WIZARDS OF WISDOM
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During The Trial of Under 5’s
1 In 200 children Were Still In Hospital 3 Months After The Covid Injections

The UK Gov. had the damning data from Pfizer trials in October yet still pushed ahead to inject all our children.

Conservative MP Andrew Bridgen on child Covid vaccination

https://twitter.com/puffnblow_at_gp/status/1629975021845204992?s=28&t=-QB6SzYc581yOk4-Mcbw_A

@childcovidvaccineinjuriesuk
WIZARDS OF WISDOM pinned «Trying to pay off the people of Éire to keep thier mouths shut ......these degenerates really are scum !! https://www.thejournal.ie/communications-team-refugee-accommodation-6003933-Feb2023/»
Forwarded from Eibhlin
Forwarded from Irish Patriots
The Jews admit to controlling the world and they want to kill you and your children.

It doesn't matter what you are, European, Arabian, African, Asian, Christian, Muslim or even atheist. No matter what you are, they want to kill you all. People must wake up and stop finghting with each other and realize who's their actual enemy!!!

More info:
https://t.me/FlatEarthAndMore/11328
https://t.me/FlatEarthAndMore/11326

#Zionism

Channel: @Flatearthandmore
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@FEAMCHAT
Forwarded from Joseph Cunningham
The development of Irish identity: political aspirations and literary conceptions, 600–919 Brendan Meighan Submitted for the degree of PhD University of Dublin June 2020 In acknowledgement to: Brendan Meighan
Declaration

I declare that this thesis has not been submitted as an exercise for a degree at this or any other university and it is entirely my own work.

I agree to deposit this thesis in the University’s open access institutional repository or allow the Library to do so on my behalf, subject to Irish Copyright Legislation and Trinity College Library conditions of use and acknowledgement.
______________________________________
Brendan Meighan

Summary

This thesis examines the development of an Irish identity in the early medieval period. It covers roughly three centuries, from 600 to 919, and it focuses for the most part on the formation of an Irish political identity, as expressed most clearly in the idea of a kingship of all-Ireland. It also explores more general questions of identity in Ireland at this time, with specific reference to the complex relationship between ‘Irishness’ and ‘Gaelicness’.

In Chapter I it shows, based on an analysis of Old Irish and Latin literary works, that the idea of a common identity centred on co-habitation of the island of Ireland dates back at least to the time of Columbanus, and a king of Ireland figure, who was to rule over these people, was being envisioned from at least as early as the seventh century, as seen for example in the works of Adomnán. But this king of Ireland was not just limited to works of literature, and the title was given to contemporary kings like
Loingsech mac Óengusso, who more than likely was aware of the designation and approved of its usage.
The conception of an allIreland polity was expressed in the ecclesiastical sphere as well, with both Kildare and Armagh claiming an archbishopric which extended over the entire island in works that have also been dated to this formative century. Contrary to popular belief however, the latter church did not create the idea of a kingship of Ireland as this conception can be found in numerous sources of varying
regional provenance, sources that are probably contemporaneous with – if not older than – the earliest works that we possess from Armagh, and as such show that the idea of an Irish political identity was widely diffused from an early stage. Despite a 160 year gap in AU between the acclamations of Loingsech mac Óengusso and Máel Sechnaill as kings of Ireland, writers and rulers alike continued to be influenced by this conception, and some of the latter quite possibly sought to exercise power on an all-Ireland basis, a suggestion more fully explored in Chapter II. Carolingian sources are also analysed in this chapter and this thesis suggests that this material, which has been largely ignored by Irish political historians, sheds muchlight on the political affairs and international standing of Ireland’s most powerful kings.
Forwarded from Joseph Cunningham
It is argued in Chapter III that the Vikings had a profound impact on Irish self-perception, and the permanent settlements they established precipitated a move away from geographically based terms of ethnic identity like fir Érenn and towards words like Goídil, which had initially been a linguistic term. However, the meaning of Goídil was transformed in this period, becoming one half of an ethnic dichotomy and contrasted with Gaill, the term applied to the Viking incomers, and, after 1169, to English settlers. This testifies to the longevity and evident popularity of
this binary division, which persisted in the minds of the literati despite centuries of intermarriage and assimilation across this ethnic divide. However, despite this shift in terminology towards Goídil, the term fir Érenn was still used to describe the Irish political community, which was still envisioned as being led by a king of Ireland. Indeed, this position also appears to have taken on a newfound sense of purpose in the face of the Viking threat
and was not superseded by the idea of an all-encompassing Gaelic political identity which straddled the North Channel.

Instead, the continued existence of the kingship of Ireland as the apical political office on the island, it is argued, shows that the shift towards more Gaelic-based terms of identity was not primarily concerned with affirming and reinforcing the close cultural ties between the British and Irish Goídil, but was instead aimed mainly at an Irish audience, being in many cases geared specifically to reinforce a distinctively Gaelic sense of ‘Irishness’ in the face of the new predominantly Scandinavian culture brought by the Vikings. This can be seen most clearly in the explosion of origin myth material that was being written in Ireland at this time, a genre that was almost exclusively concerned with the affairs of the island of Ireland and its successive waves of invaders, which culminated in its final settlement by the ancestors of the Goídil.
This scheme thus refused to recognise the recent Viking settlements as legitimate and viewed the Gaelic settlement of Britain as only of secondary interest. Therefore, this thesis suggests the existence of an imaginary barrier not only between the Goídil and the Gaill, but also to a degree between the two halves of Gaeldom, which even as farback as Adomnán’s time had been clearly demarcated from each other. Despite their shared cultural and genealogical horizons, they subscribed to different geographically based political identities, a division which has persisted through to the modern era.
http://www.tara.tcd.ie/bitstream/handle/2262/92829/PhD%20Thesis%20Final%20Edition%20PDF.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
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Govt open borders creates the surge of bogus asylum seekers which is destroying the vital tourism industry in Kilkenny says Luke O'Connor. It also drives down the wages and working conditions of working people. And time for Drew Harris OBE to stop politicising the Gardai who are obliged to defend Free Speech for all citizens.
Forwarded from Derek Blighe
Dublin man?
Forwarded from Donnchadh 🇮🇪
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In this clip, Dee Wall, who is standing  outside the GPO, asks the crowd to  cheer for Tommy Robinson, a loyalist, a zionist, and most likely a Mossad agent.

Stupid fucking boomer
Forwarded from Meme Cannons
Forwarded from @PhilipDwyer
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Irish Woman attacked at asylum Hotel In Dundalk by foreigner in nursing home uniform.