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Birdbrain

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jumpstart - 2020-08-26 6:03 PM

 

Which squad...? The hypocrisy squad?...The angry squad? Oh no sorry that you......The confused squad?

Or is this a new squad you haven’t named yet?

 

Talking of "confused" ... The squad has and always will be the the hate squad ... Been nothing other unless you can show ... Doesnt take much to confuse you though

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Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

 

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

 

Take it that the predictions were wrong Brian ... Chuckle

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Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

 

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

 

No because we haven't properly left have we? So right now nothing has changed. The situation in northern Ireland is however much more complex now going forward post transition. Johnson basically stood in a room of people, p*ssed and promised there would be no paper work or any borders and stuff but of course that was just yet another absolute lie as his government has now had to admit. So your post is a bit premature.

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Barryd999 - 2020-08-26 6:49 PM

 

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

 

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

 

No because we haven't properly left have we? So right now nothing has changed. The situation in northern Ireland is however much more complex now going forward post transition. Johnson basically stood in a room of people, p*ssed and promised there would be no paper work or any borders and stuff but of course that was just yet another absolute lie as his government has now had to admit. So your post is a bit premature.

 

Sorry I thought we had left the Eu ... My mistake

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Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 6:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Take it that the predictions were wrong Brian ... Chuckle

Do you mean you "take it that the predictions were wrong", or that I should take it that way?

 

My reason for asking whether your claimed statement was made, is because without knowing what you have in mind, said by whom, and said when, it is impossible to say. So, for clarity, who did say that, and when?

 

I can remember numerous claims being made, but they referred specifically to whether or not the border between the Republic and NI could remain in its present form (as required under the Belfast agreement), or whether a border would have to be imposed down the Irish Sea.

 

Unless you know how both can be avoided (and no one else has yet solved the conundrum - so here's our chance to succeed where others have failed) someone seems likely to kick off. Who that may be depends on which border is subject to what controls. That, despite transition ending on 31 Dec this year, still seems unresolved.

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Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 7:13 PM

 

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 6:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Take it that the predictions were wrong Brian ... Chuckle

Do you mean you "take it that the predictions were wrong", or that I should take it that way?

 

My reason for asking whether your claimed statement was made, is because without knowing what you have in mind, said by whom, and said when, it is impossible to say. So, for clarity, who did say that, and when?

 

I can remember numerous claims being made, but they referred specifically to whether or not the border between the Republic and NI could remain in its present form (as required under the Belfast agreement), or whether a border would have to be imposed down the Irish Sea.

 

Unless you know how both can be avoided (and no one else has yet solved the conundrum - so here's our chance to succeed where others have failed) someone seems likely to kick off. Who that may be depends on which border is subject to what controls. That, despite transition ending on 31 Dec this year, still seems unresolved.

 

Everyones just waiting till December 31st then eh ??? ... Chuckle

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Guest pelmetman
Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

 

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

 

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

maxresdefaultmuttley.thumb.jpg.6df4f685c4f5fdddc1869b1109b952a2.jpg

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pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

 

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

 

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

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Guest pelmetman
Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

 

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

 

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

 

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

 

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

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Now the Remoaners have changed the goalposts to December 31st does that mean we go instantly back trouble in NI at 1970s levels January 1st or will we gradually get back into it and will the medical and food supplies be whacked instantly come 1st January or will that take time ??? ... I just wanna be prepared so thats why I am asking the experts on here, Barry Brian ???
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pelmetman - 2020-08-27 9:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

Not to me, it is just stating the bleeding obvious. As I said above, "So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging."

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Birdbrain - 2020-08-28 2:21 PM

Now the Remoaners have changed the goalposts to December 31st does that mean we go instantly back trouble in NI at 1970s levels January 1st or will we gradually get back into it and will the medical and food supplies be whacked instantly come 1st January or will that take time ??? ... I just wanna be prepared so thats why I am asking the experts on here, Barry Brian ???

Antony, you're a time waster. No-one has moved, or could move, any goal posts. We left the EU on 1/1/20, and entered transition, where nothing actually changed. So the Irish border has remained unaltered from when we were EU members. Its status will change on 1/1/21, when we shall see whether the government has made sufficient agreements with the NI politicians and the EU or not. Not an expert opinion, so the persistent sarcasm could do with a rest, just the opinion of someone who listens to news and reads newspapers.

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Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:34 PM

 

Birdbrain - 2020-08-28 2:21 PM

Now the Remoaners have changed the goalposts to December 31st does that mean we go instantly back trouble in NI at 1970s levels January 1st or will we gradually get back into it and will the medical and food supplies be whacked instantly come 1st January or will that take time ??? ... I just wanna be prepared so thats why I am asking the experts on here, Barry Brian ???

Antony, you're a time waster. No-one has moved, or could move, any goal posts. We left the EU on 1/1/20, and entered transition, where nothing actually changed. So the Irish border has remained unaltered from when we were EU members. Its status will change on 1/1/21, when we shall see whether the government has made sufficient agreements with the NI politicians and the EU or not. Not an expert opinion, so the persistent sarcasm could do with a rest, just the opinion of someone who listens to news and reads newspapers.

 

Aaaaaaaaamen !!!

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Birdbrain - 2020-08-28 6:58 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:34 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-28 2:21 PM

Now the Remoaners have changed the goalposts to December 31st does that mean we go instantly back trouble in NI at 1970s levels January 1st or will we gradually get back into it and will the medical and food supplies be whacked instantly come 1st January or will that take time ??? ... I just wanna be prepared so thats why I am asking the experts on here, Barry Brian ???

Antony, you're a time waster. No-one has moved, or could move, any goal posts. We left the EU on 1/1/20, and entered transition, where nothing actually changed. So the Irish border has remained unaltered from when we were EU members. Its status will change on 1/1/21, when we shall see whether the government has made sufficient agreements with the NI politicians and the EU or not. Not an expert opinion, so the persistent sarcasm could do with a rest, just the opinion of someone who listens to news and reads newspapers.

Aaaaaaaaamen !!!

So does that mean you've at last got it (or somewhere near), or that you're praying for deliverance from ignorance?

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Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:28 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 9:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

Not to me, it is just stating the bleeding obvious. As I said above, "So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging."

 

The only bleeding obvious since Brexit is how grumpy you losers have got >:-) ......

 

Plus it's pretty clear the biggest Chinky Flu shockwave's arrived at our civil service NHS & Education doors after Brexit infinitum :D .......

 

Coz it means they may have to do a days work for a change and be "responsible for there actions",,,,,,

 

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pelmetman - 2020-08-29 8:02 PM

 

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:28 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 9:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

Not to me, it is just stating the bleeding obvious. As I said above, "So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging."

 

The only bleeding obvious since Brexit is how grumpy you losers have got >:-) ......

 

Plus it's pretty clear the biggest Chinky Flu shockwave's arrived at our civil service NHS & Education doors after Brexit infinitum :D .......

 

Coz it means they may have to do a days work for a change and be "responsible for there actions",,,,,,

There is no such thing as "Chinky Flu" and the rest of your post is senseless garbage. Lay off the bottle and sober up.

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Bulletguy - 2020-08-29 8:36 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-29 8:02 PM

 

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:28 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 9:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

Not to me, it is just stating the bleeding obvious. As I said above, "So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging."

 

The only bleeding obvious since Brexit is how grumpy you losers have got >:-) ......

 

Plus it's pretty clear the biggest Chinky Flu shockwave's arrived at our civil service NHS & Education doors after Brexit infinitum :D .......

 

Coz it means they may have to do a days work for a change and be "responsible for there actions",,,,,,

There is no such thing as "Chinky Flu" and the rest of your post is senseless garbage. Lay off the bottle and sober up.

 

Blimey Dumb Dumb 8-) ........

 

Why have you become so fascinated with my wine intake? ;-) ......

 

Are you now a Methodist or a Muslim? :D ........

maxresdefaultmuttley.thumb.jpg.ef49a7aaf570bfd4c9b11174eefdff74.jpg

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pelmetman - 2020-08-29 9:18 PM

 

Bulletguy - 2020-08-29 8:36 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-29 8:02 PM

 

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:28 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 9:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

Not to me, it is just stating the bleeding obvious. As I said above, "So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging."

 

The only bleeding obvious since Brexit is how grumpy you losers have got >:-) ......

 

Plus it's pretty clear the biggest Chinky Flu shockwave's arrived at our civil service NHS & Education doors after Brexit infinitum :D .......

 

Coz it means they may have to do a days work for a change and be "responsible for there actions",,,,,,

There is no such thing as "Chinky Flu" and the rest of your post is senseless garbage. Lay off the bottle and sober up.

 

Why have you become so fascinated with my wine intake? ;-) ......

It's not a 'fascination',,...just a conclusion that you appear to spend afternoons and evenings on the bottle. When sober your ramblings rarely make any sense but drunk they just descend into utter garbage. If you can't stay off it you need help.

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Bulletguy - 2020-08-29 9:53 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-29 9:18 PM

 

Bulletguy - 2020-08-29 8:36 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-29 8:02 PM

 

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:28 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 9:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

Not to me, it is just stating the bleeding obvious. As I said above, "So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging."

 

The only bleeding obvious since Brexit is how grumpy you losers have got >:-) ......

 

Plus it's pretty clear the biggest Chinky Flu shockwave's arrived at our civil service NHS & Education doors after Brexit infinitum :D .......

 

Coz it means they may have to do a days work for a change and be "responsible for there actions",,,,,,

There is no such thing as "Chinky Flu" and the rest of your post is senseless garbage. Lay off the bottle and sober up.

 

Why have you become so fascinated with my wine intake? ;-) ......

It's not a 'fascination',,...just a conclusion that you appear to spend afternoons and evenings on the bottle. When sober your ramblings rarely make any sense but drunk they just descend into utter garbage. If you can't stay off it you need help.

 

Well Dumb Dumb ;-) ......

 

You'd be wrong.......Yet again :D .......

 

As since we got back from Lockdown in Spain we have been working like slaves......ie unpaid :D .......

 

I've lost a stone in weight B-) ........and the garden looks like the Somme 8-) .......

 

But unlike you Sado Losers.......I can see the bigger picture :-D .........

 

BTW......You forgot to answer.......are you a Methodist or a Muslim? >:-) .......

 

 

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pelmetman - 2020-08-29 9:18 PM

 

Bulletguy - 2020-08-29 8:36 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-29 8:02 PM

 

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-28 4:28 PM

 

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 9:32 PM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-27 11:39 AM

pelmetman - 2020-08-27 8:11 AM

Brian Kirby - 2020-08-26 6:29 PM

Birdbrain - 2020-08-26 5:49 PM

... Have we returned to the violence of old in NI like the squad told us we would once we left ??? ... If so they must be keeping the news of 'the troubles' quiet

Did they say that? Where?

Here at Woke central ;-) ........

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-45513462

Except it doesn't does it? The piece is dated September 2018, so two years earlier than Antony's post. Also, it does not say we would see the violence re-emerge, it sets out the legal contradictions over the border requirements between NI and the Republic, NI and the rest of the UK, and the UK and the EU, that have to be resolved if the terms of the Belfast agreement, and the various assurances that have been given to the Unionists in Ulster, are not to be breached.

It then suggests that violence may (not will) emerge if those terms are, or appear to have been, breached. So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging.

So, as Antony says, it has to be wait and see - but whichever compromise/s is/are adopted, someone is bound to be dissatisfied on one side or the other. Whether that dissatisfaction provokes whichever side to get out their guns and dust off the Semtex remains an open question. From past experience, neither the IRA nor the UDA spend time negotiating what they will do, they just react as and when they are so minded.

"Brexit could 're-ignite conflict' in Northern Ireland"

Kinda of clear from the title what the BBC Loser brigade were trying to indicate dontcha think? *-) ......

Not to me, it is just stating the bleeding obvious. As I said above, "So far, no-one has announced how they propose to resolve the contradictions which, bearing in mind that only four months remain before transition ends, and the present UK government's track record on consequential thinking, isn't exactly encouraging."

 

The only bleeding obvious since Brexit is how grumpy you losers have got >:-) ......

 

Plus it's pretty clear the biggest Chinky Flu shockwave's arrived at our civil service NHS & Education doors after Brexit infinitum :D .......

 

Coz it means they may have to do a days work for a change and be "responsible for there actions",,,,,,

There is no such thing as "Chinky Flu" and the rest of your post is senseless garbage. Lay off the bottle and sober up.

 

Blimey Dumb Dumb 8-) ........

 

Why have you become so fascinated with my wine intake? ;-) ......

 

Are you now a Methodist or a Muslim? :D ........

 

He has form for becoming "fascinated" in folk on here ... I should know ... Suppose we are as close to family as it gets

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