The Irish Brigade - The Foggy Dew (Live)
Uploader Comments (siobhanshamrock)
All Comments (40)
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yes true that was an issue, but that was only done because under the Penal Laws stated that a father had to split the land among his evenly, unless one converted and became a prod, and the issue with the potato was that it COULD feed the people and was a great source of nutrition, as the saying goes God gave us the Blight the English gave us the Famine so yes was the land lords and the English who kept making plots smaller and smaller til the were too small
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@brinoc327 @brinoc327 Admitted Cromwell's planatation was an act of Ethic cleansing and replacement -wrong, but the Irish today have to live with their history.Britain stole your crops? What nonsense. Over-population was the problem, it was cruel nature, not Cruel Britannia,and possibly landlords,Tim and Prod. Potato- planted land fed 4x that of corn and families grew and landlords cut down the tenants subsistence land.Single-species dependency in inherently vulnerable-
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@brinoc327 Admitted Cromwell's planatation was an act of Ethic cleansing and replacement -wrong, but the Irish today have to live with their history.Britain stole your crops? What nonsense. Over-population was the problem, it was cruel nature, not Cruel Britannia,and possibly landlords,Tim and Prod. Potato- planted land fed 4x that of corn and families grew and landlords cut down the tenants subsistence land.Single-species dependency in inherently vulnerable-
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@brinoc327 happened earlier with corn in Great Britan (and possibly Ireland). The people of NI have to live with the consquences of Cromwell's history.
We went in in 69 to protect the Catholic population from REAL oppression, and the Cultural Marxist scum of the IRA expolited that by playing on the Republican sense of victimhood.
Anyhoo, you all sold your souls and asses to Brussels for a few Euro, so all this freedom stuff wears thin now.
btw, Hamish Imlach does this better.
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@Jigaboo123456 if you never invaded ireland took our language away overseen a famine by stealing our crops their would never had been an IRA and their would be no problems
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@RPenta We may not be so different in some respects. My crib about the IRA is that when WE played by THEIR Big Boy Rules, they whined like bitches, but I do not assume that British political leaders are much better than scum like peadophile - honouring Adams and McG - far from it--I'd just as happily put a round into any Brit PM of the last 40 years for their treasons to the British people as I would into the 'RA,
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but I used my parental veto to stop my then 16-year-old son joining my old regiment in Blair's ( Or Cameron's)
wars to impose Cultural Marxism on other nations.
I did not want him home in a bag, or living with the blood of others on his hands from a wrong war.
The point of "whatever it takes" is that (apart from my admittedly Para aggression) is that ultimately it can lead to less suffering.
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A case in point would be Afghan: bleed them ten times as much as they bled us, then leave them alone if they leave us alone-- which policy The Raj used successfully since the Afghan Punitive Wars.
I couldn't agree more about Le May and Churchill though- Churchill was a disaster for Britain, a Zionist bagman who, unfortunately, had courage and superb rhetoric= charisma -which usually equals disaster.
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@Jigaboo123456 The older I get, the more anti-war I am-for people like Winston Churchill, Gen. Curtis Lemay, Gen. WT Sherman (the first modern day war criminal in the Western World) and the view you shared-whatever it takes means we are willing to commit murder and torture to achieve our ends, contrary to the teachings of the Church. I do not want our modern day soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines acting like Nazi stormtroopers.
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@RPenta @RPenta I think it is debatable that The South may have, in time, ended slavery. They were increasingly isolated in their attitude, and The Royal Navy was choking their supply route of African slaves, whilst other Brits and Americans were lobbying and boycotting, and via the Christain Church, applying moral pressure to what is, to most, completely unjustifiable.
In the Civil War, there was still a code of honour widely held to, (cont.)
The best version has to be by the clancys
bondie45 2 years ago
ive always thought it was sinead o'conor lol...you picture suggests ur a wee bit biased :p
siobhanshamrock 2 years ago