Bring your faggot ass back stateside and we can discuss it.
Do you have an emotional stake in this bigging-up the Irish? Are your ancestors Irish? I'm English btw.
Have you been to Ireland? I have, 4 or 5 times. It's nice, a bit rainy, but very green. Dublin is pretty - most of the beautiful parts of the city were all built by the English during their 'stay' there. At the main post office in O'Connell Street, there is a display of large paintings depicting the battles between the Irish Republican Army and the British Army. I had sympathy with the Irish when looking at these paintings and to be honest I was nervous about opening my mouth in case people heard my accent. When engaged in guerrilla war the IRA were very effective; when they came face-to-face with the British army they were slaughtered.
I remember drinking in a pub in Dublin somewhere, it was a local and I was the only Englishman around, as far as I could tell. People started talking about 'the troubles'. A woman asked me 'surely you're sick of paying all that money to occupy six counties of Ireland aren't you?' - everyone looked at me. It was then I realised how difficult this issue is and how the two sides see it completely differently. My answer was 'no, those people are British and want to stay British and live in a part of GB'. This view did not go down too well, but I said historically it was wrong that part of Eire is now part of the UK, but if you go back historically the problem is very complex.
The Irish did not help matters by staying neutral in WW2 and although there was some co-operation between Ireland the Britain, if Ireland had been taken by the Germans, Britain would have been fucked. I think Churchill was considering sending an army to Ireland at one point.
I lived in Liverpool for quite a few years, it's known as the Capital of Ireland due to the number of Irish there and the strength of the Catholic church (the city has both a Catholic and Protestant cathedral). The Irish seem a friendly lot, love to party and have a good sense of humour, I just found them to have a strong victim mentality.
Irish neutrality during World War II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia