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#194
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03-26-2011, 11:49 PM
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Re: Soldiers Just Before They Are Killed in Belfast
They wer all occupiers.. SAS.. regular british army..Mi5.. dosent matter they have no business in our country..get out..Nothern Ireland should have thaught the British army long ago that a "country under occupation shall never be at peace" hmmm..lot of cunts probably scratching their chins here...they wer the words of Padraic Pearse..the leader of the IRISH REBELS in 1916 who read out the terms of the free people of Ireland from the GPO and started the war and eventually won Irelands freedom 5 years later. Any questions....? Watch the film Michael Collins. |
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#195
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03-27-2011, 12:08 AM
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Re: Soldiers Just Before They Are Killed in Belfast
All comments welcome here from members from DR.. EDUCATED on the history of IRELAND not "potato heads" "thick paddys" and so on.. Tiocfaidh Ar La..Our Day will come.. The Irish phrase tiocfaidh ár lá is attributed to Provisional IRA |
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#199
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03-27-2011, 09:09 AM
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Re: Soldiers Just Before They Are Killed in Belfast
Operation Banner was the operational name for the British armed forces' operation in Northern Ireland between August 1969 and July 2007, initially at the request of the Unionist government of Northern Ireland in support of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) (1972–2001), and later to the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) (2001–2007). It's role was to engage in counter-terrorism and public order operations in response to the Troubles, and to assist the Government in its objective of restoring normality in Northern Ireland. The Army presence in Northern Ireland was initially welcomed as a neutral force by the Catholic population, who had been under attack by loyalists and the RUC but this primarily changed following a three-day military clamp down (the Falls Curfew) on the Falls area of west Belfast in July 1970. On 9th Aug 1971 the Unionist government of Northern Ireland introduced internment without trial (Operation Demetrius). Hundreds of Catholics were ‘lifted’ in pre-dawn raids. The operation was directed only at the IRA and no Loyalists were arrested. During the 3 days of violence and riots that followed, 22 people died and 7,000 Catholics were burned out of their homes. |
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#200
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03-27-2011, 01:35 PM
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Re: Soldiers Just Before They Are Killed in Belfast
I have mixed feelings about this conflict. Surely the British should of left the Irish alone and not taken land. But what is done is done. And the Brits were brutal in thier repression of the Irish. But still, that kind of savagery just makes the Brits case stronger. What is it about catholic countries that breeds such violence and criminal behavior? Is it the catholic doctrine itself? Same goes for Mexico with it's savage carnage in the streets. And all south america where ever catholicism is strong. They even now have burning at the stake of people
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