Revoke, you guys have spread all over the world for centuries. There are more Irish living outside Ireland than there are back home. The island of Ireland couldn't cope if all the Irish were forcibly repatriated. Your bigoted right wing nationalistic views have more in common with the EDL than most Irish people I know. I'm beginning to think you are an EDL troll pretending to be Irish.
Poland continues to milk Ireland dry.
OP RevokeNice 15 | 1854
16 Apr 2012 / #122
Revoke, you guys have spread all over the world for centuries.
We worked in new world, continent sized countries with the resources to match. Every single european nation has had massive numbers of its people migrate to US, Oz, Canada etc.
So stop using that as a stick for us to accept poles that have no relationship with this country.
There are more Irish living outside Ireland than there are back home
Do you know the difference between ancestry and citizenship?
bigoted right wing nationalistic views
If the Irish state was ran like I wanted it to be run. It would be a lot better off than it is currently. I most certainly would not be bankrupt and we wouldnt have every chancer from eastern europe and africa living handsomely from the state.
EDL than most Irish people I know. I'm beginning to think you are an EDL troll pretending to be Irish
The EDL want muslims to return to their ethnic homelands. I support them in their quest for righteousness.
If Ireland was run how you'd like it to be run you'd be having the Union Jack flying over Dublin and the Black and Tans running amok. You're a sorry excuse for an Irishman.
If Ireland was run how you'd like it to be run you'd be having the Union Jack flying over Dublin and the Black and Tans running amok.
Erm..........I doubt he would :)
Pierdolski - | 31
17 Apr 2012 / #125
A few things...
- Ireland should be thankful it's the Poles, who are European neighbors with similar interests and culture, and not other people... ehhemm Muslims.
- Poland has been taken advantage of for too long and now it's time for Poles to get a piece of the pie.
- Where were Poland's allies upon the start of the Nazi invasion?
- Ireland should be thankful it's the Poles, who are European neighbors with similar interests and culture, and not other people... ehhemm Muslims.
- Poland has been taken advantage of for too long and now it's time for Poles to get a piece of the pie.
- Where were Poland's allies upon the start of the Nazi invasion?
Poland has been taken advantage of for too long and now it's time for Poles to get a piece of the pie.
By Ireland?
Poland has been taken advantage of for too long and now it's time for Poles to get a piece of the pie.
Where were Poland's allies upon the start of the Nazi invasion
Where were Poland's allies upon the start of the Nazi invasion
Ireland?
OP RevokeNice 15 | 1854
17 Apr 2012 / #127
Poland has been taken advantage of for too long and now it's time for Poles to get a piece of the pie.
Through the irish social welfare?
Where were Poland's allies upon the start of the Nazi invasion?
What did you want us to do, write Hitler a strongly worded letter????
@RevokeNice
With reference to your 'social welfare' allusion above, the Nice Treaty has provided for equality throughout the EU. In my book anyone who had worked and paid stamps in an EU country is entitled to claim unemployment in that country.
Ireland has done well out of its EU membership since joining in 1973.
When Poland and other countries joined they also acquired the rights of all member countries, including freedom of movement.
I will remind you that one of the original purposes of the EEC (as it was then) was to encourage countries to carry out their foreign policy by cooperating, rather than by sending armies across each other's borders. This policy has worked reasonably well since it was started, wouldn't you say.
Irish emigrants abroad have also done well by being allowed to migrate to other countries.
Why do you have such an opposition to the EU and Ireland's continuing membership of it?
What alternative to it do you have to offer to Ireland's membership of the EU?
With reference to your 'social welfare' allusion above, the Nice Treaty has provided for equality throughout the EU. In my book anyone who had worked and paid stamps in an EU country is entitled to claim unemployment in that country.
Ireland has done well out of its EU membership since joining in 1973.
When Poland and other countries joined they also acquired the rights of all member countries, including freedom of movement.
I will remind you that one of the original purposes of the EEC (as it was then) was to encourage countries to carry out their foreign policy by cooperating, rather than by sending armies across each other's borders. This policy has worked reasonably well since it was started, wouldn't you say.
Irish emigrants abroad have also done well by being allowed to migrate to other countries.
Why do you have such an opposition to the EU and Ireland's continuing membership of it?
What alternative to it do you have to offer to Ireland's membership of the EU?
Poland's minister for European affairs said in Dublin yesterday that a second Irish No to the Nice Treaty would be "a huge and terrible disappointment" for Poles...
Do not listen to that dude! Poles do not give a damn!
Say NO by all means!