Those of us who were alive at the time can never forget the huge wave of anger and sympathy for Northern Nationalists that rolled through the South in the ensuing days. Factories and workplaces throughout the country came to a standstill as thousands of people staged impromptu strikes and marched to town centres carrying placards condemning the British. Buses and trains stopped running, Aer Lingus planes were grounded and the government recalled the London ambassador in protest.
A victim of the Paras’ violence on Bloody Sunday is carried away |
After reading this excellent post I for one would not be in the least surprised to find that the government in the Dail were implicit in the murder of its citizens in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings,their cringing attitude to the illegal activities of the brits is nothing short of the quisling behaviour of quisling $inn £eind,the only difference is that those who infest the Dail are/were supposed to be a sovereign government.they must have laughed their balls off in Whitehall at the cowardice and grovelling of those so called Irish wankers.
ReplyDeleteAll unambiguous evidence of an imperial vassal state relationship proving once again that the so called southern "Free" State is nothing more than a Vichy statelet sponsored and directed by a foreign power via native complicity. What little time the British spy Wyman and his Irish traitor Crinnion served was for public relations reasons only. As in occupied France the Resistance is punished while the Vichy go free.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely sickening to read that, the slave mentality of the Irish establishment and their need to be patted on the head by the colonial master is saddening and indeed angering. Almost humiliated to be an Irishman reading that... Very painful
ReplyDeleteIt never ceases to amaze me when talking to people how naive they are when it comes to the activities of the British Intelligence services - they all seem to think that the activities of these secret service groups stops at the door of Irish Republicanism......it's quite astonishing how many unwittingly hold this view....and any attempt to remove the cataracts can be quite exhausting...
ReplyDeleteAway from Republicanism for it is too easy to see this in operation with them, if we take a close look at certain members of the SDLP and their activities you'll see a pattern develop that calls for further scrutiny...the so called 'Anne's Law' is just a recent one. Backed by and publicly pushed for, by a long-term member, which succeeded in its passing but resulted in the removal of an up and coming leading light by the leadership for betrayal (with the excesses of Stormont, did anyone really believe that the rat was removed for accounting errors!!!)...Wasn't it extraordinary how this long-term member crawled out from under his rock and began to demand that his party support Unionism on this point....who called him out to publicly embarrass the leadership in to a u-turn and look what happened to the poor patsy who was the tool...and tool being the optimum word...but who called the patsy and the long-term member to act?
In the history of The Troubles, Bloody Sunday has assumed such an imposing presence that assumption has long trumped analysis. A coup for the IRA? Well, maybe not. It's certainly eye-opening and not a little disturbing to read here in Moloney's piece that support for republican armed resistance was more hindered than helped by the murder of innocents that day in Derry. Most of us naturally assume that IRA gained both physical and moral support in the wake of Bloody Sunday. The Lynch tremors were certainly a revelation to this reader, a sad revelation. Moloney here suggests that Lynch went cap in hand to Heath, that their late night exchange and subsequent communiques resembled the servant shuffling before the master. Only a fuller, completely contextualized representation of their discussions could confirm the veracity of this interpretation of events, but what's provided here certainly shows Lynch in an unflattering light. At a time when strength and pride and righteous indignation were demanded, were an absolute onus, there was only a whimper, an apparent act of self-preservation and the kind of careerism one would expect from the denizens of pink cloud and pink coat West Britdom.
ReplyDeleteThis whole counter-intituitive betrayal declares a sad truth about nationalists of the North. The willingness to hammer physical force republicanism in the wake of Bloody Sunday shows in grim relief the undeniable isolation of the abandoned: working class Catholics were, and in many ways remain, a people left behind, a community left to fend for itself. It reminds me of what Father Brian McCreesh said about his brother Raymond when interviewed by Padraig O'Malley. O'Malley asked him, "How about the impact of the hunger strike itself. Has it had a lasting effect?" Father McCreesh replied, "The abiding impact the hunger strike had was the very strong sense that the people to whom I belong and the people to whom the hunger strikers belonged are on their own. The oppressed people of the North, people with a very strong sense of Irish identity, are on their own."