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Originally posted by Extreme Pilgrim
The soldiers on that day were guilty of feeling that they were above the law and were swept up in the camaraderie and the heat of the moment but this is not an excuse to kill unarmed civilians.
Originally posted by BingeBob
The true IRA - the people who wanted an independent Ireland, free from british rule. Were never terrorists...they were/are patriots. The people who have bombed civilians and attacked family of british military are the terorists.
Originally posted by signal2noise
Originally posted by Extreme Pilgrim
The soldiers on that day were guilty of feeling that they were above the law and were swept up in the camaraderie and the heat of the moment but this is not an excuse to kill unarmed civilians.
Years ago, I had read that a LT in the Paras that was there said that they opened fire because they were scared the crowd was going to get out of control and over run them.
Originally posted by BingeBob
Yeah all the sniper attacks on british troops and bombings of british police were somewhat legitimized.
Originally posted by Lady_Tuatha
Without the IRA I probably still wouldnt be allowed to vote, wouldnt be able to get a job, wouldnt be able to find a decent house, we wouldnt have the PSNI instead of the notoriously bitter police force the RUC who relentlessly abused catholics, we would not have catholics representing us in government, we wouldnt have anything that remotely resembles where we have gotten to today, which is a much fairer and safer society for all who are a part of it, we are finally represented in government.
So I thank SinnFein.
I do not support those breakaway factions who want to continue to fight. We need peace now, and today brought us further to it in my eyes.
Originally posted by BingeBob
*DISCLAIMER : I was too lazy to get the dates and places for my info here*
Yeah all the sniper attacks on british troops and bombings of british police were somewhat legitimized.
I think the real turning point for the IRA to be on that terror group lis was the courthouse bombing where a miscommunication (maybe intentional, who knows) led to the wrong placement of a carbomb that killed only civilians...The bomb was supposed to be placed closed to the courthouse but was parked in the evacuation assembly area.
Originally posted by Lady_Tuatha
reply to post by stumason
If the British Army left our streets, then you wouldnt have been targeted then would you? catholics did not want the British army to stay here abusing them, would have saved alot of trouble if the army went back to England earlier and left catholic neighbourhoods, if people here were given more civil rights to begin with then that would have helped do you not think?, its not as if the army were protecting the catholic community or anything, more like helping the UVF and other loyalist paramilitary groups kill catholics by giving them guns and sharing intel with them on nationalists.
Between August 1914 and November 1918 considerably over 200,000 Irish served in armed forces engaged in the First World War
During the war an estimated 70,000 citizens of neutral Ireland served in the British armed forces, together with 50,000 or so from Northern Ireland. Virtually all who served were volunteers and, unlike the First World War, Irish volunteering during the Second World War was not primarily a process of collective mobilisation. In southern Ireland, at least, decisions to volunteer and serve were mainly individual
Kevin Skelton reflects on the massacre
All we want is that my youngsters, and everybody else's youngsters - it doesn't matter whether they're Catholic, Protestant, Hindu or whatever religion they are - that they can go to school, come home, and their fathers and mothers are there and they're not afraid that every time they walk down the street, if someone drops a bin lid, that it's a bomb.
When you close the bedroom door, you're there on your own. For people to stand up and say they set a bomb in Omagh to achieve a United Ireland - that's pathetic. It achieved nothing, it never will achieve nothing, it's achieved nothing this 30 years only caused people misery and torture. And if youngsters like mine, and hundreds maybe thousands of youngsters throughout the north of Ireland without either father - in some cases without either father or mother, but in my case they've left them without their mother. A young woman of 39 years of age that had everything to live for.
It's... I never was involved in politics of any description, and to the honest truth, I hate the politicians in the north of Ireland. There's a certain element of politicians in the north of Ireland, every time they open their big gab some family suffers.