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What do you think the repercussions would be?
extranjero (Wexford) - Posts: 366 - 14/06/2020 18:40:27 2280818 Link 2 |
How would people feel if for example Gaelfest took off and there was a cross community development and popularity in GAA in Belfast/Antrim and Antrim fulfilled its true potential in a neo or new Irishism so to speak. TheUsername (Dublin) - Posts: 3671 - 14/06/2020 18:59:47 2280820 Link 4 |
No idea. This is your scenario, what do you think would happen? Htaem (Meath) - Posts: 8583 - 14/06/2020 19:05:16 2280821 Link 6 |
Well said.
royaldunne (Meath) - Posts: 17035 - 14/06/2020 19:14:05 2280822 Link 2 |
Will Palestinian flags be confiscated too??? royaldunne (Meath) - Posts: 17035 - 14/06/2020 19:56:15 2280824 Link 3 |
The flag was a military flag in a war (not the national flag). It was the flag of Lee's army. That alone was it's original meaning The biggest reason it became famous was that despite facing a much stronger opponent this army won a lot of battles. Anyway I actually know a lot of the bad things associated with this flag, I am purposefully giving another perspective as this is what some people see in it. It's better if you if people concentrate on the issue of actual discrimination rather than dictating to people what flag they are allowed to display. It's bad in a democracy when people are dictated to as to how they should think. bdbuddah (Meath) - Posts: 768 - 14/06/2020 20:35:03 2280826 Link 1 |
"Are you kidding me" so the 16 million plus who voted for brexit did solely because of immigration, no doubt it was 1 of many major reasons for brexit because whenever a discussion of immigration came up and legitimate concerns were raised you had PC left-wing leaning celebrities like Russell Brand and Eddie Izzard shouting racist and bigot to shut down discussion and debate. I know plenty of decent people in Britain who voted for brexit because they felt France and Germany were trying to dictate to the rest of Europe and they didn't want laws made for them in a largely undemocratic parliament that they had no say or control over. I have visited Italy twice in the last 4 years north and south and from talking to the locals they are only waiting for their opportunity to vote and they are gone also. And if you don't think there is no left-wing figures trying to influence the EU especially a billionaire Hungarian born US citizen you are sadly mistaken. As for the USA, Trump did pray on people's prejudices but you also had decent people and families from the middle-class suddenly with no work, struggling to pay bills and struggling to feed their children and they got sick of politician's doing nothing for them as they watched elites getting richer. Then Trump came along with his make America great again message and he told people what they wanted to hear to get support and mix that with the absolute tripe news media they have over there it worked, then again he hadn't much to beat in Hillary Clinton. To shorten a long story and to have both subjects simplified people felt they weren't being listened to or their concerns taking seriously by their governments so they voted against the establishment and it turned into 1 big mess. On your point of allowing the left to ask for change, they can ask away but I myself won't entertain their political correctness b.s, the more they get, the more they want and the more radical they become. I could talk alot more on this subject but I don't want to go off topic further and I find the conversation is getting a bit too heavy and not appropriate for a community and sport based website like hoganstand.com. The lack of sport must be getting to me I suppose. DUALSUPPORT (Limerick) - Posts: 718 - 14/06/2020 20:46:10 2280829 Link 3 |
No, this is your scenario as well. You're saying let people fly the flag. If people do fly that flag, what do you think will happen after, the consequences, that's all. extranjero (Wexford) - Posts: 366 - 14/06/2020 20:51:58 2280830 Link 2 |
Maybe all flags should be banned. Ban one type and you've taken a step on to the slippery slope.
Cockney_Cat (UK) - Posts: 1115 - 14/06/2020 20:54:03 2280831 Link 1 |
Could be none, it's been waved before numerous times in the past and I don't know of any consequences. But now that there's a clearly stated ban they could issue warnings or bans for those who wave the flags. Have they outlined the penalties? Anyway can you get to your point please, I'm not sure where you're going with this. Htaem (Meath) - Posts: 8583 - 14/06/2020 21:04:15 2280833 Link 7 |
An army that was fighting a war to retain the right to buy and sell other human beings for profit. The Cork County Board don't want to associated with a flag that represents fighting for the right to buy and sell other human beings for profit. We can do as much mental gymnastics and attach as many other meanings to the flag as we want but we cannot change the fact that it represents fighting a war to retain the right to buy and sell other human beings for profit. You cannot ignore the past or make it go away just because you don't like it. Cork GAA are perfectly entitled, in a democracy, to dictate what flags are flown in their grounds. MesAmis (Dublin) - Posts: 13145 - 14/06/2020 21:06:21 2280835 Link 5 |
When you read up about it and realise the issue which resulted in the civil war was not the right of southerners to own slaves but whether they could bring these slaves to the western frontier (where they were competing in business with northerners) you realise the war was not as straight forward as you first thought. It's funny people here now will lecture you telling you we should put aside political considerations when commentating Irishmen who faught in the British army in the first (& second) world war but can't understand how this army flag associated with absolutely huge numbers of deaths for some in America can mean a lot to some people who are normal people.
bdbuddah (Meath) - Posts: 768 - 14/06/2020 23:00:06 2280847 Link 2 |
Being honest I would not like it but I don't I would have a right to stop them doing it.
bdbuddah (Meath) - Posts: 768 - 14/06/2020 23:09:40 2280850 Link 1 |
Yes the flag should be binned and the Cork fans shouldn't have to be told, they should do it themselves. It is the flag of the Confederacy and represents the states that not only defended and fought for slavery but who also fired on their own country's army. The Confederates were not only racists they were anarchists who refused to accept the democratic wishes of the federal government. Anyone defending the flying of this flag at Cork games should be totally ashamed of themselves. Ulsterman (Antrim) - Posts: 9294 - 15/06/2020 00:17:11 2280854 Link 1 |
Mes, unfortunately we have heard all these arguments before, its a left wing conspiracy, this is all PC gone wrong, stop being snowflakes, in a democracy you should be allowed do what you want, its the rights of the individual to decide as its not black and white, where does it stop - do we ban Italians flag because the romans had slaves, the list goes on. Ireland is unfortunately no different to the rest of the world when it comes to racism and within the group of people who use these excuses, there will be some who are out and out racists. What my experiences of growing up in Ireland thought me (and then living abroad) is that a lot of Irish people simply don't understand racism, the forms that it comes in and how through the use of these type of symbols it is legitimized. Simple question for the poster who said lets focus on the actual racism, I have is if a say 10yr old Cork child is being though about racism in school and what this flag means to the African American community, what would the child think if it sees it a game in PUC, when the team and the sport he idolizes are playing? Does he think well here is that flag at a GAA game supporting Cork so perhaps what I have been told is not true or never happened as the GAA supports of Cork say so, worse still he begins to believe that the confederation was right. I will admit that growing up that I would have been a lot like some of the posters here and while there was nobody to discriminate against, I would have told and laughed at jokes about other races, I wouldn't have seen anything wrong with the flag (in fact though it was cool) and underneath it all I would have though that as a white person I was better than anyone of any skin color. As an isolated nation who took a lot of what it knew about the world from across the water, its no great surprise that there are so many people who still feel this way. I am not one bit surprised about the abuse Stefan Okunbar received. A couple of years ago my son who was born and grew up overseas was playing minor football, he had always been in Ireland during the summers and played with the boys who treated him like he was just one of them, while playing a game that they were winning agains a more fancied side one of the opposing players shouted at him to go back to where he came from - not the worse insult I admit given he is white and the only reason they knew he wasn't from there was his accent - I can just imagine what abuse he would have got had he not been white. He laughed it off but it did hammer home to him how easy it is for racism works in all its forms and how people see differences as something that should be used against the other person. zinny (Wexford) - Posts: 982 - 15/06/2020 01:05:36 2280857 Link 0 |
The Vikings did not establish Dublin. Dublin comes from the Gaelic word- Dubh Linn, meaning Black pool. The established a trading post. There was already an Irish Gaelic settlement called Baile Atha Cliatha.
galwayford (Galway) - Posts: 1927 - 15/06/2020 09:52:20 2280870 Link 1 |
Nah it was the Vikings, #canceltheDubs
Htaem (Meath) - Posts: 8583 - 15/06/2020 10:44:31 2280875 Link 9 |
It strikes me as either disingenuous or rather naive to think that this cancel culture is going to stop at the Confederate flag or John Mitchel, even if these are probably some of the stronger cases of problematic symbols/naming in GAA circles. Here is a non-exhaustive list of some similar issues which may come up in future and how they might be advocated for: Gleebo (Mayo) - Posts: 1803 - 15/06/2020 10:59:09 2280879 Link 3 |
Exactly, they were fighting for slavery. You can dance around the issue as much as you like but you can't just ignore it because it's inconvenient. The attempted whitewashing of the flag and the Confederate cause may have been acceptable once but it should no longer be acceptable to whitewash history in such a way. You can tie yourselves in knots trying to wipe out what the flag represented and still represents but you cannot change what it represents. It's not snowfalkes, or the liberal PC warriors or other such nonsense. It's about whether Cork GAA want to be associated with a flag that represents pro-slavery and white supremacy. It's that simple. MesAmis (Dublin) - Posts: 13145 - 15/06/2020 11:27:02 2280884 Link 5 |
You see the world in simple terms, as to the point I made, I take it you don't believe in remembering Irish soldiers who served in the British army in the first word war as it is that 'simple' they served to defend the British empire ?
bdbuddah (Meath) - Posts: 768 - 15/06/2020 11:56:56 2280889 Link 1 |