Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
The number one thing that should make any true Gael illiberal is the question of the Irish language
Only illiberal methods will ever be able to revive it. It needs to be forced onto the population top down in all realms of culture, just like English was.
Only illiberal methods will ever be able to revive it. It needs to be forced onto the population top down in all realms of culture, just like English was.
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
Richard Lynn didn’t even find that to be true (1st image).
As well, Lynns analysis for Ireland was semi flawed and this is very reflected when looking other tests etc. For example, Ireland scores 8th in the world on average with PISA scores (2nd pic) - how is a low IQ country scoring this high? I’ll also leave a critique of Lynns Irish analysis here and here
This also ignores that Catholics in the Occupied 6 counties score better in schools than Protestants (3rd pic).
And when looking at Irish emigrants let’s say in England - why do they score 10% more on average in school than English (4th pic) - I know the argument would be “because more affluent Irish emigrate from Ireland” - but it’s also claimed in the previous post the Irish in England are uncivilised - “scarcely human” - barbarians compared to English and in rough/impoverished areas - so uncivilised barbarians are scoring higher? Lol
As well, Lynns analysis for Ireland was semi flawed and this is very reflected when looking other tests etc. For example, Ireland scores 8th in the world on average with PISA scores (2nd pic) - how is a low IQ country scoring this high? I’ll also leave a critique of Lynns Irish analysis here and here
This also ignores that Catholics in the Occupied 6 counties score better in schools than Protestants (3rd pic).
And when looking at Irish emigrants let’s say in England - why do they score 10% more on average in school than English (4th pic) - I know the argument would be “because more affluent Irish emigrate from Ireland” - but it’s also claimed in the previous post the Irish in England are uncivilised - “scarcely human” - barbarians compared to English and in rough/impoverished areas - so uncivilised barbarians are scoring higher? Lol
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
A Dhuine Uasail,
Allow me, through your columns, to enlighten some film fan(atic)s with regard to the true character of those individuals whom they have placed on pedestals of hero worship. I am sure that if they fully realised the dangers resulting from the stream of insidious propaganda which proceeds from the Judaeo-Masonic controlled sources, and which warps and corrupts the minds of youth by implanting a false philosophy and concept of life, they would not hesitate to rise and strike...''
Seán Sabhat ''A Red List''
[1/2]
Allow me, through your columns, to enlighten some film fan(atic)s with regard to the true character of those individuals whom they have placed on pedestals of hero worship. I am sure that if they fully realised the dangers resulting from the stream of insidious propaganda which proceeds from the Judaeo-Masonic controlled sources, and which warps and corrupts the minds of youth by implanting a false philosophy and concept of life, they would not hesitate to rise and strike...''
Seán Sabhat ''A Red List''
[1/2]
Forwarded from Irish Farmer
There's a lot to unpack here, as they say. It's a good subject to really get bogged into the current farming situation here, its nitty gritty legal talk, all about a basic part of the current agri system.
There's a plethora of questions to ask, from the very basics up to the theoreticals.
Why are there calves being exported? Why is there so many Dairy farms now? The Milk quota, Irish cattle export in general and ofc, animal welfare.
The knock on effects of such a change like banning or limiting calf exports would be sizeable, but: first things first, why is there so many extra calves in the country? The milk quota was removed.
The milk quota: the "Mountains of butter" agri policy the EU had was the EU would pay farmers to produce food, no matter if anyone wanted it or not. This led to vast overproduction, in order to limit production, the EU put a quota on how much milk individual farms/creameries/member states could produce. This basically let a farmer know how much he would probably earn each year, and the over production would stop interfering in the global market.
This type of policy was kept, and further developed, instead of farmers getting fined (as it was the early EU policy set up), farmers now get paid to fulfil tasks, essentially anything from maintaining stone walls to really what amounts to excessive record keeping.
A problem arose as the amount of people, the Chinese etc, wanting powdered milk and kerrygold butter just kept getting higher.
To fulfil the market demand, in 2015, the Milk Quota was removed. Farmers could now produce as much milk as they wanted again.
Now, as is the eternal thread in farming, that solution created another problem. In order for a cow to produce milk, it has to have a calf, and there's a fair few calves around because dairy farms have grown considerably in terms of the total % of cattle in the country. The problem with that is they are bred to barely put on any meat and put all their energy into milk instead. The general practice is to breed the milking cows with a Beef bull whenever possible, so the calf will get fat if they just get packed full of grain.
Now, I'm from Donegal, and I've only ever seen barley planted 3 times in my life, so I know nothing about tillage farming, but they're intertwined here too growing food for cattle. There's better informed people than me to explain that situation.
I'll use an example I seen myself: after the milk quota was gone, a guy bought computerised calf feeders. He bought in 100 dairy calves and each one got an electronic collar. To be clear, this guy kept the place spotless, thick straw bedding in a giant shed (calves had rakes of room) with good airflow at the correct temperature and excellent vet care. Each calf had a daily allocation of milk replacer, and the computer would give it the exact amount it wanted until the ration was used up for the day.
Now, you can probably see how that would affect traditional suckler farmers, who have a beef bull and beef cows, who are having calves bred for meat, in a market saturated with cheap mince (with horse meat in it), price fixing by giant beef corporations, and every other current economic problem that's hitting everyone, the Irish agri situation is precarious at best, even before we talk about "the markets". The interaction between each farming sector is like a constant tugowar except theres one rope and dozens of different people all pulling in different directions, some only pulling at stray strands, others with their feet planted with a good grip. I haven't even mentioned Bord Bía and the huge number of other semi agri bodies in this country. Kerrygold, the amount of industrial and artisan cheeses and yoghurts. We're talking major, major money in every part of the country.
One change in the current fluctuating quasi eqilibrium and it could end up looking like a dinner dropped on the floor.
There's a plethora of questions to ask, from the very basics up to the theoreticals.
Why are there calves being exported? Why is there so many Dairy farms now? The Milk quota, Irish cattle export in general and ofc, animal welfare.
The knock on effects of such a change like banning or limiting calf exports would be sizeable, but: first things first, why is there so many extra calves in the country? The milk quota was removed.
The milk quota: the "Mountains of butter" agri policy the EU had was the EU would pay farmers to produce food, no matter if anyone wanted it or not. This led to vast overproduction, in order to limit production, the EU put a quota on how much milk individual farms/creameries/member states could produce. This basically let a farmer know how much he would probably earn each year, and the over production would stop interfering in the global market.
This type of policy was kept, and further developed, instead of farmers getting fined (as it was the early EU policy set up), farmers now get paid to fulfil tasks, essentially anything from maintaining stone walls to really what amounts to excessive record keeping.
A problem arose as the amount of people, the Chinese etc, wanting powdered milk and kerrygold butter just kept getting higher.
To fulfil the market demand, in 2015, the Milk Quota was removed. Farmers could now produce as much milk as they wanted again.
Now, as is the eternal thread in farming, that solution created another problem. In order for a cow to produce milk, it has to have a calf, and there's a fair few calves around because dairy farms have grown considerably in terms of the total % of cattle in the country. The problem with that is they are bred to barely put on any meat and put all their energy into milk instead. The general practice is to breed the milking cows with a Beef bull whenever possible, so the calf will get fat if they just get packed full of grain.
Now, I'm from Donegal, and I've only ever seen barley planted 3 times in my life, so I know nothing about tillage farming, but they're intertwined here too growing food for cattle. There's better informed people than me to explain that situation.
I'll use an example I seen myself: after the milk quota was gone, a guy bought computerised calf feeders. He bought in 100 dairy calves and each one got an electronic collar. To be clear, this guy kept the place spotless, thick straw bedding in a giant shed (calves had rakes of room) with good airflow at the correct temperature and excellent vet care. Each calf had a daily allocation of milk replacer, and the computer would give it the exact amount it wanted until the ration was used up for the day.
Now, you can probably see how that would affect traditional suckler farmers, who have a beef bull and beef cows, who are having calves bred for meat, in a market saturated with cheap mince (with horse meat in it), price fixing by giant beef corporations, and every other current economic problem that's hitting everyone, the Irish agri situation is precarious at best, even before we talk about "the markets". The interaction between each farming sector is like a constant tugowar except theres one rope and dozens of different people all pulling in different directions, some only pulling at stray strands, others with their feet planted with a good grip. I haven't even mentioned Bord Bía and the huge number of other semi agri bodies in this country. Kerrygold, the amount of industrial and artisan cheeses and yoghurts. We're talking major, major money in every part of the country.
One change in the current fluctuating quasi eqilibrium and it could end up looking like a dinner dropped on the floor.
Forwarded from Race Borz
Irish nationalists I think understand this better than anyone else because of their relationship with the British Empire and the need to find allies wherever they could find them has put them in a somewhat unique position in comparison to other nationalist movements, which is why you sometimes see them get picked on by more Anglophile types in a way that goes far beyond gentle online ribbing. And it would be disrespectful of me as an American to tell someone who is an Irish nationalist my Wikipedia-skimmed opinions on the Irish Civil War.
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
That time during the 80s when a group called “Socialists Against Nationalism” were putting out pamphlets saying that the Hunger Strikers were ‘sectarian-fascists’ and should be opposed
‘Socialists Against Nationalism’ was a campaign established by the British & Irish Communist Organisation, the Limerick Socialists Organisation and the Socialist Party of Ireland in the late 1970s.
https://www.leftarchive.ie/organisation/256/
‘Socialists Against Nationalism’ was a campaign established by the British & Irish Communist Organisation, the Limerick Socialists Organisation and the Socialist Party of Ireland in the late 1970s.
https://www.leftarchive.ie/organisation/256/
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
"D’fior chogaidh comhailtear síothcháin,
seanfocal nách sároighthear;
ní faghann síoth acht fear faghla
feadh Banbha na mbánfoithreadh."
"By a man of war is peace maintained,
a saying that cannot be refuted;
only the man of attack finds peace
in Ireland of the grassy slopes."
On stanza 3 -
"Ní fhuighid siad síodh ó Ghallaibh Gaoidhil na ngníomh gcathardha"
"Gaels of civil actions will not receive peace from the Foreigners."
(16th century version of compromising cuck-situationistists lol)
- Tadhg Dall Ó Huiginn (c.1550 – c.1591), 𝗗’𝗳𝗵𝗶𝗼𝗿 𝗰𝗵𝗼𝗴𝗮𝗶𝗱𝗵 𝗰𝗼𝗺𝗵𝗮𝗶𝗹𝘁𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝘀𝗶𝗼𝘁𝗵𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗶𝗻. Composed for Brian na Múrtha Ó Ruairc
seanfocal nách sároighthear;
ní faghann síoth acht fear faghla
feadh Banbha na mbánfoithreadh."
"By a man of war is peace maintained,
a saying that cannot be refuted;
only the man of attack finds peace
in Ireland of the grassy slopes."
On stanza 3 -
"Ní fhuighid siad síodh ó Ghallaibh Gaoidhil na ngníomh gcathardha"
"Gaels of civil actions will not receive peace from the Foreigners."
(16th century version of compromising cuck-situationistists lol)
- Tadhg Dall Ó Huiginn (c.1550 – c.1591), 𝗗’𝗳𝗵𝗶𝗼𝗿 𝗰𝗵𝗼𝗴𝗮𝗶𝗱𝗵 𝗰𝗼𝗺𝗵𝗮𝗶𝗹𝘁𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝘀𝗶𝗼𝘁𝗵𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗶𝗻. Composed for Brian na Múrtha Ó Ruairc
Forwarded from Celtic Europe
The hill-fort of East Lomond hill, in Fife, Scotland. 🏴 Dating is still uncertain, but probably late iron age to early medieval. Note the Murus Gallicus type defensive walls. Digital reconstruction by Bob Marshall.
Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/rjOekyqBmgxiZjcx
Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/rjOekyqBmgxiZjcx
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
Tailteann Games aka 'Irish Race Olympics' 1922 pamphlet
(Civil War delayed it to start until 1924)
(Civil War delayed it to start until 1924)
Forwarded from Gearóid Murphy
Real Irish people don't need approval or validation to know they're Irish. They don't need HR departments, endless propaganda, NGOs, billions of euro, or mass censorship. They don't even need citizenship. They simply are Irish and could never be anything else.
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
Those questioning efficacy/truthfulness of pluralist republican definitions of Irishness (Griffith's 'whoever swears to an Irish nation' etc.) are often accused of breaking with the past. Reality is that Gaelic notion of nationality was far closer to modern ethnonats.
Admittedly, need to assimilate Old English and Ulster planters necessitated some innovation, beginning with Céitinn's writings etc. Nonetheless, positing ethnic definitions of nationality as some imported recent phenomenon ignores 1700 plus years of Gaelic thought.
Bruadair
Admittedly, need to assimilate Old English and Ulster planters necessitated some innovation, beginning with Céitinn's writings etc. Nonetheless, positing ethnic definitions of nationality as some imported recent phenomenon ignores 1700 plus years of Gaelic thought.
Bruadair
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
"D'fhás an stór mór litríochta sin as saol na hÉireann, agus as meon an phobail in Éirinn...An méid di a tháinig mar thoradh ar an tsaoirse intleachta agus ar an nádúrthacht, is fíor-litríocht dhúchasach í ina bhfuil traidisiúin agus creideamh an chine agus smaointe pearsanta an duine measctha le chéile ar mhúnla agus i bhfriotal nach ngabhann le haon litríocht eile ar domhain, agus nach dtiocfadh ach as cleachtadh agus as cuimhní inmheánacha na gcéadta blian.
This vast body of literature grew from the Irish life, from the mind of the Irish people.....As a result of freedom of intellect and naturalness, there came about a true native literature in which the tradition and beliefs of the race and the personal thoughts of man are mixed together in a form and language that no other literature in the world possesses, something that will only come from the practice and interior memories of centuries."
Prionsias Mac Cana on the Gaelic literary tradition, "Scéalaíocht na Ríthe" (Stories of the Kings), 1956.
This vast body of literature grew from the Irish life, from the mind of the Irish people.....As a result of freedom of intellect and naturalness, there came about a true native literature in which the tradition and beliefs of the race and the personal thoughts of man are mixed together in a form and language that no other literature in the world possesses, something that will only come from the practice and interior memories of centuries."
Prionsias Mac Cana on the Gaelic literary tradition, "Scéalaíocht na Ríthe" (Stories of the Kings), 1956.
Forwarded from Archiving Irish Diversity Stuff (AIDS)
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Seán Ó Riada interview from 1970 where he discusses Traditional Irish Music vs European Classical Music