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Ireland / Éire

ireland
Ireland / Éire cfgaussian 1 month ago 100%
26 Years of Social Violence: British Occupation & The Good Friday Agreement www.lasairdhearg.com

"The Good Friday Agreement claimed to promote “a new future for our children”. Instead, we have had precisely the opposite. With the help of Stormont, MI5 and the PSNI, former Republicans have been instrumental in normalising British control over our communities. As a result, more than 20,000 members of the British Crown forces still occupy Ireland, unbeknownst to the majority of the population. It has not even given stable government here, with the Stormont administration having collapsed eight times since 1998. This “new future” has seen miserable social conditions imposed on our people and has cemented partition for the foreseeable future, with all the inevitable consequences that come with that. Instead of a “bright future” our young people are faced with disastrous social conditions and a drop in living standards which seems to have no end in sight. They are currently living in the shadow of a drugs epidemic fuelled by the disastrous effects of capitalism on our society. One of the most visible and alarming effects, closely linked to the outbreak of drug abuse, has been the spiralling tragedy of suicides in our communities. We are quickly approaching the point where the current period of so-called “peace” has lasted as long as did the most recent phase of armed struggle. In this period there have been more than 5,000 deaths due to suicide. Recent statistics gathered have shown that the most deprived areas of the occupied Six Counties had a suicide rate twice that of the least deprived areas. This shows the havoc which British imperialism in Ireland, hand in hand with capitalism, and cemented by the agreement, has produced. Nothing but social misery on the working class of Ireland who have endured a downward spiral in living standards as a result of multiple capitalist crises; Whether it be the neo-liberal program of austerity imposed after the 2008 financial crash or the devastating effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The administrations of both failed states on this island have shown no ability or inclination to properly address these issues, or the many others facing our people. For example, more than 100,000 homes lie empty across this island because of collusion between partitionist institutions and slum landlords and vulture funds to put profits and shareholders ahead of the basic human right of all people to a home. However, at the same time, our young people are living with the knowledge that there is a good chance, if things continue as they are, that security of tenure will never be available to them. It seems likely that future generations face a prospect where short-term contracts and never-ending rent hikes are the new normal. This is the normality our children are told to accept as the price of ‘peace’. The state apparatus which sees fit to parade in front of children in schools and youth clubs armed to the teeth with machine guns and military clothing, is the same apparatus defending the implementation of the social destruction brought about by the Good Friday Agreement. The almost one hundred so-called peace walls still standing to this day in some of the most deprived areas in Ireland stand as a testament to the fact that we are as divided as ever. In many ways we are growing further apart. It would not be a stretch to say this is by design. The state has a vested interest in keeping working class people divided. Communities that are kept apart are much less of a threat to the interests of the ruling class. We have to continue asking the question. Was it worth it? Did the disbandment of our revolutionary movement improve the quality of life for our children and future generations? Was the “new future” promised to them 26 years ago delivered? In the opinion of ourselves as Socialist Republicans it’s clear that the answer to these questions is no. We find ourselves in the midst of yet another capitalist crisis. People are having to choose between heating their homes and putting food on their table. At Lasair Dhearg, we are fighting to rebuild Irish Republicanism from the depths that former comrades left us in through their capitulation 26 years ago. There are those of us from past and current generations who are determined to continue the struggle against foreign imperialism. We are fighting not only the British state but the capitalist system as a whole. Only through the eradication of both failed states and the establishment of a 32-county socialist republic can we hope to provide a solution to the conditions faced by people across the island. We hope to build a new future, one which the Good Friday Agreement never offered our people. It’s time for a Socialist Republic."

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ireland
Ireland / Éire LarkinDePark 5 months ago 100%
Fine Gael votes down motion to enact Occupied Territories Bill www.thejournal.ie

>Coveney says he hasn’t heard any negative feedback from senior decision-makers in business relating to Ireland’s position on Gaza. This line is unintentionally hilarious!

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ireland
Ireland / Éire cfgaussian 5 months ago 100%
Today, in 1916, Irish rebels began the Easter Rising, setting Ireland on a path to freedom from British imperialism. That struggle still continues to this day. Tiocfaidh Ár Lá! Éirinn Go Brách!

Today, in 1916, Ireland’s single most famous challenge to centuries of British imperialism began, the Easter Rising. While Britain crushed the uprising and killed its leaders, it set off the process that expelled Britain from 26 Irish counties, today the Republic of Ireland. The underground Irish Republican Brotherhood plotted the rising, which formed a military council of seven men who commanded the Irish Volunteers and James Connolly’s socialist Irish Citizen Army (ICA). None of the men had extensive military experience, but amongst them were great organizers and influential speakers who could rally the masses. Although a revolt had been in the works for some time, the rising was triggered when England used WWI as an excuse to suspend home rule. The rebels also saw an opportunity to go on the offensive while England was bogged down in WWI. Their slogan became: “England’s difficulty is Ireland’s opportunity,” and they set about taking on the might of the British Empire to win Ireland’s freedom. On Easter Monday, the first day of the rising, poet, teacher, and rebel leader Patrick Pearse declared the “Irish Republic.” Outside the General Post Office in Dublin, he read out the provisional government’s proclamation. The proclamation declared equality for all Ireland’s people, offering hope of healing the religious divide Britain had inflicted upon Ireland. With the influence of socialists like James Connolly in the rising’s leadership, the proclamation was trailblazing for its era, demanding universal suffrage for women at a time when women in England didn’t have the right to vote. An estimated 276 women were involved in the rising, most famously Countess Constance Markievicz, who betrayed her aristocratic family, joined the ICA, and devoted her life to the cause of Irish freedom. By the fifth day, the British had brutally crushed the rebels and then arrested over 3,000 people. The rising’s leaders were court-martialed and soon after executed. Connolly was so severely beaten that British soldiers had to tie him upright to a chair so they could shoot him. While the rising initially received ambiguous support, their callous execution ensured their place as national heroes, and the insurrection of the few inspired the revolt of the many. Just three years later, the Irish War of Independence would begin. *Source: [@redstreamnet](https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqDHwyuYggv2OQOtvQbdTHA/community?lb=UgkxXgwMx_K5NM4NSt8fYcfSymrckBKyfOlC) on YouTube* ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/a6073f1b-1cc0-4d5b-8f86-70b313b22ebe.webp) ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/954f12a3-6de5-47ea-8bb2-3465a0db71f2.webp) ![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/7810781b-5465-4970-81d7-3a5fa4d06c84.webp)

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ireland
Ireland / Éire invent_the_future 12 months ago 100%
help finding a documentary/manifesto (public sex, private property, united ireland)

cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2319299 > pretty much what the title says: I remember watching a video (probably on vimeo) very serious but quite humorous of a girl making some sort of case against private property in ireland which I believe started with a weird proposition regarding the legality of public sex (particularly in private land(?)) I think it had a companion manifesto as well > > I really don't remember it that well, but it just popped in my head and I'd love to find it if you guys know of anything of the sort, this is the only place I feel like I can ask

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ireland
Ireland / Éire LarkinDePark 1 year ago 92%
RIP Sinéad
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ireland
Ireland / Éire KevinKraft 1 year ago 100%
Flopgate
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ireland
Ireland / Éire FrankTheHealer 1 year ago 100%
Hello? is there anyone here?

Just making a quick post to see if this page is active? Been keeping an eye on Lemmy for a long time but I know it will grow after the Reddit API changes. So just putting this out there in case anyone else is here?

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ireland
Ireland / Éire NyoomDelight 2 years ago 100%
I'd like book/article recommendations about Ireland

cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/225150 > I would like to learn more about Ireland and it's history, namely about the troubles, bombings, what the British were doing in there, and the anti-Irish sentiment, etc. Maybe also about it's foundations and general history. > > Basically I have a friend talking to me about it, saying that the Northern Irish were terrorists and how the majority of them did not consider the British their oppressors, but simultaneously how the bombings were done to force the British government to withdraw. But I simply do not know enough about the topic, so I'd like to ask for some in-depth reading materials so I can understand the current hot-spot between the British/Irish/Northern Irish from a non-reactionary perspective.

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