.
So Mark if somebody comes along and blows your head off (assuming here
that this has not already happened) (huge big assumption there) you
would want us all to know that this is a sign of peace.
God help us all.
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.10 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Tue Feb 22 1994 12:28 | 8 |
|
> out of north east Ireland. It's the British government
> that refuses to listen to it's own people, at the
> economic and social expense of the British people.
.. meaning it's the fault of the British govt that its people
are being killed while walking down the high street, right?
|
1336.11 | Bring in the UN for a laugh !!!! | KIRKTN::GMCDONALD | | Wed Feb 23 1994 22:19 | 11 |
|
Re.8
Q. What do you think would happen if "the British" pulled their
troops out of Ulster ?
A. For Ireland you could read Bosnia !!!!
Graeme .
|
1336.12 | | PAKORA::SWRIGHT | The Day the world turned Day-Glow | Wed Feb 23 1994 23:46 | 15 |
|
re -1
Graeme....
How could he know, He's 1000's of miles away in Pixie Land reading his
Noraid pamphlet he got when the tin was being passed around the Pub,
Sort off like... War Cry that you get of the Sally Army...
Napolion.
|
1336.13 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Feb 24 1994 08:58 | 32 |
|
re. .11
I think that would be just a start. They also need
to stop colluding and providing arms to the Loyalist
death squads, end summary executions of nationalists
politicians, end jury-less trials, and end censorship
of political opposition.
They would also need to ensure that they disarmed the
Loyalist folks that they have been busy arming.
Next might be some war reparations to pay for
reopening the roads they destroyed that connect to
the rest of the country, cleanup and removal of
their military bases and forts, financial payments
to the community as a whole that they tried to
destroy, financial damages for the censorship they
imposed, release of all prisoners of war, fincancial
compensation to those prisoners of war and their
families, removal of the PTA, and financial compensation
to those and their families who have been unjustly
held under the PTA, and most importantly an
international war crimes tribunal to try the British
officials responsible for their criminal acts during
this war.
That's just off the top of my head, I'm certain that
there are other "war crimes" that the British will
need to be held responsible for.
Mark
|
1336.14 | What future for the IRA | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Thu Feb 24 1994 10:06 | 24 |
| Mark,
Did you ever conside that its attitudes like yours that cause Unionists
to go bananas at the thought of Irish reunification? The only way that
Ireland ever gains peace will be when the Unionists can be assured that
they will not be held accountable for the past. Otherwise why should
they give up there current position.
I doubt the IRA will be satisfied in a United Ireland either. Their
vision of a united Ireland is with them on top. This will never happen,
and so no matter what happens they are destined to be on the sidelines
of any political settlement. Straight democracy will see to that
(witness the current state of Sinn Fein in the Republic and the
Democratic Left even after a double metamorphosis from the Official
IRA/Sinn Fein they are still trying to shake off their "Fenian" roots at
the ballot box).
So what future for the IRA, another 26 years as terrorists? I think
this is their last chance to come in from the cold. There will remain a
few who will never be reconciled and will continue robbing banks and
knee-capping people in kangaroo courts, but the majority should see the
futility of carrying on and increasingly losing their support among
Nationalists to the SDLP.
Joe.
|
1336.15 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Thu Feb 24 1994 10:08 | 9 |
| Re.11
> Q. What do you think would happen if "the British" pulled their
> troops out of Ulster ?
In conjunction with the IRA and other paramilitaries laying down
their arms all in a phased withdrawal, there could develop a strange
thing called peace. Demilitarization of the 6 counties in Ireland
is a good thing! Bad for the British military/industrial establishment,
but good for Ireland.
|
1336.16 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Feb 24 1994 11:09 | 3 |
|
Can't answer .10, can you Holohan. Add it to the list.
|
1336.17 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Thu Feb 24 1994 11:24 | 3 |
| Add .4 as well.
Dave
|
1336.18 | Peace would revitalise economy, | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Feb 24 1994 12:06 | 130 |
|
The Irish Times
February 21, 1994
Peace would revitalise economy, SF told
By DICK HOGAN
AN END to the Northern conflict would immediately release the L200 million
spent annually on Border security into the national exchequer and lead to a
rise in cross Border trade, creating employment, new industries and a general
improvement in the economic well being off all the people of the island, the
Cork Council of Trade Unions told the Sinn Fein Peace Commission at the
weekend.
In a submission to the fourth meeting of the commission, which met in Cork,
Mr Paddy Mulcahy, vice president of the council, representing 25,000 workers in
43 affiliated union branches, said that enough lives had been lost in the 25
years of conflict.
"We have no desire to see more sectarian assassination of taxi drivers and
other workers who try to go about their daily business. The Cork Council of
Trade Unions is aware that these atrocities can cease now or, we can have more
of the same into and after the next millennium," he said.
But even setting hat argument aside, Mr Mulcahy added, the economic case for
discontinuing bloodshed and killing was so overwhelming that peace and
reconciliation had to come about because we simply could not afford anything
else.
Mr Mulcahy said that the Irish Congress of Trade Unions was an all Ireland
trade union movement which tried to unite workers every day of the year under
extreme circumstances. "There is no group which sees the need for peace as much
as the trade union movement.
"After all, it is usually our members who are killed, sometimes by each
other, while their unified employers, regardless of the colour of the flag they
fly, can do nicely for themselves out of the disarray of their workers.
"It is clear from this submission that we favour peace and that we are
acutely aware of the intricacy of the Northern problem. It is also our
view that both the Provisional IRA and the British forces have proved that they
cannot defeat each other.
"It is also our view that working class unity can in fact rid Ireland of
British imperialistic influence but that this unity is virtually impossible to
achieve as long as the military campaigns continue."
Ms Rosaleen Murphy, of Carrigrohane, Cork who made submission to the
commission in a personal capacity, describing herself as a "socialist and an
Irishwoman", said that the Downing Street Declaration, which she rejected,
offered her a choice between a rock and a hard place and left the country as
well as the republican movement at a crossroads.
"The Joint Declaration is another clever conjuring trick on the part of the
British to maintain their interests, while appearing to be reasonable and
disinterested," she added.
In his submission, Mr Sean Gallagher, of the United Ireland Forum, who also
spoke in a personal capacity, urged Sinn Fein to consider that effectively,
for the first time since 1921, Irish self determination was on the Anglo-Irish
agenda. In putting it there through his statement that Britain had no selfish
strategic or economic interest in Northern Ireland, Mr John Major had given
the lie to the assertion by his predecessor, Lady Thatcher that Northern
Ireland was "as British as Finchley".
He went on: "There are, significant advantages in the Joint Declaration,
though they do not conceal the fact that it also contains certain flaws.
Overall, however, I, believe "tat the advantages outweigh the disadvantages,
and that the Joint Declaration has in it the seeds of peace.
"But in order for it to be of benefit to the cause of peace with justice in
Ireland, it is essential that the nationalist case be put on the table side by
side with and as an alternative to the unionist case.
Mr Micheal O Loinsigh, chairman of the Irish Sovereignty Movement,
addressing the Commission in a personal capacity, said that the central
question now or the IRA particular and republicanism in general was whether or n
ot
the time had come to discontinue the war against the British forces. The IRA,
he added, could not force the British out of Ireland and the British could not
extirpate the IRA.
"May I suggest to you that, the Downing Street Declaration is as much as we
will ever get from the British. Yet it is, enough to allow us to engage in the
political struggle that must be undertaken to achieve a unity of hearts and
minds in so far as this is achievable between the loyalist community and
ourselves," he said.
While nationalists had suffered in the past and while their day was coming,
the task for the future would be to find a fair and reasonable accommodation
with the unionists. "It is time for a new departure and the swords must be
beaten into plough shares," he concluded.
Mr Richard Behal, a former director of Sinn Fein foreign affairs policy,
said that he was against the declaration. The key element in getting positive
movement, he added, was a British declaration of intent to withdraw. He
suggested that a federal or con federal Ireland, would constitute a new
dimension and break with the old British system.
Mr John Gilligan, an independent member of Limerick Corporation, said he was
convinced that the Joint Declaration was a "blind alley going nowhere" and that
there was nothing of value in it. If the causes of violence were an IRA
reaction against the presence of the British military and the loyalist side
reacting to the presence of the IRA, then the British soldiers should be
returned to their bases in Britain, all owing the IRA to call a ceasefire.
Mr Padraig O Siochain, of west Cork, speaking in a personal capacity, said
he was a student of history for more than 60 years and believed that the Joint
Declaration offered nothing to "Irish Ireland" but contained "plenty of sops"
to Orangeism. On no account, Mr O Siochain went on, should prisoners be
used as, hostages in this peace game and we must ensure that the sacrifice of
the "Fenian dead" had not been in vain.
Mr Pat Doherty, vice president of Sinn Fein, said that on the completion of
its work the commission would publish its findings.
|
1336.19 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Thu Feb 24 1994 13:42 | 9 |
| > Q. What do you think would happen if "the British" pulled their
> troops out of Ulster ?
I sense a British feeling that the Irish wouldn't know how to
maintain peace if they were ever given a chance to run the 6 counties.
But recent history has shown, that Protestants and Catholics (how ever
you want to classify them) are living quite peacefully today in the
Republic without fear for their lives. If anything, the military
theater in NI only adds to the tension.
|
1336.20 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Feb 24 1994 14:16 | 4 |
|
You don't think armed Loyalists and Republicans unchecked represent
the required theatrical effect?
|
1336.21 | It's curtain time | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Thu Feb 24 1994 15:26 | 3 |
| Yes, I agree with you. The entire military theater I speak of includes
the British military and the IRA and the Protestant Extremists. They
feed off each other like leeches.
|
1336.22 | | KIRKTN::GMCDONALD | | Thu Feb 24 1994 17:52 | 18 |
|
re 19.
I wish I could believe that everything in the garden would
be rosey after the British pulled out of the island.However as recent
world history has proved that is not always the case .I feel,and its
only my opinion,that a power vacuum would be created and the that the
murder and suffering would increase at an alarming rate as I believe it
would have back in 69 when the troops went in to protect the catholic
families from loyalist terrorists.
I hope I'm wrong because I think that the British government
may be ready to pull the troops out and I would hate to see a full
scale Irish civil war .
Graeme ..
|
1336.23 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Feb 24 1994 22:56 | 5 |
|
Well I'll tell you something, idjit Irish_american opinion aside,
there's no way either Ireland or Britain would let the UN in there.
Forget it.
|
1336.24 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Fri Feb 25 1994 07:30 | 30 |
| The following is a list to help save Mark Holohan hours of his precious
time. It comprises of a series of phrases which he uses with astonishing
regularity and predictability. In future, instead of the ramblings we read
in dozens of his entries, all we should see (hopefully) is a series of
numbers. eg The phrase "Collusion with Loyalist Death Squads and political
censorship" will now read "2,8,5".
1. Diplock Courts
2. Collusion with Loyalists
3. Military Occupation of North East Ireland
4. Colusion with Loyalist Terrorists
5. Censorship of Sinn Fein
6. The nice gentlemen who wear balaclavas (IRA to you and me)
7. Beloved meesengers of peace, hope and proslerity for all (Sinn Fein)
8. Loyalist death squads (Who bear no resemblance at all to Nationalist
Death Squads)
9. PTA (Although I still don't know what the Parent Teachers Association
has to do with it)
10. Prisoners of war (That's terrorists to you and me)
Please feel free to add to the list. Hopefully we can save Mark Holohan a
lot of time. That would be of great benefit all round. It would give him
time to write even more notes thus increasing his chances of actually
writing one that actually made sense.
Mark R.
|
1336.25 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Fri Feb 25 1994 08:25 | 2 |
|
Well done! We can use this.
|
1336.26 | | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Fri Feb 25 1994 08:30 | 2 |
|
11. The British don't want peace.
|
1336.27 | | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Fri Feb 25 1994 08:31 | 3 |
| And i forgot
12. Talks about talks about talks.
|
1336.28 | | WELSWS::HEDLEY | Lager Lout | Fri Feb 25 1994 09:09 | 5 |
| Various other phrases such as `colonialist', `jingoistic', `knee-jerk',
etc could probably be added to the list (although I suspect that they
were mainly used by the esteemed Mr Drotter)
Chris.
|
1336.29 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Fri Feb 25 1994 09:09 | 6 |
| 13. Accident / Regrettable incident / Deliberate failure of the British
authorities to clear area after a more-then-adequate warning from the lovable
Irish Freedom Fighters (Bombing of a Shopping arcade on a busy Saturday
afternoon to you and me)
|
1336.30 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Fri Feb 25 1994 10:01 | 20 |
|
re. .24
re. #7, Sinn Fein want a just and lasting peace, as opposed to a British
peace (ie. surrender).
re. #8, Loyalist death squads who work under the direction of the British
forces.
re. #9, PTA means the Prevention of Terrorism Act. It is used in Britain
to imprison and terrorize Irish Nationals.
re. #10, Prisoners of war, that's "terrorists" only if you are speaking
British.
Here's a new one:
#14, Ignorant British noters, but we'll just call them Brits from now
on, instead of using number 14. I'm sure everyone in here, knows
who I mean.
|
1336.31 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Fri Feb 25 1994 10:15 | 12 |
| Author: KOALA::HOLOHAN
Number: 1336.30 Created: 25-Feb-1994 10:01am Replies: 30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Here's a new one:
That's a laugh. You haven't said anything new for about a year.
Mark R
|
1336.32 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Back on the nest | Fri Feb 25 1994 10:15 | 11 |
| RE: <<< Note 1336.30 by KOALA::HOLOHAN >>>
� re. #7, Sinn Fein want a just and lasting peace, as opposed to a British
� peace (ie. surrender).
Holohan,
Define "a just and lasting peace" and explain how the recent peace
accord the IRA continue to ignore fails to provide for it.
Laurie.
|
1336.33 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Fri Feb 25 1994 10:53 | 21 |
| Folks
As you all know by now Mark H only replies/writes when he has found
some hand out that tells the rest of the world how bombing of children
is "regrettable".
With his Balaclava firmly placed back to front on his head he marches
on. Like the WWI Generals he spouts his morallity safe in the
knowledge that his safe world will never experience the daily horrors
that the rest of the world endures. His stock of Commando magazines
firmly stuffed in his pocket he remains as far away as he can get from
his dressed up pals.
Why oh Why did the Kennedys not invite him on their holiday to Ireland.
At least their visit gives us a laugh. As one Kennedy said to the UDR
Soldier "Why don't you go home" Reply .... This is my home !!!
Something that the Kennedys (more Irish than the Irish when it suits
them) had not worked out. And they are politicians who Mark H
believes in. Shame they didn't bother to look up the map.
# 15. Mail people if you don't like what they say about you.
|
1336.34 | You realy need to ask your government to sit down with Sinn Fein to answer this. | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Fri Feb 25 1994 11:01 | 13 |
|
For starters Laurie, I don't remember the IRA being invited to the
table to even discuss the Downing Street Declaration. I do remember
Sinn Fein being told that here's the declaration, take it or leave it.
What do you mean you don't understand something, take it or leave it.
A "just and lasting peace" will need to be discussed immediately at the
peace table, with everyone involved. This game of here it is, take it
or leave it, and maybe in 3 months we'll talk, is nothing but British
posturing. The British didn't even agree to stop colluding with loyalist
death squads during this 3 month period.
Mark
|
1336.35 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Fri Feb 25 1994 11:10 | 7 |
| Mark,
You could have condensed that last note to 1 line if you'd used "The List"
Mark
|
1336.36 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Fri Feb 25 1994 11:12 | 8 |
| >At least their visit gives us a laugh. As one Kennedy said to the UDR
>Soldier "Why don't you go home" Reply .... This is my home !!!
That was after the soldier swore at the priest, if my memory serves
me correctly.
By the way, how did Hill do in court this week in Belfast?
|
1336.37 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Fri Feb 25 1994 11:41 | 16 |
| George
early reports seem to indicate that there are so many Kennedy's in the
court that there is no room for anybody else. If Hill is spotted
amongst this throng of upright valued citizens who know all about how
to behave we'll let you know. Unless of course we drive off a bridge
or take the girls for a stroll along the beach, maybe even take in a
Marilyn Monroe movie or two. Thats if we have the time in between
taking holidays in other Countrys Court Rooms.
Regards
Bruce
PS: George swearing at a Priest does not explain how this burk did not
realise what Country he was in !!!
|
1336.38 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Fri Feb 25 1994 11:58 | 19 |
|
re. .33
Bruce,
I think you have a lot of maturing to still go through.
I'm a father of 3 little boys. I can tell you as a parent, that
the killing of children by British forces or anyone else for that
matter, is absolutely wrong.
I've no idea where you get your Balaclava, commando magazine image
from, but if you knew me, you'd know that it's about as far off the
mark as you can get.
By the way, it was the British soldier who said to Joe Kennedy,
"Why don't you go home", to which Joe replied, "Why don't you go
back to your own country". In case you weren't aware, the Kennedy's
from the Cape, are Americans not Irish.
Mark
|
1336.39 | | CUPMK::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Feb 25 1994 12:19 | 12 |
| RE: .38 by KOALA::HOLOHAN
>re. .33
>I've no idea where you get your Balaclava, commando magazine image
>from, but if you knew me, you'd know that it's about as far off the
>mark as you can get.
It's called demonizing the opposition. Anybody who disagrees with any
aspect of British policy in Northern Ireland must be painted as a
terrorist in order to distract from what they are saying.
|
1336.40 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Fri Feb 25 1994 13:06 | 2 |
| I just thought of something. Joe Kennedy could apply for Irish
citizenship since his grandfather was from Wexford.
|
1336.41 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Fri Feb 25 1994 14:35 | 2 |
|
Good, get him out of Cambridge!
|
1336.42 | | CTHQ::LEARY | Tonya's speed dial number: #* | Fri Feb 25 1994 14:44 | 13 |
|
Well I'll tell you something, idjit Irish_american opinion aside,
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You know, I read this notefile occasionally to try and educate
myself on the situation in NI. I'm an American of Irish and Scottish
ancestry, and I find this unfortunate phrase insulting. I might
suggest that the phrase "idjit english-american" might be just
as insulting. Please be more careful in choosing your words, sir.
Thank you,
Mike
|
1336.43 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Fri Feb 25 1994 15:34 | 13 |
|
Mm, really. Now let me guess. You don't mind the names the Brits get
called at all, right? For what it's worth, there are plenty of idjits,
or if you prefer, idiots, in the Irish-American community, especially
on the subject of NI. They're the ones whose knowledge of the situation
was derived from Mother Goose.
Given I don't know you from Adam, I think you can assume that I am
not referring to you. Neither am I referring to my wife for that
matter who is an Irish-American from Southie, or to any of the other
quite reasonable and well-meaning folks who don't specialize in
Brit-bashing drivel.
|
1336.44 | | CTHQ::LEARY | Tonya's speed dial number: #* | Fri Feb 25 1994 15:59 | 17 |
| When you generalize, you invite criticism. I'n talking about your
"idjit irish-american" statement which I took as a generalization,
and insulting. I am not so naive to think that there are not
those of irish extraction making idiotic statements, of course
there are.
And if you read my note further, I mentioned that "idjit english
american" phrases are just as insulting. Expand that to "idiot
Brits" or the like if you wish.
Point is they're all insulting when you (the plural) generalize.
It's really not worth belaboring this any further. You got my point.
Mike
|
1336.45 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Fri Feb 25 1994 16:07 | 8 |
|
Well you're right. It could be taken as a stereotype. We tend to forget
the readers out there. I think you'll find however, that you need the
'thicker' skin by far if you happen to be British.
Anyway, now you're here - prompted by a perceived insult as it may be,
why not add your 5c somewhere.
|
1336.46 | | CTHQ::LEARY | Tonya's speed dial number: #* | Fri Feb 25 1994 16:12 | 9 |
| -1,
I can't add my 5c yet, because I am ignorant of the background
and facts.. I need to do some reading first. But thank you
and continue!!
Mike
|
1336.47 | | CUPMK::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Feb 25 1994 18:13 | 7 |
| RE: .40 by TALLIS::DARCY
>I just thought of something. Joe Kennedy could apply for Irish
>citizenship since his grandfather was from Wexford.
Which Grandfather was that?
|
1336.48 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Sun Feb 27 1994 09:29 | 21 |
| To Mark Holohan.
Mark I to am a father of a ten year old son. I guess where we differ
is my son has to live in the shadow that so willingly lend you support
to whilst ensuring that your children are kept about as far away from
it as is humanly possible.
Maybe me and almost everybody else in this conference misses something
in your Mark. But you sure as hell come across as a supporter of
the IRA and therefore a supporter of their campaign against children.
If I have it wrong then please print that you do not support the IRA.
Please only answer this one line. Do not go into your usual British
Toadie facist at war with retoric.
Either you support the IRA and their campaign or you don't.
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.49 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Sun Feb 27 1994 10:45 | 9 |
|
You're wasting your time. Anyway, Adams is still talking out of both
sides of his mouth. Talking about disapproving fish and chip shop bomb
while supporting misguided scum like Begley. If the entire island of
Ireland did vote as he says they should, and voted to let the North
deciced its future, one wonders if the IRA would accept it. After all
the elected govt of the Irish people in the 26 counties already decided
that and the IRA reaction is to keep killing.
|
1336.50 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Mon Feb 28 1994 05:14 | 11 |
| Results of an opinion poll just out:
91% of the population of Ireland would like the IRA to stop violence
immediately and permanently.
66% of Catholics in the North, 79% in the South would not like to see a
united Ireland without the freely given consent of the Ulster Unionists.
Sinn Fein of course immediately issued a statement rubbishing the poll.
Dave
|
1336.51 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Mon Feb 28 1994 05:46 | 18 |
| >91% of the population of Ireland would like the IRA to stop violence
>immediately and permanently.
>66% of Catholics in the North, 79% in the South would not like to see a
>united Ireland without the freely given consent of the Ulster Unionists.
Even with a 5% margin of error this poll shows that the normal
people that the IRA claim to be fighting for are against them and
what they stand for(as every decent person should be).
>>Sinn Fein of course immediately issued a statement rubbishing the poll.
We would expect nothing else.
SCott
P.S Who was the Poll for ????
|
1336.52 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Mon Feb 28 1994 06:02 | 9 |
| > P.S Who was the Poll for ????
It was jointly commissioned by the BBC and an Irish newspaper, the name of
which escapes me. The figures come from today's Daily Telegraph.
The British connection is no doubt already being exploited by the IRA
apologists in an attempt to deflect attention from the (unsurprising) results.
Dave
|
1336.53 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Mon Feb 28 1994 07:11 | 12 |
| Author: CTHQ::LEARY Tonya's speed dial number: #*
Number: 1336.46 Created: 25-Feb-1994 04:12pm Replies: 52
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> I can't add my 5c yet, because I am ignorant of the background
That hasn't stopped anyone else from doing so in the past :-)
MR
|
1336.54 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 28 1994 08:45 | 19 |
|
re. .51
Did they ask what percentage of the population of
Ireland would like the British forces to stop their
violence immediately and permanently?
I'd bet that if you polled the IRA themselves, that
91% of them would like to stop violence immediately.
What percentage of people in Ireland would like the
British forces to stop colluding with loyalist death
squads?
You can get a poll to say any damn thing you want,
by picking who to canvass, and wording your question
carefully.
Mark
|
1336.55 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Mon Feb 28 1994 08:49 | 8 |
|
RE.54
Well....there's a reply no one expected.
SCott
|
1336.56 | not surprised at all | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Mon Feb 28 1994 09:01 | 8 |
|
Well it appears to me that they asked the Irish people and
incidentallly, this is only one of a number of polls which have been
taken in the last year and are mentioned elsewhere in this conference.
All of which came back with similar results.
Bill
|
1336.57 | Mark H demanded a re-count | KIRKTN::GMCKEE | That blokes' a nutter | Mon Feb 28 1994 09:35 | 11 |
|
There also was a certain Irish election where SF only achieved 3%
(three percent) of the vote.
And a slightly higher 15%(of the nationalist/republican/catholic vote)
in NI's elections.
Now your going to tell us that anybody can rig an election...
Gordon...
|
1336.58 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Mon Feb 28 1994 09:47 | 16 |
| Re: <<< Note 1336.54 by KOALA::HOLOHAN >>>
I would imagine that a high percentage of the population would answer in favour
of all of the questions you pose. How does this change the survey result that
the aims of Sinn Fein and the IRA are out of step with the wishes of the
population at large?
> You can get a poll to say any damn thing you want,
> by picking who to canvass, and wording your question
> carefully.
You are quick to rubbish the poll without evidence and without stopping to
consider that its findings may accurately reflect public opinion. Just like
Sinn Fein.
Dave
|
1336.59 | | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Mon Feb 28 1994 09:56 | 15 |
| I think we have #15 to add to the list of .24
.54
> You can get a poll to say any damn thing you want,
> by picking who to canvass, and wording your question
> carefully.
1293.20
> For starters, polls can be slanted. Who was canvassed for
> this poll, the folks in Shankill? I could take a poll in Divis,
> or Ballymurphy and show you a different story.
You can take your pick of the implementations.
Joe.
|
1336.60 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Mon Feb 28 1994 10:07 | 11 |
| RE: .50
Dave,
Agreed, 99% of the Irish people with whom I've talked would like
IRA violence stopped immediately. But most of them also would like
eventual Irish unification and a British withdrawal from the 6 counties.
While Britain has stated it has no political or economic interest in NI,
it has yet to make the statement of its intent to withdraw from Ireland
at some point in the future. Getting the terrorists to stop their
bombing campaign is a must, but it is only half the equation.
|
1336.61 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Feb 28 1994 10:13 | 3 |
|
Irish Sunday Independent.
|
1336.62 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Mon Feb 28 1994 10:26 | 20 |
| > But most of them also would like
> eventual Irish unification and a British withdrawal from the 6 counties.
> Getting the terrorists to stop their
> bombing campaign is a must, but it is only half the equation.
I'm not sure whether by 'British withdrawl' you mean withdrawl of troops,
creation of an independent state or unification.
I would imagine that withdrawl of troops would follow once violence (on both
sides) ceased and the situation stabilised. This would not happen overnight.
Regarding the other options, the question is, what happens to the ~1,000,000
Ulster Unionists? Any solution without their consent would be doomed to fail,
and would probably result in even more violence.
The IRA campaign over the last 25 years has only served to increase the division
and distrust between the two communities. The IRA has made Irish unification
more difficult, not easier.
Dave
|
1336.63 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 28 1994 10:46 | 20 |
|
re. .62
"The IRA campaign over the last 25 years has only served to increase the division
and distrust between the two communities. The IRA has made Irish unification
more difficult, not easier."
More Downing street propoganda. Perhaps it's the
British partition, the loyalist veto, the British
military occupation, the British military collusion
with loyalist death squads, the imprisonment of the
innocent, the jury-less trials, and the littany of
human rights abuses reaped upon Irish men/women/and
children by the British forces.
Are we going to have to wait another 15 years for a
movie to be made about this latest collusion of the
British forces with loyalist death squads, before
we begin to believe that the problem is the British.
Mark
|
1336.64 | | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:11 | 7 |
| re.60
George, I'm sure you would find that 98% of Brits would like to see
Irish unification as well.
Guess where the 2% who don't, live?
Bill
|
1336.65 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:17 | 18 |
| re. .63
Not more Downing Street propoganda. My own view which I'm sure is also the view
of the vast majority of the Protestant population. If you don't believe that,
fine.
What else would you expect, that the Unionists should want to hop into bed with
those who have killed, maimed and destroyed in a futile attempt to force them
to submit?
Does your master plan for the unification of Ireland say what to do about them?
Ignore them and hope thay will go away? Forcibly resettle 1,000,000
people who have the right to an Irish as well as a British passport?
Wipe them out?
Dave
PS Please use the number codes, it saves disk space.
|
1336.66 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:18 | 10 |
| re.64
Agreed If that's what the people on both sides want.
.63
Where have we heard that reply before.
Scott
|
1336.67 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Feb 28 1994 12:01 | 4 |
|
It's easier to be an armchair radical if you just blow angry smoke.
Don't ask any brain-taxing questions.
|
1336.68 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 28 1994 12:16 | 30 |
|
re. .65
I'm certain that many Loyalists believe as you do.
The British propoganda machine has made a good job
at hiding the real issues, demonizing the Nationalists,
and censoring legal political opposition.
This is all the more reason now for the British
government to come clean and act as persuaders.
Then this 2% minority of folks who consider themselves
British, even though they were born in Ireland,
can have their fears addressed, and allayed.
Why don't you tell us, exactly what the Loyalist
fear? Is it an end to censorship? An end to a
priviliged status? Will they miss the opportunity
to kick a nationalist in the teeth.
The more I hear about the "loyalist fears", the more
they sound like certain South African neo-nazi groups
still hoping for their own privileged, and
partitioned home-land.
Mark
|
1336.69 | | KIRKTN::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Mon Feb 28 1994 12:30 | 9 |
|
Hahah... That's about the best yet.
Now your saying you know better than the majority people in NI.
SCott
|
1336.70 | Answer the questions please | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Mon Feb 28 1994 12:34 | 15 |
| re .68
Mark H.
I am sure as a father you realise that it is rude to ignore questions
when you have invited them. To then go on and start asking your own
questions whilst continuing to ignore the question put to yourself
shows a clear and obvious lack of maturity far worse then that which
claim to see in others.
please answer .48
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.71 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Feb 28 1994 12:36 | 10 |
|
Well Anyway even if Holohan doesn't get it, Martin McGuinnes is
reported as having been a lot more reasonable at the Sinn Fein
conference once the poll was announced. Of course they're still
talking out of both sides of their mouth like good terrorists, but
they see the picture. Their support is a lot more conivnced that the
Downing st declaration represents a chance for peace than the IRA are.
After all, without a nice little terrorist campaign going on, they'd
have to get honest jobs.
|
1336.72 | | KIRKTN::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Mon Feb 28 1994 12:41 | 9 |
| >> without a nice little terrorist campaign going on, they'd
>> have to get honest jobs.
Exactly,They can't hate the British that much...they let them feed
there families.
SCott
|
1336.73 | | BONKIN::BOYLE | Tony. Melbourne, Australia | Mon Feb 28 1994 18:04 | 16 |
| Perhaps some of you people out there who normally press Mark Holohan to
answer questions might like to answer the question he posed in .68:
>Why don't you tell us, exactly what the Loyalist fear?
Whatever they fear is obviously getting in the way of a united Ireland.
Maybe the Irish govt should be working to remove these obstacles so
that the loyalist fears can be allayed. I lived in Dublin for a long
time and my neighbours on both sides were prodestants. As far as I
know, their lives were not adversely affected by living in the Republic.
The only thing I can think of is the stupid Divorce laws (or lack
thereof). Any other fears ????
Tony.
|
1336.74 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Feb 28 1994 20:15 | 6 |
|
What do you fear? Maybe you'd like some terrorist outfit trying to bomb
you into becoming part of New Zealand. I admit a little far fetched,
but in general people fear being coerced into union. You;ve heard of
the phrase 'Shotgun wedding', right?
|
1336.75 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Tue Mar 01 1994 04:43 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 1336.68 by KOALA::HOLOHAN >>>
The British propaganda machine has no need to demonize the Nationalists. The IRA
has done that without any outside assistance.
> Then this 2% minority of folks who consider themselves
> British, even though they were born in Ireland,
I don't understand this. Which 2% minority are you referring to?
Dave
|
1336.76 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Tue Mar 01 1994 08:01 | 22 |
| Re .73
A few reasons why the Loyalists might not embrace a united Ireland:
The economy
Tax
Social security
Cost of living
Power of the Catholic Church
Divorce
Abortion
Contraception
Add to that what they have suffered at the hands of the IRA. There has long been
a suspicion that the Irish government has done less than it might to curtail
the activities of the IRA. For example, the extradition laws have never been
satisfactory from a British/NI viewpoint. Murder may be regarded as a political
act provided that an automatic weapon is not used. Thus the state is seen as
sheltering and protecting those who maim and kill.
Dave
|
1336.77 | praise the lord | EASE::KEYES | Technology Grp. 827-5556 | Tue Mar 01 1994 08:31 | 10 |
|
>divorce
>abortion
>contaception
>TAX
...But think of how they would all be "saved" from Hell on the
day of judgement
Mick -) -)
|
1336.78 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Tue Mar 01 1994 12:17 | 25 |
|
re. .76
The 2% I'm talking about is the minority of folks
(north east Irish Loyalists) who consider themselves
British (ie. 1,000,000 out of 50,000,000).
The British government needs to start working towards
peace. It needs to stop colluding with loyalist
terror squads, and to start answering the questions
that Sinn Fein is asking it. Once they do that they
could begin to undo the years of damage they have
done, and start working as persuaders, to allay the
fears of the folks who call themselves loyalists.
Everyone of the "fears" you mentioned can be addressed
via negotiations. But those negotiations can't
happen if the Unionist maintain their veto over
British policy in north east Ireland, and especially
if the British government refuses to immediately
sit down at the peace table.
Mark
|
1336.79 | | MASALA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Tue Mar 01 1994 12:53 | 47 |
|
>The British government needs to start working towards
>peace.
It is.
>It needs to stop colluding with loyalist
>>terror squads,
It doesn't.
>and to start answering the questions
>that Sinn Fein is asking it.
Sinn Fein are not as important as they would like people to believe.
As has been said before they,represent a very small minority of the
people in NI.So the peace process will move on with or with out them.
>Once they do that they
>could begin to undo the years of damage they have
>done, and start working as persuaders, to allay the
>fears of the folks who call themselves loyalists.
The majority of the people in NI can make up their own mind,they do
not need to be "persuaded" by anyone.
> Everyone of the "fears" you mentioned can be addressed
> via negotiations. But those negotiations can't
> happen if the Unionist maintain their veto over
> British policy in north east Ireland
You just don't get it do you....You have know idea of the level of
hatred between the two side.
> and especially
>if the British government refuses to immediately
>sit down at the peace table.
What's so out rages about what the BG want,"Stop killing and then
we'll talk".makes sense to me.....and millions of others.
SCott
|
1336.80 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Tue Mar 01 1994 17:08 | 30 |
|
re. .79
People committed to peace would not continue to
collude with loyalist terror gangs, and would
immediately sit down at the peace table with their
"enemies".
As for your refusal to believe that the British
fores collude at a high level with the loyalist
death squads, I can only say that your beliefs do
not match the facts as presented by human rights
organizations (AI for one), and human rights activists
in north east Ireland (Father Des Wilson for one).
The peace process will not move anywhere unless the
folks who are at war immediately sit down at the
peace table.
"What's so out rages about what the BG want,"Stop killing and then
we'll talk".makes sense to me.....and millions of others."
I'll tell you, the BG wants the folks it's at war
with to stop for 3 months, but makes no concession
that they will stop their collusion with loyalist
terror gangs, or their continued littany of human
rights violations directed against nationalists.
Mark
|
1336.81 | | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Tue Mar 01 1994 18:07 | 19 |
| Ok Mark, so what will the IRA lose by stopping the campaign for 3
months. Nothing!
What would they gain for this action: a seat at the talks table and a
moral victory of sorts over the loyalist terrorists.
The way I see it if the IRA came in from the cold now and began talking
the loyalist will escalate their violence in an effort to taunt the IRA
back into the fray. However its then that the IRA need to sit tight as
continuing terrorist activity by the loyalist paramilitaries will only
lead to their demonisation (to borrow a metaphor) in the media.
This won't happen however as the IRA don't care about peace, they're
only really interested in what they can get out of the whole mess
politically. Why be an elected politician, who could be out on his ear
at the next election when you have respect out the
barrel of a gun right now.
Joe.
|
1336.82 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Tue Mar 01 1994 18:25 | 9 |
| I agree with Joe. The IRA should call a cease fire, irrespective
of what Britain does. Maybe a cease fire would be enough to set
into motion a discussion of British withdrawal. Certainly, the
public eye would shift over to Britain. I realize the nasty
actions each side has endured and provoked, but eventually you
have to say enough is enough.
Sinn Fein won a major political war with Britain concerning the
U.S. visa. Momentum is on their side now.
|
1336.83 | | BONKIN::BOYLE | Tony. Melbourne, Australia | Tue Mar 01 1994 18:33 | 33 |
| re <<< Note 1336.76 by NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D "The third world starts here" >>>
>A few reasons why the Loyalists might not embrace a united Ireland:
>The economy
>Tax
>Social security
>Cost of living
All good financial reasons although I would have thought that the economy
of the ROI is in far better shape than the economy of NI. I also thought
that the cost of living was pretty similar between the ROI and Britain.
Anyone got any up-to-date figures?
>Power of the Catholic Church
Not as powerful as they imagine, not at the government level. The CC
*does* have a lot of infulence with the man in the street thru their
Sunday Mass sermons. I think this is a diminishing infulence as new
generations come along.
>Divorce
Unbelieveable that there is no divorce in the ROI although from the
current indications this may change after the next referendum. The lack
of divorce is on religious grounds and if I was a loyalist I wouldn't
have anything to do with the republic until laws like this were
changed.
>Abortion
There's no abortion in NI either.
>Contraception
I thought contraception was freely available in the ROI.
Tony.
|
1336.84 | Clintoon kisses up to JM | KIRKTN::GMCKEE | That blokes' a nutter | Wed Mar 02 1994 02:59 | 8 |
|
re- SF visa
Statement this morning (after Major's visit) from US,
No more visa's issued to SF until the IRA stop the violence.
|
1336.86 | | KIRKTN::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 02 1994 03:28 | 25 |
| re 80
> I'll tell you, the BG wants the folks it's at war
> with to stop for 3 months, but makes no concession
> that they will stop their collusion with loyalist
> terror gangs, or their continued littany of human
> rights violations directed against nationalists.
Q: What has the IRA gained in the last 3 months
A:NOTHING!.
So we're no closer to peace than we were 3 months ago.Just think how
much the peace process would have moved in the IRA had stopped their
killing 3 months ago.
Jerry Adams shot his mouth off in the US about how he was going to
do this that and the other to get peace....what's he done...nothing.
Just think how much pressure SF/IRA would have out on the BG if we
were now at the 3 month of no action.You're yer own worst enemy.
SCott
|
1336.87 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Mar 02 1994 08:42 | 23 |
|
Q: What has the British government gained in the last
3 months of refusing to explain their declaration,
and continuing their collusion with the loyalist
death squads.
A: They've managed to kill more innocent nationalists,
and have used their media machine to try and paint
Sinn Fein as the hold-outs. They've also managed
to hold off any possibility of peace.
What would have been lost by having the British explain
their contradictory remarks on the declaration?
What would have been lost by having the British
stop their collusion with the loyalist death squads?
In 3 months the British could have cleansed themselves
so that they would have had a right to sit down at
a peace table.
Mark
|
1336.88 | | MASALA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 02 1994 08:47 | 7 |
|
And so it goes on and on and on and on and on...........
SCott
|
1336.89 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Wed Mar 02 1994 09:22 | 10 |
| Mark H.
You seem to have forgotten to answer my question, please reply if only
to show me and others that we have misjudged you and that you do posses an
opinion of your own. Like you said Mark "as a father of three
children" I hope that you don't teach them to ignore questions.
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.90 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 02 1994 09:44 | 6 |
| re.87
BTW The security forces have killed no one this year.
SCott
|
1336.91 | posted with authors permission | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 02 1994 09:50 | 71 |
|
<<< PEAR::DKB100:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SOAPBOX.NOTE;1 >>>
-< SOAPBOX. Just SOAPBOX. >-
================================================================================
Note 1140.194 Gerry Adam's visit to the USA 194 of 196
BLKPUD::CHEETHAMD 61 lines 2-MAR-1994 07:49
-< Further thoughts >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re .177 in particular " crocodile tears concerning the IRA don't impress
me." and many others in general.
The fact that the moderators would probably delete the reply prevents me
using the language that immediately springs to mind regarding the above
quote,instead let me relate a little personal experience.
As I stated in my original note we live quite close to where the Warrington
bomb was planted. My wife is the head teacher of a junior school in the area
and a 10 year old girl in her school was involved in the explosion. The girl in
question was standing next to one of the children who was ripped apart by a
fragments from the bin that the bomb was planted in. The girl is now virtually
dumb, all she does is make drawings showing balloons with BANG in them, she is
receiving extensive psychiatric help and unsurprisingly suffers from
nightmares. I would personally regard it as a great pleasure and priviledge to
tear the murdering hypocritical b******s who planted that bomb to pieces with
my bare hands. This also applies to the apologists and sympathizers for such
atrocities.
re miscarriages of justice in general. As is stated in previous notes
miscarriages of justice have certainly happened, are regretted by most
people, and efforts such as appeal hearings to uncover then and compensation
to try make some amends to those wrongly convicted are to be applauded. All
societies will attempt to protect themselves from terrorists and
murderers, given the atrocities that the IRA have committed and the fact that
the police are composed of human beings who get disgusted and angry in the
same way as the rest of us I'm pleased that in the most part those who have
been convicted are demonstrably guilty. As a rider to this and to Mr Toohey's
comments regarding army activities in Ireland I'd like to hear his comments on
the Phoenix program. This was an official program run by the CIA in Vietnam
which undertook to assassinate Vietnamese SUSPECTED of being Viet Cong cadres.
As Mr Toohey has stated that he was involved in Vietnam I would be interested
in any comments he has to make on this.
re the NI situation in general. Adams failure to convince the rest of the
army council to renounce violence has now resulted in a further step back
for the peace process. Due to this failure the Official Unionists have
now decided that they are now longer prepared to talk to the Southern
government regarding cross border institutions. Can the IRA apologists not
see that the IRA is the main obstacle to a lasting peace in Ireland and
eventual re-unification. Can they not understand that if the British were to
follow the simplistic slogan "Brits out" that a bloodbath would result,with
loyalist terrorist groups targeting innocent catholics. Non of the IRA
aplogists we have seen in this note have cared to comment on the
fact,reiterated a number of times, that the IRA (Sinn Fein) gets 10% of the
vote or less, and even get a minority of the Republican vote.. comments please
gentlemen.
Finally a query which might possibly be answered from the other side of the
pond. Messrs Toohey et al obviously hate all "Brits", the more mature of us
tend to take people as individuals rather than members of some imagined racial
stereotypical group I would guess, but hating all "Brits" is their privledge.
My query is whether this is a purely american attitude, I've visited
Ireland, both North and South, a number of times on company business, met some
very nice people, and had some very convivial evenings, both in Dublin and
Belfast (Have you been there Mr Toohey?). What I have never encountered is the
blind racial bigotry to be found in some of the replies to this note. I'd
welcome any enlightnment on this.
Dennis
|
1336.92 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Mar 02 1994 10:48 | 11 |
|
re. .89
What question? Your note that's filled with
accusations?
re. .87
Not through lack of trying, besides the loyalist
death squads with whom they collude have done
their murderous best.
Mark
|
1336.93 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 02 1994 11:11 | 11 |
|
>> Not through lack of trying,
when ?
SCott
|
1336.94 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Wed Mar 02 1994 11:14 | 19 |
| Mark.
Your reply shows the true level of your maturity. However no one will
be suprised by that. The question was.::
DO YOU SUPPORT THE IRA AND THEIR CAMPAIGN AGAINST CHILDREN.
the answer can only be yes or no.
So that there is no misunderstanding this time Mark I have put the
QUESTION in Uppercase characters (big letters to you Mark) It has a
line all on it's own in the middle of the note. If you require any
further clarification (I see now where Gerry Adams gets it from)
Please do not hesitate to reply in this conference.
Regards
Bruce (who's really pleased he learned to read before starting to go
into notes)
|
1336.95 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Wed Mar 02 1994 11:23 | 27 |
| <<< TALLIS::S2:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CELT.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Celt Notefile >-
================================================================================
Note 1336.48 Joint Declaration on Peace 48 of 94
YUPPY::MILLARB 21 lines 27-FEB-1994 09:29
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To Mark Holohan.
Mark I to am a father of a ten year old son. I guess where we differ
is my son has to live in the shadow that so willingly lend you support
to whilst ensuring that your children are kept about as far away from
it as is humanly possible.
Maybe me and almost everybody else in this conference misses something
in your Mark. But you sure as hell come across as a supporter of
the IRA and therefore a supporter of their campaign against children.
If I have it wrong then please print that you do not support the IRA.
Please only answer this one line. Do not go into your usual British
Toadie facist at war with retoric.
Either you support the IRA and their campaign or you don't.
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.96 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Wed Mar 02 1994 11:25 | 9 |
| Mark H
I posted the original note for you again. I'm struggling to see all
the accusations you refer to. Still you can point them out with your
reply can't you.
Have a nice safe day.
Bruce
|
1336.97 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Mar 02 1994 13:15 | 20 |
|
re. .94
The question has no meaning as it is based on a
false premise. The IRA do not have a campaign
against children.
re. .95
The bottom line is that unfortunately, my children
grow up in a much more dangerous environment than
yours.
Now that I've answered your questions, please
answer mine.
Do support the British forces and their campaign
against Irish children?
Mark
|
1336.98 | I'm away home for my weekend now. | KIRKTN::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 02 1994 13:28 | 18 |
|
> The question has no meaning as it is based on a
> false premise. The IRA do not have a campaign
> against children.
What was Warrington???
> Do support the British forces and their campaign
> against Irish children?
There is no such campaign...other than the one in your imagination.
SCott
|
1336.99 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Wed Mar 02 1994 13:37 | 17 |
| The questions I see being posed are of the type
"Do you still beat your wife?". Cleverly worded
and made to put the receiver on the defensive.
Both sides in the conflict are guilty of civilian
murders whether or not it was an IRA bomb in a
fish shop or a British soldier shooting up cars
at a checkpoint.
Arguing endlessly about who is to blame or who supports
one particular side will not solve the conflict. Let's
instead move forward and discuss efforts to build peace
and demilitarize the region.
It's getting monotonous reading these replies.
/g
|
1336.100 | "Are you now, or have you ever been..." | CUPMK::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Wed Mar 02 1994 20:28 | 6 |
| RE: .94 by YUPPY::MILLARB
>DO YOU SUPPORT THE IRA AND THEIR CAMPAIGN AGAINST CHILDREN.
So, it's back to the McCarthy hearings again, is it?
|
1336.101 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 02 1994 20:38 | 4 |
|
Not really. Many of the people Tailgunner Joe went after hadn't written
as many notes.
|
1336.102 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Information Super do what? | Thu Mar 03 1994 06:36 | 12 |
| Actually, asking Holohan questions is a pointless exercise. Recently I
asked him many times "Do you believe that the Warrington bombing was a
cowardly act?". A question which, unlike those recently posed, does not
resemble "Do you beat your wife", but which, like those recently posed,
Holohan chose to completely ignore, and which required a simple yes/no
answer.
I've given up debating with him, or asking him questions. As I said at
the time, his silence on that matter, and his utterances before and
after that, have led me to an inescapable and inevitable conclusion.
Laurie.
|
1336.103 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Thu Mar 03 1994 07:57 | 14 |
| Re. 97
Mark shame on you !! If your pals knew what you were saying.
>> Do Support the British ..........
Still it looks like your starting to see the light.
Next time you visit Planet Earth give us a shout we could go for a beer
together.
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.104 | Oh, mygawd!!! ;^) | POLAR::RUSHTON | տ� | Thu Mar 03 1994 16:55 | 41 |
| BRITISH MOLE IN NORAID
TUNBRIDGE WELLS (Rueters) - Documents found in the home of the former
head of MI6, General Sir Arthur Pakenham, indicate that a British
citizen now living in the United States is a mole in Noraid (the
American organisation that supplies the PIRA with weapons and funds).
Pakenham's papers were to be indexed by the British Museum
when the documents were discovered. According to very reliable
sources in the PMO, the Prime Minister has been aware of the mole and
has kept the Irish Prime Minister, Mr. Albert Reynolds, apprised of
the situation.
Sources in the Foreign Office indicated that the mole works
for a Massachuset-based hi-tech manufacturer which enables him access
to a world-wide network of Noraid and PIRA sympathizers. The same
sources said that the mole, who was born in England but moved to
America in his teens, was recruited by MI6 with the cooperation of the
FBI and CIA. No details were given about the date of recruitment or
duration of his activities; his codename was "MH".
Attempts to contact his family in London were unsuccessful,
but colleagues in America who have known him and his activities in a
vast computer network expressed shock at the news. As one colleague
in Spit Brook, MA stated, "He was the finest example of the support
that Irish-Americans provide to the struggle in Northern Ireland,
I guess he really stuck to his British roots after all".
Sources in Whitehall said that during the last year, the
mole's work had become too strident, "drawing too much attention".
One source indicated that the mole "protests too much, we had to cut
him loose. Most of his rantings were unbelievable and embarrassing,
destroying any credibility that would have continued to endear him to the
Irish-Americans".
CNN's Larry King was contacted in Los Angeles, during the
earthquake, that the mole wished to have representation whenever Sinn
Fein was interviewed. As Mr. King knew at the time that Mr. Adams was
eventually to appear in the US, he agreed to an opposing viewpoint. A
Mr. Trotter was suggested by the mole to represent his case. Mr.
Trotter has been cited in MI6 files as the mole who proceeded MH.
As recently as February of this year, Mr. Trotter and MH have
been observed attending Irish language classes. This was seen by
informed sources of the CIA as an attempt to get back into the good
graces of MI6 and MI5, for future monetary considerations.
;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^) ;^)
|
1336.105 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 03 1994 17:23 | 3 |
|
Hope you don't get 'mole mail' demanding retraction :-).
|
1336.106 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Fri Mar 04 1994 09:08 | 13 |
|
re. .104
Well, the cat's out the bag, now everyone knows
you're stupid.
Mark
P.S.
Would you be the same Rushton, Eastland duo found
in a British apartment, dressed in women's clothing,
attempting to (well I can't really print it here). :-)
|
1336.107 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Fri Mar 04 1994 09:19 | 5 |
|
That's not fair cuz as you know, if we return the insult we run
the risk of having to see your illiterate mail messages exhorting
deletion.
|
1336.108 | hot hoot | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Fri Mar 04 1994 10:39 | 4 |
|
great laugh for a Friday afternoon that one!! :>)
Bill
|
1336.109 | Freedom of Noting ????? | MASALA::GMCKEE | That blokes' a nutter | Fri Mar 04 1994 11:14 | 10 |
|
RE .107
Chris,
Are you implying that Mark is advocating the censorship of an
opposing parties views ??
Gordon...
|
1336.110 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Fri Mar 04 1994 11:22 | 3 |
|
Makes quite a habit of it it seems.
|
1336.111 | Geez, whatta sorehead... | POLAR::RUSHTON | տ� | Fri Mar 04 1994 16:21 | 15 |
| >>Well, the cat's out the bag, now everyone knows
>>you're stupid.
>>Mark
Aw, c'mon!! With smiley faces and all, a little (granted, very little)
bit of humour and you have to become offensive.
But, what the hell, I've been called worse.
Have the day you deserve.
Yours in stupidity,
Pat
|
1336.112 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Sun Mar 06 1994 10:35 | 34 |
|
This is a very heated discussion!
It is also being conducted by regurgitating the propaganda of all sides.
RE: What would happen if the British Army pulled out of Ireland? Probably
not very much. The British propaganda has been constant for a number of years
in forcasting a civil war. However, Irish and Scots-Irish live quite
happily together in the USA, England, Canada, Australia, NZ and
surprisingly (perhaps for some respondents in this note) in Ireland.
Irish/Scots-Irish were distributed all over the Island before
partition and there was no mass movement across the new border.
The Irish Government has long proven the IRA's deadliest enemy (when it
suits them) and would be able to control the situation far better
than any other Govt..
RE: IRA wants to control all Ireland.
Again this is mostly propaganda. When it was in vogue to consider
Communists as society's worst enemy the IRA were painted as Communists.
Now that nobody would believe that any more the same propaganda
message has changed to suit the times. If a United Ireland ever comes
into being the IRA would disappear (or be removed) very quickly.
RE: Warrington. This should be condemmed by all sane people. It was a futile
exercise directed at people who have no influence over the future of Ireland.
It was just as futile as the killing of thousands by the fire-bombs in
Dresden in WW2. Just as futile as the bombing of thousands of innocents
all over the British Empire between the two world wars.
I'm not in any sense claiming that one offsets the other, rather before
we call Mr Holohan to justify the bombing in Warrington consider the
sentiment of the biblical saying "Let him who is without sin cast the first
stone".
Mark
|
1336.113 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Sun Mar 06 1994 11:24 | 9 |
|
What a ludicrous argument. Because of what happened in a world war
(that saved Ireland from fascism too), that's supposed to mean wd can't
criticize the IRA for being terrorist scum, which they undoubtedly are,
whatever apologia I see attempting to crawl between the lines in the
previous reply. As to what happens if the army moves out of Northern
Ireland, leaving it to the RUC to police the terrorists of both sides,
can you say "Beirut".
|
1336.114 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Sun Mar 06 1994 11:28 | 9 |
|
By the way, there's a guy on soc.culture.celtic in a topic about
Irish-American input into the NI situation, who's bleating the same
line of IRA/Sinn Fein propaganda we are innured to seeing here. Check
out how many Irish citizens, both in Ireland, north and south, and in
the US, are trying to tell him what the true situation is, where the
IRA injure more Catholics through knee-cappings and the rest of their
gangsterish tactics than anyone else.
|
1336.115 | The weather *is* better in Beirut though ;v) | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Mon Mar 07 1994 10:22 | 8 |
| Typical British propaganda has Ireland in a full scale civil war,
if the British military were to leave Ireland. Instead I believe
a military pullout would be a catalyst for peace, provided that
all groups were fairly represented in a new police force of NI.
As other noters have pointed out, people of different religious
and political backgrounds seem to get along just fine in the
Republic.
|
1336.116 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Mon Mar 07 1994 10:48 | 6 |
| > provided that
> all groups were fairly represented in a new police force of NI.
That's an easy thing to say, but a difficult thing to achieve.
Dave
|
1336.117 | | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Mon Mar 07 1994 11:13 | 16 |
| re .115
While I'd like to agree with you, I'm afraid you underestimate the
hard-line stance of a sizeable amount of the Northern Loyalist
community. Loyalist terrorists while not as well armed or organised as
the IRA have been more lethal in the last two years than the IRA and
far more indescriminate (even by IRA standards). I don't think its
propaganda that such people will not take a United Ireland "lying
down". While an imposed United Ireland would probably not reach a
Beirut scenario, even if the whole country was brought to the current
level in the North it would be a disaster for the people of the
Republic and the lot of the people of the North would probably get
worse, as British Government subsidies dried up. Remember 50% of the
workforce in NI is employed by the state.
Joe.
|
1336.118 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Mon Mar 07 1994 11:43 | 29 |
| RE: .117
Joe, I never mentioned a "United Ireland" in my note. What I speak
about is a NI that polices itself, with a police force made up of
equal members from both communities, and without the British military
to back up one particular side.
A united Ireland is a desirable (in my opinion) but very different goal,
and to be achieved only by agreement by both communities.
I believe a non-partisan police force can be succesfully implemented
under the supervision of the peoples in NI, and British and Irish
(Republic) authorities. As with any plan there is some risk of a deeper
civil war within NI. However, there are things which can alleviate
the transition and build trust among the communities, such as
- gradual, phased withdrawal of British troops
- permanent independent supervision of NI police force by Irish
and British
- integrated police force in NI (50/50)
- integrated patrols
- continual exchange of personel thoughout NI
I really believe that a demilitarization of NI is the only way to
secure peace in province. The timing and decision of joining the
Republic is disjoint from demilitarization.
If done correctly a British military withdrawal is a catalyst to peace.
/george
|
1336.119 | | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Mon Mar 07 1994 13:15 | 11 |
| George,
apologies for reading more into your note than was intended. I also
think that your suggestion has merit. It would certainly allow a
situation where it could be really seen had anything improved since the
days of the Stormont government in relation to civil rights. It would
also require a tight and absolutely impartial control structure. I
doubt that either the UK or the Irish government or both would be
suitable.
Joe.
|
1336.120 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Mar 07 1994 13:48 | 5 |
|
Ireland is not in a 'full scale civil war'. Not yet it isn't. And for
the Loyalists to refuse to be bombed into union is not "British
propaganda'.
|
1336.121 | | HILL16::BURNS | ANCL�R | Mon Mar 07 1994 14:02 | 6 |
|
Has anyone done a "Show Moderator" lately ?? :-)
keVin
|
1336.122 | | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Mon Mar 07 1994 14:36 | 6 |
| Nice one.....
I think the Pope should be a moderator as well..., after all its really
all his fault :-)
Joe
|
1336.123 | From the Irish People | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Tue Mar 08 1994 17:04 | 77 |
|
MANTON ADVOCATES PEACE IN NORTHEAST IRELAND
Congressman Thomas Manton recently spoke on the floor of the United States
House of Representatives on the issue of a united Ireland. In his speech,
Manton called upon the Clinton administration to continue to advocate a peace
plan for northeast Ireland.
Congressman Manton, who is chairman of the Ad-Hoc Committee on Irish Affairs,
and who was recently chosen Grand Marshal of New York City's 233rd Annual St.
Patrick's Day Parade, reaffirmed his commitment for peace in northeast
Ireland.
Manton stated, "I think it's appropriate that we join to discuss prospects for
a United Ireland at this juncture. In the last several months, those of us
concerned about human and civil rights in northeast Ireland have had reason
for hope. This optimism began when the most important Catholic leaders in
northeast Ireland, John Hume, the leader of the SDLP party and Gerry Adams,
the leader of Sinn Fein, announced that they had craft a historic plan to end
civil strife in northeast Ireland. Later, British Prime Minister John Major
and Irish Prime Minster Albert Reynolds took another step to encourage the
peace process by issuing their joint Declaration of Peace. More recently,
President Clinton's decision to allow Gerry Adams into the United States last
month provided an important opportunity for Mr. Adams , whom the British have
silenced through censorship in his own country, to share the perspective of a
substantial segment of the Catholic population in northeast Ireland.
While these events have been positive, change in northeast Ireland is o=long
overdue. We cannot be satisfied by the encouraging gestures we have received
from Mr. Major, Mr. Reynolds or President Clinton. We cannot be satisfied
because we cannot allow any more young lives to be sacrificed to the ongoing
sectarian strife in northeast Ireland.
Several weeks ago, Amnesty International released a troubling report entitled,
"Political Killings in Northern Ireland," which noted that more than 150
people have been killed by crown forces in northeast Ireland during the last
20 years. About half of those killed were unarmed individuals. Most were
Catholic. Disturbingly, Amnesty International expressed the view that there
was convincing evidence that British crown forces in northeast Ireland
practice a policy of deliberately killing suspects rather than arresting them.
The gravity of such a charge cannot be overstated. The idea of the RUC
shooting suspects, thereby taking upon themselves the role of investigator,
prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner is shocking to ,e as a former police
officer, and as an American. To date, the British have still not responded to
Amnesty's charges.
Unfortunately, these kind of charges against British occupying forces in
northeast Ireland are not new. While international media attention is often
rightly given to the tragedy if IRA activity in Ireland, in the US we do not
often hear of the equally gruesome violence perpetrated by the loyalist
paramilitary groups against Catholics there. My point today is not that one
type of murder is worse than another, but rather, that after more than 20
years and the deaths of more than 3,400 people, overall, the time has come to
stop simply laying blame at one side or another and bring peace to the whole
of Ireland.
Those of us who have joined here today believe that we can no longer be
patient with small steps towards peace. We must offer support to President
Clinton, and the Irish and British Prime Ministers for their efforts up to
this point. But we must urge them to do more. The fact is, northeast Ireland
is one of the last vestiges of the British colonial system. British rule in
northeast Ireland is enforced today by the barrel of the gun. TO me, it seems
the sensible thing, from all standpoints, would be to create a government for
all of Ireland which protects the rights of both Protestants and , encouraged
integration rather than reinforces separation and is determined by the ballot
rather than by bombs and fear. I firmly believe this is an Ireland that the
Irish people fervently desire. Of course, as Americans we cannot make peace a
reality. Although we can continue to speak out and urge our President to
encourage the British and Irish governments to support peace, peace must
ultimately come from the Irish people themselves. However, they must be given
the support necessary to achieve this goal. I pledge my support, and ask my
colleagues to join me in continuing to call attention to the suffering in
northeast Ireland, and speak out until the goal of peace for all of Ireland is
realized."
|
1336.124 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Wed Mar 09 1994 04:35 | 12 |
| Congressman Thomas Manton is happy to attack British rule 'by the barrel of
the gun' but is strangely silent on the IRA's attempt to coerce the Loyalists
into a united Irelend by the bomb and the bullet. He conveniently ignores the
fact that the Loyalists (the majority in NI, remember) want to remain part
of the UK. How he proposes to 'create a government for all of Ireland...
determined by the ballot' I'm not sure, since the ballot in both the North
and South, judged by Sinn Fein's share of the vote, says different.
When I see phrases like 'British occupying forces' I expect this sort of
drivel. It's stuff like this that gives Americans a bad name.
Dave
|
1336.125 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:06 | 7 |
|
They're all like that. They think all they have to do is drone on about
British injustice (which of course occurs, no denial from any of us),
Diplock courts, Amnesty int'l, job discrimination, while praising the
IRA as freedom fighters, and that will make their case for them. And it
does, with the braindead.
|
1336.126 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:22 | 13 |
| re. .124
Strangely silent on the IRA?
Mr. Manton says, and I quote, "While international
media attention is often rightly given to the tragedy
of IRA activity in Ireland,".
It seems you conveniently ignored his statements in
your attempt to demonize him.
Mark
|
1336.127 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 09 1994 10:50 | 5 |
|
Looks like Holohan found a new word. "demonize". Add that to the
Diplock courts, AI and the price of eggs in the Catholic areas of
Belfast.
|
1336.128 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Wed Mar 09 1994 12:01 | 8 |
| Mr Manton devotes 16 words to the IRA in a long tirade against the British.
Looking at his own figures, the security forces are responsible for 150 deaths
out of a total of 3,400. That means that 3250 deaths were not the responsibilty
of the security forces.
Methinks his emphasis is a little misplaced.
Dave
|
1336.129 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Mar 09 1994 12:37 | 8 |
|
re. .128
Perhaps it is because Mr. Manton, like many others
around the world, has come to the conclusion that
the British are the problem in north east Ireland.
Mark
|
1336.130 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 09 1994 12:46 | 7 |
|
I don't think even you believe that Holohan. I think it might have
begun to penetrate that dense fog that the problem is that the
Loyalists can't and won't be bombed into union. By the way, when are
you going to get out of the land you stole from the Native Americans
when you were planted in North America?
|
1336.131 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Mar 09 1994 15:05 | 7 |
|
re. .130
I'm not really too interested in what you believe
Eastland. It doesn't really have any relevance to
reality.
Mark
|
1336.132 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 09 1994 15:50 | 7 |
|
Judging by your inability to reply to the hundreds of outstanding
questions addressed to you, I'd say you demonstrate only too well the
depth of your understanding of the situation and your lack of interest
in a real exchange. All you can do is repeat your little mantras one
after the other, like a parrot.
|
1336.133 | Another of his repetitions | KIRKTN::GMCKEE | That blokes' a nutter | Wed Mar 09 1994 17:26 | 6 |
| re 127
Sorry Chris but "demonize" is an old favorite of Mark's,
normally used in the form of
"....the British media's demonisation of ______"
|
1336.134 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 09 1994 19:41 | 5 |
|
It _is_pretty pathetic isn't it. I'm almost missing Drotter. At least
he eventually answered questions addressed to him, albeit with a unique
use of vocabulary.
|
1336.135 | | WELSWS::HEDLEY | Lager Lout | Thu Mar 10 1994 03:53 | 6 |
| > I'm not really too interested in what you believe
> Eastland. It doesn't really have any relevance to
> reality.
I can't believe that you have the arrogance (or stupidity) to post
that here, given your own track record.
|
1336.136 | Who was it that wants peace? | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Thu Mar 10 1994 04:01 | 8 |
| Last night the IRA executed a motar attack on Heathrow Airport. Four
mprtars were fired and hit the northern runway. Luckily none exploded.
If they had or one had hit an aircraft on take off there could have
been 200 to 300 killed. The only damage done was to some cars in the
car park when the car holding the motars exploded. This happened at the
same time that the government was voting to maintian or finish the
Prevention of Terrorism Act. It is expected to have caused great damage
to the Peace Declaration.
|
1336.137 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Memories are made of Mead | Thu Mar 10 1994 04:17 | 10 |
| Surely Simon, you must realise that this was an accident. The bombers
were clearly aiming for the military part of Heathrow. Any suggestion
that they were attempting to kill innocent civilians is the kind of
scurrilous lie put about in the British Government's pathetic attempts
to demonise the IRA.
Sorry? What military part of Heathrow? [fx: pages rustling] Oh, there
isn't one...
Laurie.
|
1336.138 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Thu Mar 10 1994 04:23 | 8 |
| Heathrow is the world's busiest international airport, handling 47 million
passengers per year. At peak times, such as the time of last night's attack,
there is more than one aircraft movement per minute. But for the grace of
God we could be reading about another Lockerbie this morning.
I can't express in words my contempt for the scum who did this.
Dave
|
1336.139 | | NEWOA::GATHERN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 04:35 | 19 |
| I am taking my family on holiday in 11 days time, to Eurodisney. My
children have never flown before, and once they have been told they
are going, will be really excited at the prospect of flying for the
first time.
I view what happened last night with great concern. I used to work at
Heathrow and know just how busy it is at that time. Not just the
aircraft movements but all the cars and lorries going about their
business.
I think the IRA have shown their complete and utter contempt to ANY
peace moves that are going on and have shoved two fingers up at
everyone and said F*** you, we dont give a SH*T.
It's a great pity they didn't blow themselves up at the same time.
But then again, that would have made them heroes, not just the cowardly
SCUM they are.
Dave
|
1336.140 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | What goal-posts? | Thu Mar 10 1994 07:03 | 7 |
| Boys, boys! It's all the fault of the British Government. Why? Because
(and I'm not making this up), they aren't serious about peace! If the
British government were to remove the totally unreasonable
pre-condition to allowing terrorist groups a seat at the peace-table,
this would never have happened!
Laurie.
|
1336.141 | More "British" justice on the way | IRNBRU::EDDIE | Eddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537 | Thu Mar 10 1994 08:19 | 3 |
| If the cowardly scum who did this are caught then they can look forward
to a fair "British" trial and then be sent to jail for 300 years
because of all the people they might, could have, nearly killed.
|
1336.142 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:00 | 14 |
|
Deja vu! Didn't the British pull a stunt like this
about 20 years ago as some other "anti_terrorist"
legislation was being debated? All in the name of
forcing the Irish government to clamp down on the
Irish Republican Army. Of course the British military
succeeded in that plot at the cost 25 Irish lives.
Mark
|
1336.143 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:05 | 10 |
|
After the "cowardly scum" (ie. random Irish National
pulled off the streets of London), is held incommunicado
for 7 days, and tortured, we'll have a "British" inspired
confession on the sinking of the titanic (er. I mean the
mortar attack on Heathrow), that will hold up in any
"British" court.
Mark
|
1336.144 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:10 | 5 |
|
The giant brain hums into action again. Of course, the Jewish settler
who killed 50 folks in the Hebron mosque was really a paid agent of the
PLO. Duh! My brain hurtttt when I rote that.
|
1336.145 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:22 | 23 |
|
re. .144
"Duh! My brain hurtttt when I rote that."
No doubt, a complete sentence and all.
Austrolopithicus had a small cranial cavity, and now we
know he suffered severe headaches when forced to think.
Classic examples of his thoughts being:
"Duh!, should I get up today"
"Duh!, should I say I'm of special Welsh stock"
"Duh!, should I say, live by the Armalite, die by the
armalite"
"Duh!, should I bleat, remove my note"
Eastland, perhaps you should have another go at
trepination to relieve the pressure.
Mark
|
1336.146 | | WELSWS::HEDLEY | Lager Lout | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:29 | 5 |
| > Eastland, perhaps you should have another go at
> trepination to relieve the pressure.
> Mark
bollocks, you can't even spell it, Mark.
|
1336.147 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 10 1994 10:49 | 7 |
|
Give the lad credit. He is trying after all. But, mystery of mysteries,
we haven't yet heard from him on the latest act of the brave freedom
fighters, have we? You think it's worth waiting for? Or perhaps he
might tell us all about his Congressman and the McBride principles, or
the Diplock courts?
|
1336.148 | | WELSWS::HEDLEY | Lager Lout | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:08 | 11 |
| > fighters, have we? You think it's worth waiting for? Or perhaps he
> might tell us all about his Congressman and the McBride principles, or
> the Diplock courts?
oh yes, I wait in anticipation of his well thought out and reasoned
debate, I'm sure I'm set to learn the real truth about the latest
incident from a cliche free rant, er I mean tirade, er...
I wonder if he'll use that fantastic `demonise' phrase again?
Chris.
|
1336.149 | | NEWOA::GATHERN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:10 | 21 |
1336.150 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:16 | 3 |
|
Wonder why .149 is set hidden? Wonder who requested it.
|
1336.151 | I did | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:21 | 2 |
| I did because I'm fed up with the foul language and personal
attacks. Please tone it down. Thank you. /George
|
1336.152 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:22 | 5 |
| > Wonder why .149 is set hidden? Wonder who requested it.
I wouldn't like to guess, but whoever it was wasn't quick enough.
Dave
|
1336.153 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 10 1994 11:23 | 5 |
|
Mmm, well that's an improvement. One might be able to understand how
upsetting it is for people living at the scene of these mindless
attacks to hear pathetic conspiracy theories about them.
|
1336.154 | My Reasons | NEWOA::GATHERN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 12:16 | 23 |
| I apologise for offending certain people, but it must be understood
how frustrating it is for noters living in the UK. Whenever we have
a bombing or shooting incident carried out by republican terrorists
over here in the UK, certain noters the other side of the "pond" take
great delight in laying the blame, very smugly, at the door of HMG.
Twice last year both of my children were in buildings that were later
found to have explosive devices in. I made a point of this, only to
be told "What a dangerous place to have a holiday/live etc"
I was very angered by this reply, as it almost dismissed the fact that
my kids lives were put in danger by an irresponsible act.
It is the blinkered, unreasoning views held by some noters that caused
me to vent my frustration and anger.
Nothing to do with NI is straight forward, it is never black and white.
There are good and bad on both sides, and until the senseless killings
stop on all sides, nothing is going to get done.
Dave
|
1336.155 | i'm only serious | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Thu Mar 10 1994 12:23 | 16 |
|
I wonder what would have been said in this conference if the brave
freedom fighters had scored a diplomatic own goal by hitting an
American Airlines 747 as it was landing; full of British soldiers
disguised as American buisnessmen?
Since one plane touches down at the rate of one every 50 seconds or
there abouts, i doubt that American lives would not have been lost last
night.
So once again the IRA have given everyone, including America, the big V
sign.
I'd like to know which city would have been bombed by the Americans
this time if one of their airliners had been hit last night?
Bill
|
1336.156 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:16 | 21 |
|
re. .154
Apology accepted.
I too have family in London, and have flown to/from
Heathrow many times. Unfortunately, given the
abuses your government is reaping on the nationalist
population, I'm not surprised this happened. Though
there is some serious doubt as to whether or not the
IRA even did this, since the British have been known
to commit these acts and blame the IRA. Especially
when there's a vote on for more oppressive legislation.
We can all only hope that the British government will
stop it's human rights violations, end it's jury-less
trials, end it's collusion with loyalist terror gangs,
and immediately sit down at the peace table, without
one-sided pre-conditions.
Mark
|
1336.157 | tell me more | NEWOA::GATHERN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:23 | 7 |
| While I still dispute what you are saying, can you inform me of which
incident you are referring to that happened 20 odd years ago which
resulted in 25 deaths.
Curious,
Dave
|
1336.158 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:30 | 8 |
|
Re: .113
You missed the bit about "between the wars". By the start of WW2 the RAF
had 20 years experience of bombing civilians. Nothing to do with
saving anyone from facism - everything to do with holding on to Colonies.
M
|
1336.159 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:39 | 5 |
|
re. .157
The bombing of Dublin and Monaghan in 1974.
25 people died in Dublin, 6 died in Monaghan town.
|
1336.160 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:52 | 9 |
|
It's 'fascism'. It's true Britain did a lot of nasty things in its
imperial days, including a brutal putdown of the Palestinian revolt in
1936-1939. History is full of brutality. You could even put some USAF
bombing raids in that category. I don't know how many civilians they
bombed between the wars. Perhaps you could start a note on it. You
could also tell us what relevance this has to present-day terrorist
acts by the IRA, or are you claiming Britain deserves it?
|
1336.161 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:53 | 6 |
| RE: .136 by SUBURB::FRENCHS
>Last night the IRA executed a motar attack on Heathrow Airport. Four
Somebody executed a mortar attack. How was it determined to be the IRA?
|
1336.162 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Mar 10 1994 13:57 | 11 |
|
Looks as if the British government intentionaly
ignored the warning that the IRA had phoned in one
hour before the attack on Heathrow.
Was the British government hoping that a U.S. carrier
might get caught in the attack, and hence ignored
the warning? I hate to make this accusation, but
the British have been known to do these things to
influence U.S. public opinion.
Mark
|
1336.163 | news clip | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:04 | 67 |
| I would find it very odd if the IRA were responsible for the
mortars at Heathrow. That said, here's the AP report...
------------------------------------------------------------
LONDON (AP) -- Four mortar shells were fired toward Heathrow
Airport from a car Wednesday night following telephone warnings in
the name of the IRA, but police said none of the shells exploded
and no injuries were reported.
A scheduled Concorde flight from New York touched down on the
targeted runway 17 minutes before the attack, Heathrow and British
Airways confirmed.
Apparently as a result of firing the mortar shells, the car,
parked near a hotel close to the northern runway, caught fire and
exploded, a police spokesman said.
``It was like the whole car park (parking lot) was on fire,''
said Piyush Kadiwar, who manages a cafeteria nearby. Police said up
to 10 vehicles were damaged.
The runway was closed as authorities searched for shells but
Heathrow, one of the world's busiest airports, remained open.
Departing flights were delayed an average of 30 minutes and
arrivals 20 minutes, the airport said.
Scotland Yard said in a statement that three of the four rounds
had been found intact and parts of the remaining one had also been
recovered. It first reported five mortar shells were fired, but
later said the total was four.
Several telephone warnings that included recognized Irish
Republican Army code words were received, said Cmdr. David Tucker,
head of Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist branch.
The attack came just before the House of Commons voted to renew
of the Prevention of Terrorism Act, aimed at the IRA and other
paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland.
The IRA, which wants the British out of Northern Ireland, has
frequently used improvised mortars there and, in 1991, in a bold
daylight attack against the prime minister's official London
residence. Airports have not been an IRA target in the past.
It was the biggest attack in London since Dec. 15, when prime
ministers John Major of Britain and Albert Reynolds of Ireland
offered the IRA's political allies a place in negotiations if the
violence stopped.
The two prime ministers planned another meeting on their
Northern Ireland initiative Thursday.
Home Secretary Michael Howard announced the attack in the
Commons as lawmakers were debating the Prevention of Terrorism Act.
``I don't know if that incident is supposed to send some message
to this House as we conclude our debate,'' said Howard, the Cabinet
member responsible for law and order issues. ``But if it is, there
is only one conclusion which the House can responsibly take.''
The House then voted to renew the act.
Scotland Yard said the mortars were fired from a small Nissan
car in a parking lot at the Forte Excelsior Hotel on the perimeter
of the airport.
The busy A4 highway nearby, a main route west from London, was
sealed off and the hotel was evacuated, Air News said.
``I've come back from trying to sell Great Britain, and look
what's happened,'' said Matthew Wallace, manager of a Scottish
hotel who was on his way home from the International Tourism
Exchange convention in Berlin.
``I wouldn't be surprised this was designed to kill the tourist
trade.''
Heathrow, west of London, served 40.2 million international and
domestic passengers last year, ranking it fifth busiest in the
world.
|
1336.164 | Denis beat me too it. | SNELL::ROBERTS | c'mon Springtime | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:12 | 3 |
| >Last night the IRA executed a motar attack on Heathrow Airport. Four
^^^
You know this as fact?
|
1336.165 | More on attack | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Thu Mar 10 1994 14:13 | 63 |
|
LONDON (Reuter) - IRA guerrillas signaled their contempt for
the British government and a faltering Anglo-Irish peace
initiative with a daring mortar strike on the world's busiest
international airport.
The Irish Republican Army's mortar salvo on London's
Heathrow airport Wednesday threatened to shatter the peace
plan's fragile credibility as Britain's Northern Ireland
minister and the Irish foreign minister entered talks about
Northern Ireland on Thursday.
The guerrillas came close to disabling the airport and
scoring a propaganda triumph with their mortar attack, which was
seen as a violent response to parliament's renewal Wednesday of
tough anti-terrorism laws.
Five mortars hit their target, one of the airport's main
runways, and could have caused devastation but they failed to
detonate. Nevertheless, the runway was closed while police
searched for more unexploded mortars and airline passengers
suffered lengthy flight delays.
Officials in London and Dublin insisted the attack had not
shaken their faith in the three-month-old peace initiative,
which seeks to persuade the guerrillas to stop fighting and join
talks on Northern Ireland's future.
But the attack on Heathrow, the IRA's first major strike
since the so-called Downing Street Declaration was launched,
left the diplomatic effort looking even more futile.
The IRA's renewal of its campaign on the mainland will make
it nigh impossible for Northern Ireland Secretary Sir Patrick
Mayhew and Ireland's Dick Spring to put an optimistic gloss on
the peace prospects after their routine meeting in London.
Hopes of a breakthrough have turned to scepticism and
frustration as the IRA's political wing Sinn Fein refuses to
make any firm response to the proposals without first securing
what it calls ``clarification'' of the key clauses.
The declaration, hailed at the time as an historic gesture
of reconciliation, asserts that Britain has no long-term
interest in Northern Ireland but gives the province's Protestant
majority an electoral veto over any link-up with Dublin.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility from the IRA,
whose ultimate aim is a united Ireland, but police and
government officials were in no doubt about who was responsible
for the early evening mortar strike.
The IRA used the same kind of car-mounted mortars against
Prime Minister John Major three years ago and only narrowly
missed the room where he was meeting his cabinet.
British officials condemned the latest mortar attack as a
``cynical'' gesture of defiance against parliament's decision to
renew the anti-terrorism statutes which allow police to hold
guerrilla suspects for up to a week without charge.
The laws must be routinely extended every year.
The home-made mortars were launched from the car park of an
airport hotel less than a mile (1.5 km) from Heathrow's northern
runway after a caller with an Irish accent telephoned various
news organizations with a bomb warning.
The caller told police to close the airport completely and
halt incoming flights but officers decided against disrupting
the busy flight center on the basis of what were described as
``unspecific'' warnings.
``It is quite clear that the objective of the IRA was to
close the airport,'' said Home Secretary (interior minister)
Michael Howard. ``They have failed in that objective.''
|
1336.166 | 1st class Space Cadet | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Thu Mar 10 1994 15:28 | 12 |
|
> Though
> there is some serious doubt as to whether or not the
> IRA even did this, since the British have been known
> to commit these acts and blame the IRA.
He's gone,he's out a here,he's flipped...say hello to Captian Kirk when
you pass him.
SCott
|
1336.167 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Thu Mar 10 1994 15:34 | 14 |
| Re all the doubters
After every major attack by the IRA we get the"How do you know it
was the IRA".If there was a phone warning(I missed the news as I'm
night shift) they will have used a code word.The reason they use a code
word is so they don't get blamed for other peoples wrong doings.And as
was ridiculously suggested that HMG carries out attacks and blames then
on the IRA.....don't you think the IRA might just deny these attacks,
are there any denials for any attacks......NO!.So come on...lets try
and keep a grip on reality
SCott
|
1336.168 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu Mar 10 1994 15:48 | 81 |
| RE: .167 by KURMA::SNEIL
>After every major attack by the IRA we get the"How do you know it was
>the IRA".
The reason I asked was that I've not had access to any of the news
media since the first report of the attack. I wanted to know if the
IRA had taken "credit" for it, or if this was just assumed. Meanwhile
I went and found this:
Article: 5049
From: [email protected] (Reuters)
Newsgroups: clari.world.europe.western,clari.news.terrorism,clari.news.aviation,clari.news.issues.conflict
Subject: IRA Say They Carried out Heathrow Mortar Attack
Date: Thu, 10 Mar 94 6:40:21 PST
DUBLIN, Ireland (Reuter) - The IRA Thursday claimed
responsibility for a mortar attack on London's Heathrow airport,
Ireland's state-run broadcasting service RTE said.
It said the Irish Republican Army, which fired four mortars
Wednesday night from a hotel parking lot across a perimeter
fence into the airport, insisted it had given specific warnings
about the attack nearly an hour before.
Article: 5050
From: [email protected] (AP)
Newsgroups: clari.world.europe.western,clari.news.terrorism,clari.news.aviation
Subject: IRA Claims Airport Attack
Date: Thu, 10 Mar 94 10:40:08 PST
LONDON (AP) -- The Irish Republican Army on Thursday claimed
responsibility for a mortar attack on Heathrow airport, and its
leading political ally blamed Britain for prolonging the conflict
over Northern Ireland.
Four mortar shells fired from an hotel parking lot Wednesday
night landed near the north runway but did not explode. No one was
injured but the north runway was shut down 40 minutes later and
many flights were delayed.
It was the first big attack in London since Britain and Ireland
launched their Northern Ireland peace initiative Dec. 15. The
declaration offered the outlawed IRA's legal political ally Sinn
Fein a role in talks on Northern Ireland's future if the IRA called
off the violence.
The IRA claimed responsibility in a statement given to RTE,
Ireland's state broadcasting service.
Asked whether the deadline had now passed for the IRA and its
allies to accept the declaration, Irish Foreign Minister Dick
Spring said Thursday: ``I think it is very close to it.''
Spring met in London with Britain's Northern Ireland secretary,
Sir Patrick Mayhew, who insisted there were ``very sensible grounds
for being hopeful'' that the two governments political parties in
the province could make progress with or without Sinn Fein.
Prime Minister John Major told the House of Commons that the IRA
attack ``will make no difference whatever to the search for peace
in Northern Ireland.''
Gerry Adams, president of Sinn Fein, blamed the attack on the
British government's refusal to answer his calls for
``clarification'' of the terms for talks.
`` ...This attack comes in the middle of a stalemate. I would
ask now for John Major to end the stalemate,'' Adams said in a
radio interview with RTE.
``There are causes of conflict, the conflict is ongoing. Every
so often there will be something spectacular to remind the outside
world,'' Adams said.
The IRA, which issued a statement Thursday claiming
responsibility for the airport attack, has mounted bigger strikes
without apparently deflecting diplomatic efforts. Last year,
Britain and Sinn Fein continued their secret contacts despite a
massive IRA bomb in the financial district which killed one man and
caused millions in damage on April 24.
The delay in closing the north runway and authorities' decision
to keep the airport open caused controversy.
``It is intolerable that this incident put the lives of pilots,
their flight and cabin crews and their passengers at risk,'' said
Chris Darke, general secretary of the British Air Line Pilots
Association.
Commander David Tucker of Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist branch
said none of the shells hit an area actually used by aircraft.
A spokeswoman for the airport said police had finished searching
the north runway and it was reopened at 9:55 a.m.
|
1336.169 | | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Fri Mar 11 1994 03:33 | 8 |
| And to top it all, Gerry Adams publicly sTated that there would be more
suprises and these attacks would continue.
It is obvious to me that Gerry Adams, Sinn Fein, The IRA...
DOES NOT WANT PEACE....
|
1336.170 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | What goal-posts? | Fri Mar 11 1994 03:40 | 18 |
| Last night, they did it again; four more mortars near Terminal 4 which
fortunately also failed to explode.
Now Mark, refresh my memory. Tell me how it is that British that are
refusing peace.
The Downing Street Declaration states simply that peace talks are open
to anyone *except* those who continue terrorist activities. There is
no ambiguity. The IRA has shown in no uncertain terms that it is not
interested in talking peace except on its own terms, terms of
surrender by all parties with an opposing view.
This is neatly underlined by the sectarian killing of a Protestant
policeman last night in NI; the IRA have admitted responsibility.
Go on Mark, tell me again.
Laurie.
|
1336.171 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Fri Mar 11 1994 04:01 | 23 |
1336.173 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Fri Mar 11 1994 04:54 | 12 |
| > Looks as if the British government intentionaly
> ignored the warning that the IRA had phoned in one
> hour before the attack on Heathrow.
I thought you might dredge this one up. In case you are not aware, one of the
IRA's tactics is to issue vague warnings then blame HMG/the police/the army/
Ian Paisley's aunt for not acting on them.
Had Heathrow been evacuated, guess where one of the evacuation areas is?
The car park from which the mortars were fired.
Dave
|
1336.174 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Fri Mar 11 1994 05:10 | 7 |
| The Adams statement has been condemned by politicians on all sides, including
Northern Ireland Nationalists.
Dick Spring has said that the Heathrow attacks were not what he had been led
to expect and that Sinn Fein's credit is now 'very low, if not extinct'.
Dave
|
1336.175 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | What goal-posts? | Fri Mar 11 1994 09:50 | 5 |
| To make matters worse, the Loyalists have killed someone today as well.
They're all mad.
Laurie.
|
1336.172 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | What goal-posts? | Fri Mar 11 1994 10:22 | 10 |
| Hey, he sent me mail too, because I made a word-play on his name. He
didn't threaten me as such, just suggested that "since we both might
meet someday in a professional, or even perhaps a non-professional
situation", it wasn't a good idea for me to continue to do so.
Naturally, I have immediately stopped; I wonder what sort of friends he
might have.
Laurie.
|
1336.176 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Fri Mar 11 1994 10:52 | 9 |
| Folks
It seems my note has been set hidden. Therefore we have to assume that
Mark H is a really nice guy who just enjoys nice pastimes (inset
occasional bombings)
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.177 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Mar 11 1994 11:07 | 6 |
| RE: .172 by PLAYER::BROWNL
>Hey, he sent me mail too, because I made a word-play on his name. He
Hey, I made a word-play on his name and I didn't get any mail. Waaaah!
|
1336.178 | Make Whiskey not war | MSBCS::HARTNETT | Bazebol bin berry, berry good to me | Fri Mar 11 1994 11:22 | 5 |
| After two attempts it seem our errant cousins ffrom the auld sod are better at
making whiskey that morters. If it wasn't souch a tragic situation I'd be
inclined to suggest that they stick to store bought.
Tom
|
1336.179 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Fri Mar 11 1994 14:12 | 39 |
| re: - what relationship to old atrocities?
I was making a simple point here that the British Govt. (past ones) have
used similar tactics. Perhaps an analogy is a burglar who has his house
burgled is not likely to get much sympathy!
re: IRA not interested in peace.
This is just propaganda. Everyone involved wants peace, the issue is
upon who's terms that peace is based. Simply because one group doesn't
want to get involved in another's route to peace doesn't mean that
peace is not a goal.
RE: Did the IRA do it?
Of course they did. They are the only ones waging such a campaign at the
moment. Even if the British Govt. would sink to such levels as staging
the incident themselves - they wouldn't have the need to. The IRA
are waging war "by any means necessary" and have never tried to
hide their involvment in such acts. It would be pointless as well.
RE: Are the British Govt' deliberately putting civilians in the Front Line
and ignoring warnings?
It is well known to the police that a current IRA tactic is to give only
very vague descriptions of where an incident will occur. They deliberately
do this to extend the economic impact well beyond the target area. In fact
there are many false alarms given with the correct code-words.
If you listen to the Govt' spokesmen after such attacks, they don't keep
a secret of their policy to minimize the economic impact. They didn't
evacuate the Airport and they didn't close the runway. They tried to make
a very obvious statement that the Airport was still running.
There are obvious dangers if the respective policies are continued
Mark
|
1336.180 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Fri Mar 11 1994 14:31 | 23 |
|
Oh sure, "The IRA want peace" on their terms, which are unacceptable,
so they 'don't' want peace. Actually all this 'want peace' talk is
silly. It's obvious the IRA want to continue blowing up people and
buildings, and as long as they do the UDA,UFF etc will retaliate.
It isn't the British or the RUC that's been doing the killing. Or don't
you understand that? What do you think of a 'war' where one side
refrains from killing the other.
As for your lessons in British history, thanks. We all know what
atrocities all nations under the sun have pereptrated through history.
Most of our ancestors were guilty of it. This is utterly irrelevant to
the situation on the ground today, and again I ask you, is this your
justification for IRA terrorism? That the Brits killed civilians in
the past? I don't know what your nationality is. Are you claiming your
govt is blameless?
Finally, do you think the IRA are justified in blowing up airports or
runways to airports until the British pack up and go home? Then,
when you've answered that, tell us what you think will happen in the
North?
|
1336.181 | Pretty poor politico-military planning/action | CHEFS::HEELAN | Dale limosna, mujer...... | Fri Mar 11 1994 14:54 | 15 |
| What I don't understand is why the IRA chose LHR: it must damage their
standing in the international community, especially the US, as many
foreign nationals would have been killed had the mortars exploded.
Only 10 or so miles away is RAF Northolt, an airbase just as vulnerable
to mortar attack (perhaps even more so) than LHR.
Then the IRA would have been able to boast of a "legitimate target",
rather than the indiscriminate killing of foreign nationals they would
have achieved at LHR.
Has the Army Council, as well as Adams, lost control of the ASUs ?
John
|
1336.182 | Mini-plan for peace | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Fri Mar 11 1994 14:55 | 63 |
| >re: IRA not interested in peace.
> This is just propaganda. Everyone involved wants peace, the issue is
> upon who's terms that peace is based. Simply because one group doesn't
> want to get involved in another's route to peace doesn't mean that
> peace is not a goal.
I tend to agree. One could argue both ways. That the IRA don't want
peace because they keep on bombing. And that Britain doesn't want
peace because they refuse to negociate the conditions of peace...
The key point of the peace plan is the Unionist veto. The IRA will
not give in to a Unionist veto over a United Ireland. And apparently
the British will not give up the Unionist veto at this time.
So where does that leave us? Most everyone (British, southern Irish,
and most northern Irish with the exception of hardcore loyalists) that
I talk to tend to agree a United Ireland is the long term answer.
So how do you get from here to there, in some time frame, without all
the ugly violence?
- Establish a political framework (devolved government) acceptable to
all parties for initial implementation
- Announce today a British military withdrawal at some specified date
in the future provided all conditions are met
- Integrate the NI police force with representatives from both
communities, the British, and Irish garda�
- Establish stiffer sentences for future terrorist activities
(bring back the chair :vo )
- Agree to a plan for future representation of NI, either in a
federal structure (26 + 6), provincial structure (4 provinces),
complete Unity
- For power-sharing, establish some segments of government (such
as judicial for example) in the North
- To legally challenged person such as myself :v) the legal
ramifications would appear daunting. But establishing some legal
board where problems of law could be addressed with consultation
of both British and Irish authorities.
- Agreement to change various objectionable laws in the Republic
pertaining to divorce, etc...
- Agreement to give British citizenship to children of people in NI
who request it. Also provide relocation assistance for those people
wanting to move.
- Financial and economic aid from the UK, European Community (that's
what they're there for), and the US (whynot?)
- Remove all border posts and security towers, re-establish all
roads into and out of the North.
- Build a major international airport in Tyrone and start reaping
some of the US and European tourist trade
- Enjoy the new peace...
|
1336.183 | Don't fly into Heathrow or Gatwick | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Mar 14 1994 08:43 | 21 |
|
What's being lost in the anti-IRA rhetoric, is the
fact that the British forces are currently colluding
with the loyalist death squads in attempts to murder
and intimidate the nationalist population. Would
a government that wanted peace refuse to sit down at
the peace table, would a government that wanted peace
refuse to end it's collusion with the loyalist death
squads?
For all the whining that has gone on about the "mortar
attack" on Heathrow, it should be pointed out that
the Irish Republican Army has intentionaly been
launching mortars that won't explode. Their goal
has been economic damage.
Who in their right mind would take a chance and fly
into Heathrow or Gatwick? (Besides the Queen Mummy).
Mark
|
1336.184 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Mon Mar 14 1994 08:51 | 6 |
| > the Irish Republican Army has intentionaly been
> launching mortars that won't explode.
How do you know this?
Dave
|
1336.185 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Mon Mar 14 1994 09:39 | 27 |
1336.186 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Mar 14 1994 09:59 | 8 |
1336.187 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Mar 14 1994 11:23 | 5 |
|
Please remove the racist remark in -1. I also find it passing strange
that you should be boasting that the IRA deliberately used duds, given
how you approve of their using the real stuff in other places.
|
1336.188 | Confusing ! | CHEFS::HEELAN | Dale limosna, mujer...... | Mon Mar 14 1994 13:28 | 31 |
| Any piece of metallic detritus (unexploded mortar or not) can cause a
major disaster to an aircraft taking off or landing. So it was still
either naivety on the IRA's part (which I doubt a professional
terrorist organisation has) or careless disregard as to the outcome of
their actions on defenceless civilians (of which the IRA has a track
record).
There are many reports of IRA mortars failing to explode in various IRA
attacks in NI, so it is more likely to be faulty equipment/operation
that is the cause than the alleged soft-heartedness of the IRA.
IMHO, the LHR and LGW attacks were ill-judged political actions by the
IRA. There is no need to demonstrate "Look what we can do" (as if after
Warrington, Harrods, City, Hyde Park, Birmingham, Dover, Guildford
anybody in the UK needed reminding about the implicit vulnerability to
terrorist attacks).
All that happens is that they p*ss off foreign nationals travelling
through the busiest international airport in the world, most of whom
don't GAF about what is happening in NI.
In addition, they have given Westminster and the Dail the perfect
opportunity to hang Adams out to dry as being totally untrustworthy.
(Maybe that's what the IRA Army Council want: perhaps Adams is so out
of favour now with the IRA bosses that they want to nullify him without
assassinating him and blaming it "on security forces".)
Politics is dirty.
John
|
1336.189 | Economic attack on Heathrow having strong effect. | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Mar 14 1994 13:30 | 29 |
|
British government is continuing to ignore the IRA's
warnings and according to AP.
``The luck of the British authorities who are deliberately
taking these calculated and cynical gambles with peoples' lives
will inevitably run out,'' it said.
"Lines of angry passengers waited for telephones and toilets or
to buy food. Others sat slumped over their luggage. The public
address system poured out a stream of messages announcing
cancellations, delays and advice to passengers to go home and
consult their travel agents."
According to Reuters:
``We can cope with one or two incidents, but if they
continue and our customers suffer, then we'll have to consider
trucking cargo down to continental airports instead of using
Heathrow,'' said Steve Finch, managing director of Burlington
Air Express U.K. Ltd., a major British air freight forwarder.
Damage to the airport, which has just spent $44 million
upgrading facilities, was scant, but the Irish Republican Army's
aim was to inflict financial pain with high-profile attacks on
British economic and commercial targets.
|
1336.190 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Mon Mar 14 1994 13:46 | 4 |
|
You sound rather pleased. Wonder if any DEC shipments, customers or
personnel were put at risk.
|
1336.191 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Mar 14 1994 13:57 | 7 |
|
re. .190
I hope not. Perhaps they could be re-routed through other, safer
countries, until this thing is worked out.
Mark
|
1336.192 | | ADISSW::SMYTH | | Mon Mar 14 1994 13:56 | 7 |
1336.193 | | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Tue Mar 15 1994 03:35 | 5 |
| Digital do in fact ship a lot of cargo via Heathrow, we even had an
office and warehouse in the grounds.
Simon
|
1336.194 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Tue Mar 15 1994 03:49 | 12 |
1336.195 | | WELSWS::HEDLEY | Lager Lout | Tue Mar 15 1994 03:53 | 6 |
| re .191
really easy to be smug when you're sat several thousand miles away, isn't
it? It's really big of you to make all your clever comments when others
lives are in danger, but, well, I suppose it's all just light entertainment
as far as you're concerned. Git.
|
1336.196 | 5th NOT 1st | IRNBRU::EDDIE | Eddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537 | Tue Mar 15 1994 04:03 | 6 |
| Just for the record, Heathrow is not, as the English would like it to
be, the busiest airport in the world. It is actually the fifth busiest.
It would do no harm for Heathrow to lose some business to other
European or English colonial airports like Prestwick, Glasgow,
Edinburgh, Aberdeen etc.
|
1336.197 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Tue Mar 15 1994 04:46 | 15 |
|
> Who in their right mind would take a chance and fly
> into Heathrow or Gatwick? (Besides the Queen Mummy).
You could try asking our project manager, who flew in from Geneva last week.
Or the Americans who were here. Or perhaps you would rather see Digital's
business go down the pan while they stay at home.
Just to get something straight, it's not the security forces who are putting
lives at risk at Heathrow. It is the IRA.
You may approve of what the IRA are doing. The Irish government certainly
doesn't.
Dave
|
1336.198 | | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Tue Mar 15 1994 04:51 | 8 |
| So the alternative to not evacuating the airport is to close and
evacuate. Where do all the people go? For a start one of the evac.
areas is the hotel carpark where the first motar was fired from. The
IRA are known to plant secondary devices in the evacuation path. In
an evecuation situation it is a human trait to panic. People are going
to try and get out as quick as possible. There would be injories,
possibly deaths as people could get trampled.
|
1336.199 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Tue Mar 15 1994 05:05 | 10 |
|
John Major said yesterday"There will be no talks while the violence
continues".
A TV poll the other day showed that over 70% of British people think
that there should be no more talks at all.
SCott
|
1336.200 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Tue Mar 15 1994 05:13 | 17 |
|
Holohan,
Are you typical of the American attitude to terrorists ? If so, you are a
nation of wimps. Do you really belive that because some lunatic fringe is
trying to cause disruption that people should give in ?
I hope that your fellow countrymen have a little more backbone than you. If
not, the good ole US of A would be brought to a standstill by one man with
a water pistol.
As for your "I only ever wanted to be an American" bit.... Pass me the
sick bucket please.
Mark R.
|
1336.201 | | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Tue Mar 15 1994 07:09 | 17 |
1336.202 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Tue Mar 15 1994 07:19 | 17 |
| Note title: 5th NOT 1st Lines: 6
Author: IRNBRU::EDDIE Eddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537
> It would do no harm for Heathrow to lose some business to other
> European or English colonial airports like Prestwick, Glasgow,
> Edinburgh, Aberdeen etc.
Yes, just think of all the benefits that Ayrshire could reap, Eddie. We
could have more noise pollution, traffic chaos as all the cargo was trucked
out of Prestwick, more air pollution from the exhaust fumes AND we could
become a terrorist target too. Brilliant idea !! Why didn't I think of
that one ?
Mark
|
1336.203 | roots | MSBCS::HARTNETT | Bazebol bin berry, berry good to me | Tue Mar 15 1994 08:09 | 8 |
| I hope that both sides of this question would realize that the IRA is and
has always been a Marxist organization and as the communist empire crumbles
they are becomming very nervous. Lets count now communism consists of
PRC, Cuba, IRA and The University of Wisconsin.
JMHO
Tom
|
1336.204 | Anybody got the REAL figures ? | CHEFS::HEELAN | Dale limosna, mujer...... | Tue Mar 15 1994 08:22 | 11 |
| re .196 "English colonial airports like Prestwick, Glasgow, Edinburgh,
Aberdeen"^^^^^^^^
Brave man !!! :-))
BTW, the claim was for the busiest International Airport (O'Hare has
more aircraft movements but not international ones; the only
challengers in Europe could be CDG, Schipol or Frankfurt.
John
|
1336.205 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Tue Mar 15 1994 08:28 | 7 |
| Isn't the English colonial airport of Prestwick only used for rubber band jobs
these days?
Dave
(Who had to fly to Glasgow on his last visit to Ayr)
|
1336.206 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Tue Mar 15 1994 08:56 | 9 |
1336.207 | | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Tue Mar 15 1994 09:02 | 9 |
| � then I could clear up our little misunderstandings
Look out Bruce, make sure you wear steel knee-cap protectors.
While on the subject of torture, several years ago an Army Captain was
captured by the IRA. He had been tortured and killed. When he was found
it was revealed that he had had his knee-caps drilled and threaded and
an eye bolt screwed into each knee, he was found hanging from a rafter of
an old warehouse.
|
1336.208 | who's foolin who? | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Tue Mar 15 1994 09:28 | 17 |
1336.209 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Tue Mar 15 1994 09:29 | 20 |
1336.210 | IRA targets in Scotland ? | IRNBRU::EDDIE | Eddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537 | Tue Mar 15 1994 11:58 | 10 |
| RE .202
Mark,
Can you name the last Scottish IRA target ?
If having lots of aircraft flying over you is all bad then why do the
English insist on grabbing as much as they can ? Aeroplanes = money !
Eddie.
|
1336.211 | The Irish are a fair people,they never speak well of one another. | HILL16::BURNS | ANCL�R | Tue Mar 15 1994 15:33 | 21 |
|
200+ replies, and it just goes on, and on, and on , and on .......
Jaysus Lads, Have ye no home to go to ????
"Put an Irishman on the spit, and you can always get another
Irishman to turn him."
George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) Anglo-Irish Playwright, critic"
|
1336.212 | If ye hurry Supermacs will still be open... ;v) | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Tue Mar 15 1994 15:50 | 5 |
| Time now lads, drink up now.
Right so. Time lads.
Please. Time.
|
1336.213 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Wed Mar 16 1994 07:34 | 16 |
|
> Can you name the last Scottish IRA target ?
Nope. But I've no doubt that the IRa can hit a moving target, economic or
otherwise.
> If having lots of aircraft flying over you is all bad then why do the
> English insist on grabbing as much as they can ? Aeroplanes = money !
I'm not disputing that a busier Prestwick airport would have it's
advantages Eddie. I'm just keen to point out that there's a drawback to
everything, including increased economic activity.
Mark
|
1336.214 | Why not Scotland ? | IRNBRU::EDDIE | Eddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537 | Wed Mar 16 1994 07:46 | 4 |
| Re -.1
Why do you think the IRA hasn't targeted Scotland ?
|
1336.215 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Wed Mar 16 1994 07:58 | 17 |
|
RE.-1 I don't know, but I'll have a few guesses. Tell me if I'm right.
A lot of Scots are of Irish descent (me included) ?
A lot of Scots are sympathetic to the cause of Nationalism and
see many similiarities between Scotland and NI ?
A lot of Scots provide financial support for Irish nationalist
organisations ?
I really don't know Eddie. Perhaps you could enlighten me ?
Mark
|
1336.216 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 16 1994 08:02 | 6 |
|
I think it may be along the lines of, "We are fellow celts who have
also been oppressed by the English".I don't know if I read any sort of
weird pride in that or not. Scotland has certainly had its own role in
the history of Northern Ireland.
|
1336.217 | | PAKORA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 16 1994 08:51 | 8 |
|
I think you'll find that most Scot's will support the the Majority of
the people in NI who want to remain part of the UK.
SCott
|
1336.218 | Scotland's ties are too close | KIRKTN::GMCKEE | That blokes' a nutter | Wed Mar 16 1994 10:55 | 7 |
|
You'll also find that many Scottish Catholics and Scottish
Protestants sympathise with their respective communities in NI
and provide support/funding/safe houses for both sides.
Gordon...(A Scottish Protestant from Irish decent)
|
1336.219 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 16 1994 11:00 | 5 |
|
Scotland's historical ties are indeed close, as can be seen by looking
at a map. They had to have been engaged with each other due to
proximity - more engaged than those in the South perhaps.
|
1336.220 | My answer | IRNBRU::EDDIE | Eddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537 | Wed Mar 16 1994 11:52 | 11 |
| In my opinion .216 comes closest to the answer although all of the
other comments are perfectly valid.
Scotland is still an English colony similar but not identical to NI
which has its own particular problems. One of the reasons I have heard
quoted as to why the "Conservative & Unionist Party" do not want
Scotland to be independent is because it would set a precedent for
Wales and NI. The Tories will never give up any "corner of a foreign
field that will be forever England".
Ed.
|
1336.221 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Mar 16 1994 12:03 | 9 |
|
re. .220
Eddie,
Perhaps the Scottish people aren't asking the English government
in the right way? What methods are currently be employed by
Scotland to seek it's independence?
Mark
|
1336.222 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Wed Mar 16 1994 12:15 | 3 |
| Didn't the Scots Nats got creamed in the last general election?
Dave
|
1336.223 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 16 1994 12:27 | 7 |
|
I think Holohan is suggesting a bit of the old 'economic targetting'..
We all know about Bannockburn et al, but I think you should recognize
that many Scots have rather enjoyed the Act of Union at times, like
when England was the workshop of the world and so forth. But sure, go
ahead, blame it all on the English.
|
1336.224 | | KERNEL::BARTHUR | | Wed Mar 16 1994 13:06 | 16 |
|
Having lived in England for 12 years now, maybe i can add something to
this.
There is no doubt that the government in England is very biased towards
it's own. There is also no doubt that many English commentators regard
Scotland, Wales and Ireland as mere provinces.
That said, the English are no different to any other race in their
attitudes or hang-ups about different subjects and they have some
pretty peculiar narrow minded attitudes about some things. But don't we all!
Scotland ought to have it's own parliament though but i would stop
short of independance because nationalism really has had it's day.
There is no real good reason why countries cannot have unions but
govern themselves which is more or less what happens in Europe today.
Auld Reekie born and bred.
|
1336.225 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Wed Mar 16 1994 15:30 | 47 |
|
Re: Scotland's involvement
I don't think the IRA would target Scotland, it's really England they are
seeking independence from.
Somebody correct me if I'm wrong but ...
Scotish people aren't just involved because they're close. The "Protestants"
in Ulster are, by and large, more usefully referred to as the "Scots-Irish".
When England decided to colonize Ireland the prime beneficiaries of this
policy were Scots. Some Scots integrated, as indeed did most of the English
settlers. I can't recall them at the moment but some of family names
that are commonly regarded as quintessentially Irish are actually Scots. I
think it's the Mc.xxx range. However the Scots-Irish in Ulster didn't
integrate and rest, as they say, is history...
Suppose that some day the Scots decide to get serious about independence and
resort to an irregular military campaign to achieve it. Let's
further suppose that the Scots-Irish don't like the deal they are getting in
Ireland [if you listen to Ian Paisley that's a current reality]. It would be
interesting to speculate who the Scots-Irish would back? I wouldn't like
to call that one, I'd put the odds 50/50 Scotland/England.
An interesting historical perspective is the American Revolutionary War.
By the time the land rush, from Scotland to Ireland, was in full swing the
latecomer Scots found that all the best land had gone. Some of them went
on to America, often joined by relatives that had settled Ireland some
generations back. Their migration was mainly to the "Back Country", which
I think is now the west parts of the Carolina's and Virginia. Not plantation
country, more south and west of that. Historical attention usually focusses
on the "shots that were heard around the world" in 1776 (or thereabouts).
Though the Revolutionary war might have been said to have started in Boston
that town basically sat the war out. The British were thown out of America
by George Washington's Army. That army was primarily made up of Scots-Irish,
Scots-Borderers [probably their descendents].
Now whether history is any predictor of the future? Your guess is as good
as mine. But I do agree with the extract in the Bernadette Devlin posting
that resolving the problems in Ireland is about correcting historical
wrongs. It's also interesting that these events are more recent by 100-200 yrs
that the events that are the root cause of todays problems in Ireland.
Mark
p.s. the part about Scots-Irish involvement in American Independence comes
from a book called "Albions Seed". If anyone's interested i'll post full
details of that book.
|
1336.226 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 16 1994 21:00 | 14 |
|
The British were thrown out of America by many English descendants, I
am quite sure of that. The soldiers the German king of England sent
were Hessian mercenaries in large part, Boston at that time was ranked
second only to London as English literary center, and with 4 million
odd inhabitants the American colonies and Britain were involved as much
a civil war as anything, given the support the colonies had in the
shires of England, Scotland and Wales (who were all together in the
colonialist expansion into North America and other parts of the world).
I guess I read into your notes, few as they have been to date, yet
another one who likes to bash the Brits whenever there's a chance.
Maybe I'm wrong.
|
1336.227 | | CTHQ::LEARY | It'sBeenALongTimeComing... | Wed Mar 16 1994 21:30 | 17 |
| I'm not so sure it's Brit-bashing per se that is being brought out,
but more a perceived (possibly from this American's viewpoint)
recounting of history(anti-British gvmt?), right or wrong.
To me, it's very interesting to try to understand how perception
of history has shaped many viewpoints, particularly of the Irish
diaspora here in America.
So I find all history on the anglo-irish-scot-welsh relationships
vital as long as it's kept in the proper context.
And I wish a happy St Patrick's Day to all, and may there be
peace in the British and Irish isles soon, however idealistic
that may sound.
Mike
|
1336.228 | Interesting comments from unexpected quarters | CHEFS::HEELAN | Dale limosna, mujer...... | Thu Mar 17 1994 03:32 | 12 |
| Interesting comments on the Beeb this morning from Congressman (did't
catch his name, but he is Grand Marshal this year of the NY St
Patrick's Day parade) and Joe Kennedy (no friend of the UK).
Both said that the IRA should now back off violence and give the peace
process the chance to work out.
Congressman (?) was concerned that now the US was talking about Iraq,
Lenanon and NI in the same breath.
John
|
1336.229 | | BUSSTP::DSMITH | Tears of a clown..fatboys's back | Thu Mar 17 1994 03:34 | 15 |
|
re .23
"many Scots have rather enjoyed the Act of Union at times, like when
England was the workshop of the world"
Maybe so, but many Scots can remember when Scotland was the workshop
of the world. Nowadays there's little or no steel industry,
shipbuilding, car industry, coalmining, heavy engineering etc etc.
Much of this has disappeared under Conservative governments who have
never had much support in Scotland, so its no surprise when we "blame
it all on the English"
Danny.
|
1336.230 | MacGonigall was the Poet Illiterate ! | CHEFS::HEELAN | Dale limosna, mujer...... | Thu Mar 17 1994 03:41 | 12 |
| re .229
What about the "oil", Danny ? You haven't mentioned the "oil" that
the Sassenachs stole, or the profits from military expenditure on
shipyards, naval bases, air bases, tourism, grants to attract industry
(especially in Silicon Glen) that Johhny Cope's men have forced on the
poor "crofters".
:-))
John
|
1336.231 | Scotland still enslaved by England | IRNBRU::EDDIE | Eddie McInally, FIS, Ayr. 823-3537 | Thu Mar 17 1994 04:43 | 41 |
| Re .222
> Didn't the Scots Nats got creamed in the last general election?
Yes. The people of Scotland voted Labour again. Labour had promised a
Scottish Assembly and they won most of the seats in Scotland with the
Tories only getting 9 out of 76 seats. In the previous general election the
Tories had only 6 out of 76 seats in Scotland and in both cases we
suffered a Tory Government.
The Scottish National Party are the second most popular party in Scotland
behind Labour with the Tories in FOURTH position. The figures quoted on 8th
March this year were as follows :-
Labour 47%
SNP 25&
Lib/Dem 15%
Con 13%
While consistently polling a high percentage of the vote in every election
the SNP fail to win many seats because of the British "first past the post"
electoral system.
The issue of Scottish independence has been discussed at length in
IRNBRU::SCOTLAND note 195. This conference also covers many other aspects
of Scotland and Scottish life. (Hit KP7 to add)
Re .223
> many Scots have rather enjoyed the Act of Union at times, like
> when England was the workshop of the world and so forth
Can you explain to me why Scots should enjoy England being the workshop of
the world ?
The double standards of the English Government can be seen when they tell
the Scots "it is better to be in a Union because you can reap all of the
benefits of belonging to a bigger establishment", while they are
continually striving to disempower the European Union by vetoing all
attempts to move towards true European Federalism.
|
1336.232 | | WELSWS::HEDLEY | Lager Lout | Thu Mar 17 1994 05:20 | 7 |
| re .229,
exactly the same story in northern England, I'm sure that the dock workers
on the Tyne who lost bids to the Clyde will be interested to hear your
comments.
Chris.
|
1336.233 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | One hundred and eeiigghhttyyyyy | Thu Mar 17 1994 07:14 | 41 |
| >Author: KOALA::HOLOHAN
> re. .220
>
> Eddie,
> Perhaps the Scottish people aren't asking the English government
> in the right way? What methods are currently be employed by
> Scotland to seek it's independence?
>
> Mark
Scotland is similiar to NI in many ways. An example of this is
considerable amount of people who believe that some sort of break with
England is a good idea. The Scottish Nationalists are very vocal and have
a high profile in Scottish life. They have a fair amount of support
accross the country. As Eddie points out, the shambolic first past the
post electoral system has been their downfall. Their number of seats in
Parliament is grossly understated.
Where the SNP wish to influence policy, they use argument, persuasion,
facts, statistics. In many cases, they win the argument, in some they
lose. That's life. Recently, a couple of hardline nationalist groups have
sprung up - Settler Watch and another crew whose name escapes me right now.
Their activities have involved intimidating English settlers, Vandalising
property etc. They have been, quite rightly, comdemned by the SNP.
So Mark, the SNP have accepted that the only way forward is to continue to
try to influence people by means of persuasion and argument. If they were
to become associated with acts of violence, as your question above seems to
recommend, their support would plummet. Another factor to consider is that
the Nationalism debate in Scotland isn't really based on religion. You
may hear sections of the support of certain Glasgow football clubs singing
in favour of the Pope,the Queen, the IRA, the UDA or whoever. However
these are the same people who do not know that Wolf Tone was actually a
Protestant or that the the Queen has absolutely nothing to do with the
Protestant Church of Scotland. These supporters also tend to have single
figure IQs.
All in my humble opinion as usual,
Mark R.
|
1336.234 | An observation and a thought... | PEKING::WOODWARDP | | Thu Mar 17 1994 08:56 | 17 |
| Scotland united politically with England (it was already linked through
a shared monarch) because the Scottish Grandees wanted access to
England's world wide trade. Scotland's own attempt to found a colonial
empire ended with the destruction of the Darien settlemnt on the
isthmus of Panama at the hands of the Spanish. The Scots at least had a
little more leeway in surrendering their parliament than the Irish a
century later, although the people of Edinburgh rioted when they heard
the news, it was their leaders who capitulated.
I think that the union between the nations of Britain and Ireland has
outlived it's usefulness. The break-up of the British unitary state would
be the final act of de-colonisation, and it's replacement by a looser
confederation within Europe, may even show the way ahead for a fair
settlement in Ireland.
Woody.
|
1336.235 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 17 1994 10:44 | 29 |
|
From George Melloan's column in today's Wall St Journal (Melloan
is deputy editor (international)).
"One root of my family tree. assiduous research has shown, sprang
from the green hills of County Tyrone. According to the ninth
century Book of Armagh, St Patrick himself once wandered thereabouts,
converting the heathen Irish to Roman Catholicism. I'm one of the
45 million Americans who claim Irish ancestry..
....
"Of course one can't avoid Ireland's dark side. after a week in
which the IRA harassed Britain again by lobbing some mortar shells
over the boundary fences of Heathrow Airport. But judging from
weekend manifestations in SAn Francisco and Boston, most of the
IRA's remaining support comes from America's lunatic fringe. In
the Irish Republic and even Northern Ireland, disgust with the
IRA's bloody doings is rising. The gentle St Patrick would have
found them appalling.
"But don't let me spoil the fun that will enliven hospitable and
boozy venues in NY and other American towns and cities roday.
The gentle legends will live on. And in the pubs of Dublin there
are some who will raise a glass today to the future of a new, modern
Ireland, with little place for the ancient hatreds of Sinn Fein and
the IRA. If Ireland's sons and daughters in the New World could only
be in Dublin to see what's really happening, it might be a merrier
St Patrick's day all around.
|
1336.236 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Mar 17 1994 11:07 | 22 |
|
Yes, I've been warned that there would be a British
press blitz trying to undo the damage done, by
freedom of speech in America (ie. the Gerry Adams
visit).
Hopefully some of those raising glasses will be
praying for an end to British human rights violations
in north east Ireland. I'll make my toast to an
end to British collusion with loyalist death squads.
"lunatic fringe", this of course is British for
people who dare to read reports by Amnesty
International and Helsinki Watch, and then dare to
question the crimes of the British. What disgust
would St. Patrick have for those who only concentrate
on the IRA, and forget the real criminals behind
this bloodbath, the British.
Mark
|
1336.237 | | NEWOA::GIDDINGS_D | The third world starts here | Thu Mar 17 1994 11:16 | 6 |
| > Yes, I've been warned that there would be a British
> press blitz trying to undo the damage done, by
I didn't realise that the Wall St Journal was in British ownership.
Dave
|
1336.238 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Thu Mar 17 1994 11:19 | 4 |
|
Took the words right out of my keyboard. Glad to see the remarks hit
home. They are of course spot on target.
|
1336.239 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Thu Mar 17 1994 16:17 | 36 |
|
Re: .226
The English descendents were responsible for declaring independence, particularly
the Puritan Hegemony. However, they didn't do very much of the fighting.
Independence was delivered by the Scots-Irish and Scots Borderers that made
up George Washington's Army.
The replies prior to my last note indicated [to me at least] that the
respective authors had no idea of the Scots connection to the current
situation in Ulster. My only intent was to raise awareness of the connection.
With regard to the point of the Revolutionary War, I was hoping to emphasize
two points:
1. The affinity between Scots and Scots-Irish is perhaps greater than
their respective affinity to the English.
2. That on the last chance the Scots and Scots-Irish [descendents!] had
to unite they did so against the English.
In other notes there had been some very negative reaction to American involvement
in resolving the current situation. I was also hoping to raise awareness of
the historical importance of the Scots-Irish in American history. They really
delivered the USA, had they chosen to ally with England we would probably
still be talking of the "North American Dominion".
There, hidden agenda revealed!
Most of that history comes from the book "Albion's Seed", which is a study of
the origins of American culture. It spans the four regional migrations from the
British Isles (Puritan East Anglia to New England, Civil War Cavaliers
to Virginia, Quakers to Pennsylvania and the Scots-Irish and Scots Borderers
to the "Back Country"). It's not at all political but it does discuss
the cultural origins and bonds between the Scots and Scots-Irish.
Mark
|
1336.240 | | PAKORA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Sun Mar 20 1994 17:46 | 9 |
|
The IRA launched a mortar attack on police station/army barracks,One
mortar hit a lynx helicopter,one RUC officer was injured in the
attack.
The mortars were fired over houses,Luckily for the people living in
those houses all made it over them.
SCott
|
1336.241 | | YUPPY::MILLARB | | Mon Mar 21 1994 07:00 | 10 |
| Well
According to our resident IRA expert, the mortars are meant to explode
if they hit anything in a uniform but miraculously won't explode if
they hit civilian targets like airports. Clever blokes these freedom
fighters.
Regards
Bruce
|
1336.242 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | They've got a cunning plan... | Tue Mar 22 1994 04:44 | 3 |
| Unless it's an accident, like Warrington, of course.
Laurie.
|
1336.243 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Wed Mar 23 1994 21:15 | 11 |
|
The IRA launched another mortar attack on a joint Police and Army
patrol.6 members of the security forces were injured.
They held a family hostage for 4 hours,then launched the attack from
their house.
SCott
|
1336.244 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | I'm the NEA, NEH, NPR | Wed Mar 23 1994 22:03 | 3 |
|
Careful Scott, or your pal might show up :-).
|
1336.245 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | They've got a cunning plan... | Thu Mar 24 1994 04:49 | 3 |
| C'mon lads, it's just a request for clarification.
Laurie.
|
1336.246 | 3 day ceasefire | AYOV20::MRENNISON | | Thu Mar 31 1994 07:44 | 18 |
| Well the IRA have called a 3 day ceasefire over Easter. The government
have called it cynical and ask why the ceasifire can't be extended
indefinitely.
This could be an interesting development. It has come at a great time
for John Major as it diverts a lot of attention away from the EEC
fiasco and the calls for his resignation.
I'd say that the ceasefire is a step in the right direction. The
government should, in my opinion, talk to Sinn Fein for 3 days but make
it clear that when the ceasefire ends, the talks end too.
I have little faith in either Sinn Fein or the UK government so I will
not be holding my breath waiting for a breakthrough. But there is
always hope.
Mark
|
1336.247 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | RADARed on the Info Highway | Thu Mar 31 1994 07:52 | 5 |
| RE; .246
Well said. Yes, let's hope.
Laurie.
|
1336.248 | When it suits them... | KIRKTN::GMCKEE | That blokes' a nutter | Thu Mar 31 1994 08:01 | 5 |
|
Why do the IRA only declare ceasefires at public/religious holidays ???
Anything to do with them also wanting a quiet weekend with the family
along with everybody else.
|
1336.249 | | METSYS::THOMPSON | | Thu Mar 31 1994 14:45 | 5 |
|
This one is also rumoured to be in celebration of the "Easter Rising" in
1916.
M
|
1336.250 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | RADARed on the Info Highway | Fri Apr 01 1994 04:26 | 8 |
| The IRA seem to declare "cease-fires" at "holiday" times like Christmas
and Easter. I don't recall any such offers from the thugs on the
Loyalist side. Personally, I don't see why it's so difficult for all
the terrorists to call a ceasefire, and to sit down at a table with
the British and Irish governments, and each other. that, after all, is
what they *claim* they want.
Laurie.
|
1336.251 | | KURMA::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Sat Apr 09 1994 22:10 | 9 |
|
The IRA launched two attacks after there cease-fire.The First was
2 minutes past midnight,they fired shots at a check point.the second
was a grenade attack on a RUC station.No one was hurt.
SCott
|
1336.252 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Hitchhiker on the Info Highway | Mon Apr 11 1994 11:51 | 5 |
| Not to forget that "someone" killed a woman in Belfast the day before.
The UFF are suspected, and the motive is believed to be "because she
was a Catholic". They're all sick, the lot of 'em.
Laurie.
|
1336.253 | Clarification requests | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Mon Apr 11 1994 13:34 | 74 |
| from An Phoblacht/Repubican News
April 9, 1994
AP/RN Editorial/ Opinion
No time for trivia
The British government has made much propaganda in recent days and weeks,
asking what clarification Sinn Fein could possibly want about the Downing
Street Declaration.
Sinn Fein has consistently said that it is concerned about the ambiguous
wording of the document itself, as well as about subsequent contradictory
statements by both governments and has asked what processes are envisaged for
moving the peace process forward. Sinn Fein has also requested to know what
the British government's long-term intentions are towards Ireland.
This week, Gerry Adams has expanded further on what clarifications Sinn Fein
is seeking. In an interview with the Irish Press he outlined that republicans
want clarification of where the British government stands on the Government of
Ireland Act. He pointed out that while the declaration mentions Articles Two
and Three of the 1937 Constitution, the British act is omitted.
Adams also spelled out for the British the concern of republicans about the
status of the unionist veto, which he described as ''a governmental imperative
which gives one party more rights than any other,'' a right which no group
should have. He echoed the sentiments expressed by Martin McGuinness that
there could not be a situation in terms of Irish democracy ''when one side can
have a veto''.
He pointed put that a unionist veto meant no movement and also that we cannot
have a new Ireland without them. He asked then how do the British government
intend moving the process forward?
The churlish manner in which this week's IRA suspension was publicly greeted
by John Major is regrettable given that the British government has clearly
lost the clarification debate at this stage. The suspension offered Major a
golden opportunity, as John Hume and Cahal Daly have pointed out, to provide
clarification without 'losing face'. But others have also played a negative
role this week, particularly Dublin Foreign Minister Dick Spring. Spring took
the opportunity to describe a Sinn Fein candle-lit vigil for peace outside the
British embassy in Ballsbridge - timed to coincide with the start of the IRA
suspension - as ''a cheap and odious publicity stunt''.
Whether he likes it or not, republicans are genuinely involved in trying to
move forward a peace process. Spring could have instead taken Mitchel
McLaughlin's constructive advice and launched a diplomatic offensive to secure
British support for a peace initiative that comes out of Ireland, designed by
Irish people, for all of the Irish people.
Another trivial and highly-personalised contribution was made on Mitchel
McLaughlin by Fine Gael's Austin Currie, whose contribution to their radio
debate consisted almost entirely of a negative verbal attack on the Sinn Fein
councillor.
For republicans and indeed, the entire nationalist community, the peace
process is more than a political football for cheap pointscoring. It is a
matter of life and death. Elected representatives from all parties have a duty
to take this process seriously. The statement in the Sunday Business Post by
Henry Mountcharles criticising John Bruton for not recognising the concerns of
the nationalist community is a welcome sign.
The name-calling continues though. On Wednesday, 6 April, John Hume was
described by Official Unionist leader James Molyneaux as ''the actor's voice
of Mr Adams''.
Everybody on these two islands, particularly politicians, has a duty to take
the peace process seriously and to try to move things forward. This week, the
IRA has made a significant gesture. Sinn Fein is ready to move forward. It
would indeed be a shame if the British government allows political cowardice
or Tory Party infighting to place further barriers in an already difficult
road towards peace.
|
1336.254 | | KIRKTN::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Fri May 20 1994 11:30 | 8 |
|
The BG has answered sinn fiens call for clarification so now all
involved are calling for SF to react positively...we'll see.
SCott
|
1336.255 | | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Fri May 20 1994 12:14 | 2 |
| Did the British Government publish their response to Sinn Fein?
It would be interesting to read it...
|
1336.256 | getting closer | SIOG::KEYES | Decadmire Engineering DTN 827-5556 | Fri May 20 1994 14:09 | 16 |
|
Its in most of the papers here....Liam may summarize on Monday.(it runs
to 20 page document)
Probably will not be a response until after the May European elections.
Its dialogue of some sorts between the parties so is a good sign.
Sectarian tension is extreemly hight at the moment. Paisley has said he
is not interested in talks anyway but the official Unionsists are
not dismissing anything.
Mayhew is doing ok....all sides accept this.
Mick
|
1336.257 | | IRNBRU::HOWARD | Lovely Day for a Guinness | Wed Sep 06 1995 05:09 | 15 |
| the latest Anglo-Irish summit has been "postponed", to allow
differences of opinion to be settled, political correspondents state
that the impasse is about the de-commisioning of arms. The peace
process is in its deepest crisis since its inception. I hope the
Clinton visit can kick-start the process again as it looks like no-one
in these isles wants to be seen to `give in' to the other side on this
issue.
Personally, I think that asking either side to hand in any of their
arms as a pre-condition to All-party talks is not an option, it simply
won't happen as has been said repeatedly. Let's hope that someone can
keep the process going, the price of failure is too high....
Ray....
|
1336.258 | deadlock | EASE::KEYES | | Wed Sep 06 1995 06:02 | 25 |
|
Irish Government cancelled at the last minute. It would seem there is
very little "give" fom both sides. The british want a gesture on
giving up arms Before any all-party talks...SF say that the this is
unacceptable and unsellable to the IRA as its imposing pre-conditions
to talks.. The unionists are insisting that a gesture on de-commisioning is
essential before they will take a chair...
I think a joint gesture might be the only way forward..ie some weapons
from both paramilitary sides..and parallel movement on prisoners.
From a practical point of view you can be sure that both sets of
paramilitaries have solid plans for re-arming in any case.
Overall not looking toooo good
rgs,
mick
|