One question, if Northern Ireland unifies with the Republic of Ireland, does that mean Northern Ireland is automatically in the EU?
@Q9wihsioa8 ай бұрын
Yes, it will become part of Ireland as just another 6 counties
@XMysticHerox8 ай бұрын
Yes. Assuming they join Ireland. Happened with Germany as well.
@bretonneux33898 ай бұрын
yes. Although technically, Northern Ireland already enjoys all the benefits of being in the EU thanks to Sunak's Windsor deal
@Soldknight3248 ай бұрын
It doesn't matter much either way for NI, considering the Windsor framework and that pretty much everyone born in the North to British/Irish parents can get an Irish passport
@ULYSSES-318 ай бұрын
@@bretonneux3389 NI only remains in the Single Market for goods, not Services, and NI is not in the Customs Union. It also lost its EU funding by UK not being in the EU.
@CrackaPackify8 ай бұрын
Thanks to the DUP for doing more for Irish unity than 100 years of armed insurgency
@Natalietrans8 ай бұрын
@wotermelon_oh no! I have to print one of the best currencies ever and have strong diplomatic relations with my neighbors! The tyranny!
@Deadlus-p3m8 ай бұрын
@wotermelon_ Lick=Licking. der.
@bobbobertson30698 ай бұрын
There homophobia doesn't help them either. @wotermelon_
@J-Vasa8 ай бұрын
@wotermelon_do people outside if the uk really think royal family run the country? Is that the perception like how people think irish are aggressive drunks or americans are all fat?
@mormacil8 ай бұрын
@@J-VasaDo people inside the UK really think the EU runs any country? No of course not, neither Charles or the EU run any country directly so the comparison is apt.
@jono_cc22588 ай бұрын
An epsiode of Star Trek the BBC were so scared of they banned the whole episode from being aired at the time of release.
@tombee97858 ай бұрын
Because in Star Trek it is explicitly said it was reunified by terrorism?
@wta15188 ай бұрын
@@tombee9785 Boo Hoo, you can't opress people without them getting mad. I feel so sorry for poor little Britain.
@lurmpfh0ne8 ай бұрын
@@wta1518LARRRRRPPPP
@lurmpfh0ne8 ай бұрын
@@wta1518larping
@lurmpfh0ne8 ай бұрын
@@wta1518LARPPPP
@TotesEmoshVibes8 ай бұрын
Irishman here, I just wanted to say I came to this video expecting a slightly biased British perspective on this matter and I'm Pleasantly surprised that this wasn't the case. Very well researched and balanced. Well done TLDR
@awolpeace17817 ай бұрын
Be as biased as you want the pro-British side is led by a "historic sex offender"
@thefearonloathing7 ай бұрын
I want to share this sentiment - this was surprisingly well done from a British presenter
@oliveryellop13336 ай бұрын
I think you’ll find that English people by and large are either ambivalent towards unification or are in favour of it.
@BigRed26 ай бұрын
Why should there be a unification when Northern Ireland has been under UK control for over 400 years? US isn’t even 300 years old to put this in perspective for you
@TotesEmoshVibes6 ай бұрын
@BigRed2 because a large proportion of population want unification. We call that democracy.
@stevendurrant17248 ай бұрын
Anyone who says Brexit didn’t help anyone never spoke to Sinn Fein 🇮🇪 😂
@JonnaBearNI8 ай бұрын
Absolutely bang on! 😂😂
@EarnestBunbury8 ай бұрын
I am wondering how radical unionists would handle an Irish reunification
@t.c.43218 ай бұрын
Maybe the weak Irish state doesn't mind Brussels telling them how to run their country, but the UK chose sovreignty
@aonary53828 ай бұрын
@@t.c.4321😂😂😂
@Karu_TC8 ай бұрын
@@t.c.4321And how's that going for us
@SirAntoniousBlock8 ай бұрын
Ali G: _Is you Irish?_ Sammy Wilson: No I'm British! Ali G: _So is you here on holiday?_
@Vampire.Vegan.8 ай бұрын
That episode was hilarious 😂
@Irishman08558 ай бұрын
😂😂gold
@parabot28 ай бұрын
@@Irishman0855 Gonna be gold when all the Ali's run Ireland and the UK . You will laugh and laugh .
@darraghfarrell90248 ай бұрын
THIS WAS ABSOLUTE COMEDY GOLD!?!
@Irishman08558 ай бұрын
@@parabot2 who put a euro in you?
@alexroberts7718 ай бұрын
It certainly would make Brexit related customs deals a lot easier
@danielwebb84028 ай бұрын
But Northern Ireland trades multiples more with the rest of the UK than it does with EU. So this trade woukd become.... a lot harder?
@Deadlus-p3m8 ай бұрын
@@danielwebb8402 At this present time Northern Ireland trades more with the occupiers but in the near future, when they Re-Unify, ( the "Re" being the important word), greater freedoms, prosperity and easier trade will usher in a better future for the Irish people.
@Redwitheran8 ай бұрын
@@danielwebb8402Since Brexit, NI is increasingly trading more with the republic than Great Britain (UK), whether this would continue depends on if the UK wishes to align itself more with Ireland and the EU. Plus what products can a 60 million country have that a 450 million trade block can’t? A lot of NI trade is based on politics, businesses operating UK-wide, but once that changes they’ll adapt quickly.
@freneticness69278 ай бұрын
It really wouldnt as it would become actually more difficult to import stuff from britain.
@CityWhisperer8 ай бұрын
@@freneticness6927 While simultaneously being easier to import from the actual island of Ireland (if you can technically import from your own home state) and the EU, along with the hundreds of trade agreements the EU has with other countries.
@dylanduke10758 ай бұрын
As an Irish fella who gets very annoyed at inaccuracies, mistakes, and oversimplifications in relation to NI and reunification - I have to say, you did a great job here imo. Very objective and fact driven. No glossing over atrocities and no sugar coating. Great content, cheers.
@mogznwaz7 ай бұрын
Activities like IRA assassinations and bombings you mean? Like not accepting that Northern Ireland didn’t want to be part of the Republic and trying to force it on them?
@phylk46837 ай бұрын
Except Ireland isn’t un-unified… we’re waiting for the north 6 counties to be freed from Britain. There’s a difference.
@jami3767 ай бұрын
@@phylk4683 ?
@oliversherman24147 ай бұрын
@@phylk4683Define "free". The people of Northern Ireland don't live in slavery
@phylk46837 ай бұрын
@@oliversherman2414in the sense that Ireland was always meant to be free of British rule and to this day we still hope for that day to come. For example the Israelis think killing Palestinians is the way to claim back their land while any actions against them is terrorism while Ireland have come to the conclusion that if Ireland is to become one again it must be through the northern Irish wanting it themselves. It’s very enlightened of us I must say.
@lewatoaofair25228 ай бұрын
0:24 Fun fact, because of that line, this particular TNG episode was banned in the UK at the time. This was before the Good Friday Agreement, of course.
@prismpyre76538 ай бұрын
because, fun fact: england has never been a democracy. what a farce
@geroutathat8 ай бұрын
They also banned/cut an episode of the simpsons that not many people know about. In it a british place with british flags blows up and Homer celebrates with Irish people in a drunken haze, its during a St patricks day part.
@spankeyfish8 ай бұрын
It's also cos of the 'terrorism works' angle to the discussion.
@Kalenz12348 ай бұрын
@@spankeyfishOne side's terrorists are another side's freedom fighters.
@tomikexboii54038 ай бұрын
@@Kalenz1234 So then tell me how that altitude turned out for all of us with the 1980s Taliban?
@Vonononie8 ай бұрын
I saw young people in NI claim their Irish EU passport after Brexit. One girl said her grandfather had fought on the side of the Union during the troubles but she had grown up under the GFA so didn’t have the same views. I wonder how many people in NI also now have an Irish EU passport and see themselves as Irish? If the people don’t view themselves as British then that will end the Union
@alexlehrersh99518 ай бұрын
Nope Some Irish people see themselves as Irish but wants too keep their monarch
@Cussie38 ай бұрын
I know quite a few that got the Irish passport at the time of Brexit to have more unrestricted travel freedoms. I imagine a diehard loyalist would never do so.
@JamesHardaker8 ай бұрын
Born in England here and moved to N ireland. I want unification. This is how most immigrant English feel now because they didn't grow up in the troubles. Most people agree tho that economically it would be bad, however with the uk economy going up in smoke that attitude is changing
@geroutathat8 ай бұрын
@@JamesHardaker Agreed, but I think most are just being cautious, economically I think it would be amazing for the north. Ireland and the EU would have no choice but try and make the north the biggest success story on the planet. I think overnight you would see money flow in from the USA/EU, places like google opening up satelite offices in belfast because its so cheap. Its so easy to get to from Dublin that Belfast could just poach half the business in Dublin, hell if they pushed for it hard they could get half the govt of Ireland to move up there. They could easily host the department of eudcation, agriculture. How many US companies would want to have their name aligned with a unified Ireland? Unionists have the land up there, instead of an Northern Ireland amazon site they could get an island of ireland amazon site, have belfast airport handle the air cargo cheaper than Dublin can.. etc etc.
@thomasdalton15088 ай бұрын
Having an Irish passport and seeing yourself as Irish are two very different things. If you are entitled to an Irish passport then you might as well apply for one and get all the benefits of EU citizenship, regardless of how you identify. People applying for Irish passports after Brexit did so pragmatically, not because of any feeling of Irish identity.
@cathaloneill5048 ай бұрын
That was one of the best quick explanations of Northern Ireland's history I have seen on a KZbin video.
@lervish19668 ай бұрын
Clover hat
@Agtsmirnoff8 ай бұрын
Totally left out the IRA and the terrorism and all that….
@Rofflestomper8 ай бұрын
@@Agtsmirnoffthey mentioned it? Lmao.
@framethis8 ай бұрын
but its wrong at a vital point ...the IRA was formed when 13 unarmed civilians were shot dead by Brit Army .They were marching for human rights and equaly opportunity in their own country.
@Agtsmirnoff8 ай бұрын
@@Rofflestomper timestamp?
@connall71888 ай бұрын
Thank you for pointing out that the troubles began as a civil rights issue for Catholics and not a fight for reunification. This is a fact that even the Irish get wrong.
@ABS-oh8jt4 ай бұрын
No its not a fact that even us Irish get wrong ! Are you actually Irish yourself ? 🤐🤐🤐
@Elongated_Muskrat8 ай бұрын
If only to make Star Trek TNG correct.
@QemeH8 ай бұрын
2024, this is the year...
@daled41918 ай бұрын
Just hope they aren't correct about other stuff.. don't fancy ww3, the eugenics wars in the 90s were rough enough
@filipe57228 ай бұрын
Hopefully without the terrorism, though.
@QemeH8 ай бұрын
@@filipe5722 Well, there are relatively recent examples for both directions. Germany 1990 went pretty smoothly, all things considered - Catalonia on the other hand... well... So, let's hope.
@ThatGuyBrian8 ай бұрын
@@daled4191 No sanctuary districts yet, wonder what Gabriel Bell is up to.
@jamessteel90168 ай бұрын
Brexit has certainly sped up the cause of Irish unification, thanks Unionists 👏🇮🇪
@spoonkus58938 ай бұрын
Look at the polls and it tells a much different story lol
@jamessteel90168 ай бұрын
@@Patrick-y4d1z invading a sovereign country? Like Russia you mean?
@Patrick-y4d1z8 ай бұрын
@wotermelon_ I don't hate the Irish. And they're not better than anybody. But reuniting Ireland back into the UK would be far better for both the UK and Ireland. At the moment, Ireland is not doing well, neither is Britain. Together they would do much better. The UK should then rejoin the EU afterwards.
@Patrick-y4d1z8 ай бұрын
@@jamessteel9016 What are you talking about? I never said to invade. I'd like Ireland to reunify diplomatically.
@davidryan76138 ай бұрын
@@Patrick-y4d1zlol Ireland isn't doing well? Mate salaries in Manchester are half that of Dublin, you're absolutely decades behind us these days
@fpoggesi8 ай бұрын
I would recommend putting the "earlier" columns on the left and the "later" column to the right in your comparisons of Census and polling results. Butting 2021 first then 2011 second looks wonky in a left-to-right language like English.
@wilhelmbittrich888 ай бұрын
Not really. It doesn’t take more than a second to check the wording underneath the bars.
@markooklop8 ай бұрын
But what if you're driving on the left side of the road?
@realgcomedy27778 ай бұрын
Linguistically this comment is right. If it were an Arabic graph, perhaps it would be appropriate, but in this order the graphs are simply more confusing
@SeanSKZ8 ай бұрын
As a Data Analyst I agree 💯
@SMGJohn8 ай бұрын
@@wilhelmbittrich88 Even in Asia they put it left to right when its a date that goes from old to new, are you that daft?
@Ammo083 ай бұрын
I'm an American, and I don't even claim to understand Irish politics. Your channel is so far, to me, the best to explain things evenly.
@warren-freshoffthevinemedia3 ай бұрын
I was just about to post the same thing.
@rob58948 ай бұрын
Only 4 of the counties in N. Ireland had loyalist majorities. The 2 that didn't were added because the British thought N. Ireland would be otherwise too small.
@gloin108 ай бұрын
@rob "Only 4 of the counties in N. Ireland had loyalist majorities"? Now it's down to two, Down and Antrim. While Belfast is now a Catholic/Nationalist/Republican(CNR) majority city....
@oneroomboy8 ай бұрын
Didn't they all have loyalist majorities and the UK gave back the counties with the majority catholic populations ie Donegal, Cavan and Monaghan
@jimmyryan58808 ай бұрын
@@oneroomboyno, rob is correct
@rob58948 ай бұрын
@@oneroomboy yes, they gave back those counties but two others should have also been given back but weren't. The new autonomous Northern Ireland was formed from six of the nine counties of Ulster: four counties with unionist majorities - Antrim, Armagh, Down, and Derry/Londonderry - and two counties with slight Irish nationalist majorities - Fermanagh and Tyrone.
@gaeilge09008 ай бұрын
@@oneroomboy Fermanagh and Tyrone also had Catholic majorities. Nationalists in these counties couldn't believe they were thrown in to make Northern Ireland viable.
@marsupius8 ай бұрын
I hope they can make a decision based on the clear preference of the majority and peacefully pursue that decision.
@YoungDefiant3698 ай бұрын
Whatever that means
@danielb.35158 ай бұрын
@@YoungDefiant369not hard mate just best to avoid another 30 years of conflict
@YoungDefiant3698 ай бұрын
@@danielb.3515why would that happen ?
@theangrysocialist68848 ай бұрын
@@YoungDefiant369 England
@fearnpol49388 ай бұрын
We tried that in Scotland in 2014 but the British government, civil service and MI5 all worked illegally to make sure it wasn’t a fair or legal ballot. Also helps when all media is London owned and controlled from there. England loves its colonies!
@korpiz8 ай бұрын
The U.K. parliament has lots of Scottish nationalists in it, the local parliament in Northern Ireland are now run by an Irish party and England doesn’t even have a national parliament. I mean, can it get anymore ridiculous.
@TwoToTheSix8 ай бұрын
Sinn Féin are the largest party but they definitely aren’t ‘running the local parliament’. The NI Executive (which is what I’m guessing you meant) is formed through mandatory coalition, so currently it’s run by Sinn Féin, the DUP, Alliance, and the UUP.
@faithlesshound56218 ай бұрын
England has no national parliament because the Tories are dead set against devolution of any sort. They refused to allow regional assemblies: the nearest we have is regional mayors based in a few of the largest cities. That's because they want decision making to stay in London, where the money is. If there was an English Assembly in the middle of the country it would be in Coventry.
@warrenpaine8 ай бұрын
The Parliament that sits in London is England's national Parliament. Always has been and always will be.
@lighting75088 ай бұрын
@@warrenpaineit’s fundamentally such a flawed system and I say that as a guy from London/Essex 😂
@1981Marcus8 ай бұрын
@@faithlesshound5621And now they've changed how regional mayors are elected to a FPTP system so that they can win without majority support. 🤮
@JarodFarrant8 ай бұрын
I hope it does and I hope it’s all done peacefully. Ireland deserves peace and prosperity from all the struggle they have gone through.
@Lolp8218 ай бұрын
They do have peace and prosperity, pushing for something that basically only politicians want is going to end that peace. I'll guess you don't live here and just took some guys video as basis for your comment.
@howshecuttingbogman89998 ай бұрын
The Irish need to take revenge against the loyalists after the brits leave.
@petercunningham56407 ай бұрын
It's the people who decide the people vote for the man date the politicians lay out in their manifesto
@dolier28025 ай бұрын
@@Lolp821 Literally "I hope it's all done peacefully" nice sentiment but what is that supposed to mean and how does it relate? Speaking as if we are still living through the troubles 😂 People will hardly be out on the street shooting each other when NI is united with the South, it'll just happen, some people will be very happy, some people will be very angry and upset, for the most part, that will be that. I swear, it's mostly Americans that talk as if we're still in the troubles.
@bobthebuilder65534 ай бұрын
@@Lolp821"only politicians want" what are you smoking?
@Some1rishGuy8 ай бұрын
Really appreciate you referring to it as REunification
@firstname48658 ай бұрын
Why do you think by default Northern Ireland would join republic of Ireland and not be independent?
@Rofflestomper8 ай бұрын
@@firstname4865cause it would crash and burn otherwise idiot?.
@burp20198 ай бұрын
@@firstname4865 they have nothing to gain and much to lose from being an independent country
@firstname48658 ай бұрын
@@burp2019 Ireland has one of the highest gross debts in the world
@yahoooooooooooo.oooooooooooooo8 ай бұрын
@@firstname4865Ireland has one of the highest gdp per capita rates in the world. Also Ireland isn’t one of the countries with the most national debt, uk has more.
@seanfinnegan19428 ай бұрын
Fermanagh and Tyrone had clear Catholic majorities at the time of partition. Armagh and Derry were almost 50/50. Down and Antrim had clear protestant majorities. Today, Antrim and Down are still majority protestant and still mostly unionist (with the exception of Belfast).
@catfootball5928 ай бұрын
People forget a how many Catholics want to stay in the Union.
@thomasoflaherty35208 ай бұрын
@@catfootball592 How many? Tell us where you've attained that information.
@mikerodent31648 ай бұрын
Yes yes, my young Fenian friend. But you seem oblivious the quality of the grouse shooting in Fermanagh and Tyrone, what what!
@unknownidiot6178 ай бұрын
@@thomasoflaherty3520 Catholics I work with and know said they wouldn't vote because it was alot cheaper and less hassle they said with the amount of paper work that would be required would kill most of their small businesses
@andrewdouglas19638 ай бұрын
In a poll conducted in 2022 and published by the times newspaper, 21% of catholics in Northern Ireland said they would vote to stay in the union, 55% would vote for reunification, 3% were undecided and 21% replied don't know.
@robbiezy8 ай бұрын
It's interesting that after the war counties Tyrone and fermanagh want to join the Republic but Britain kept them as they feared the block would be too small to become viable
@faithlesshound56218 ай бұрын
Unionist greed a century ago led to their shooting their descendants in the foot. The historic province of Ulster had nine counties, four of which had a Protestant majority. Putting six counties into Northern Ireland meant there was a substantial Catholic minority. Fermanagh and Tyrone had mainly Protestant landowners and mainly Catholic labourers. A bit like the old East Prussia with its Protestant Junkers? They minimised the effect of the Catholic numbers by gerrymandering. NI had extra votes for owning another house and for owning a business for decades after those privileges were abolished in Great Britain. Those rules have gone now in NI too. The rich in NI were mostly Protestant so they had most of the extra votes.
@robert61068 ай бұрын
@@faithlesshound5621 The majority or the poor where also protestant.
@faithlesshound56218 ай бұрын
@@robert6106 I would be surprised if the majority of the poor in a Catholic-majority county of Northern Ireland were Protestant, considering that the main reason for holding onto it was their Protestant landowners.
@ericwolf94828 ай бұрын
What truly Needs to be in the Heads and Hearts of the Irish..is simply this in a Republic minority rights ARE protected.. in a Democracy you vote daily if they are under protection.. Example ,you have one sheep and two Wolves. And they get to vote what's for dinner. But in a Republic minority rights are protected. I'm of Irish Decent and Love Ireland..
@Luca-gu7qu8 ай бұрын
What is most important if there is to be a united ireland, us that you need to tear up "them joining us & us joing them" and the whole politucal structure hasbto be changed to a United Ireland not "north joining republic". This state must ensure that it is inclusive of all residents, including protestants.
@yermanoffthetelly8 ай бұрын
5% of the Republics population is Protestant, have you ever heard any of them complaining about exclusion? The sectarian divide isn't a thing in the rest of Ireland.
@Luca-gu7qu8 ай бұрын
@@yermanoffthetelly for sure, but sinn fein need to make this point to the undecided voters clearly as they will be those that get this over the line
@lighting75088 ай бұрын
@@yermanoffthetellyit will still be a bit of a shock for the ROI. Unification might mean a violent lurch to the right… that’s the simple truth
@fitzstv85068 ай бұрын
There are 7 million people on the island of Ireland, 6 million identify as Irish that's 85% of the people on the island and that figure is increasing annually....Ireland is heading towards unification and there is little anyone Unionist or otherwise can do about it.
@fitzstv85068 ай бұрын
No! Irish people are for the most part politically moderate, there are a few head bangers around but they are confined to the fringes and their dangerous narrative only available on social media. In a United Ireland those British Unionists will be respected and involved but after a generation or two it is likely that they will be absorbed in the general Irish population.@@lighting7508
@andrewdavies89548 ай бұрын
I would suggest the vast majority of English people could not give a toss one way or the other
@stevoc99308 ай бұрын
Indeed, most little Englanders don't care for or know much of anything outside England.
@dirtiestharry65518 ай бұрын
@@stevoc9930kek absolutely this
@fitzstv85068 ай бұрын
Many English people do not know that Ireland (the Republic) is actually politically separate from the UK....I know an English guy who could not understand why Ireland had not got a day off for the late Queens funeral!.
@devJOE-Man8 ай бұрын
@@fitzstv8506😂😂😂😂😂
@limpa7568 ай бұрын
In a twist of Irony Northern Ireland now has a more Celtic population than Ireland kek. Dublinistan is Germanic (Scandinavian) and it shows, that's why it's a parody of londonistan. Anywhere vikings touch town and influenced are turning into the middle east
@AmateurHEROduelist8 ай бұрын
If that's what the people living there want 🤷 so be it, it should be their choice
@malehumanperson79018 ай бұрын
It isn't. Look at the polling.
@Rofflestomper8 ай бұрын
@@malehumanperson7901it is. Look at the polling.
@MajoraWaffle8 ай бұрын
@@malehumanperson7901 colonialist bot, proceed to ignore
@malehumanperson79018 ай бұрын
Don't get mad at me. Get mad at the polling data.@@MajoraWaffle
@HaroldDrama8 ай бұрын
@@MajoraWaffle Just because of what he said doesn't make him a colonialist bot, just a british person, what's wrong with that?
@gaeilge09008 ай бұрын
Tyrone and Fermanagh had Catholic majorities from the start in 1920. Now Armagh and Derry also have Catholic majorities. So 4 out of the 6 counties of NI have a Catholic majority, 7/9 Ulster counties and 30/32 counties on the island of Ireland have Catholic/Nationalist majorities.
@iainpattison9035 ай бұрын
Dublin, in general, is not that keen on Roman Catholics though. Dublin is a good city, Dublin was good when I went there in 2011.
@75slaine8 ай бұрын
Well done guys, you handled what is a sensitive topic very well.
@NicolaMulholland8 ай бұрын
It's worth noting that while the signing of the Anglo Irish Treaty in 1921 created the Irish Free-State, the Government of Ireland Act 1920 had already split Ireland into two separate territories.
@taintabird238 ай бұрын
Indeed. But the 1921 Anglo Irish Treaty was for the whole island, North and South of the border. However, NI opted out, as it was entitled to do under the treaty.
@konstantinosnikolakakis81258 ай бұрын
I think, had the Government of Ireland Act 1920 been passed in 1912 all of Ireland would still be in the UK. But the Loyalists were too stubborn about home rule, which pushed the rest of the island towards independence.
It would perhaps have remained in the UK for perhaps a few decades more but ultimately Ireland would have gone it's own way.@@konstantinosnikolakakis8125
@CountScarlioni8 ай бұрын
@@konstantinosnikolakakis8125 "the Loyalists were too stubborn about home rule" And who'd have thought over 110 years later and THAT would still be the main f'ing problem!
@jamescraft29765 ай бұрын
From a British point of view I've always assumed it would. Should never have been divided and of course there should be a united Ireland. It's best for the Republic of Ireland and the UK.
@benoneill78838 ай бұрын
The most accurate description of the situation in Northern Ireland I have ever seen 👍
@jamesmulrooney33098 ай бұрын
As a brit I think it should be upto the irish to decide if they wanna remain in the UK they should get a referendum, a fair choice
@spoonkus58938 ай бұрын
UlsterProts have the right to self determination, there is no logic in sacrificing that right for a group that already has its own nation
@Bushflare8 ай бұрын
That’s not how it works. Let’s say even 75% of the Irish vote to unify… that’s 25% of the country who just had their country democratically voted out of existence. There’s zero chance that doesn’t lead to violence and it’s a pretty huge ethical question if you can just vote countries out of existence to begin with. Referendums are effectively just mob rule. Who has the most boots in the ground. Direct democracy like that in reality just leads to tribalism like the Brexit debacle. An Irish referendum is a childish solution to a complicated problem. If an Irishman wants to live in Ireland he can already do that without needing to culturally erase a country.
@davidpeterson56478 ай бұрын
@@spoonkus5893The Unionists gave up that right when they chose to blindly support a Brexit referendum without knowing what that meant, and then begging an ambivalent Tory party to do something much too late to ineffectively change anything. Holding government up indefinitely doomed the Unionists, and there’s no changing the trends. Happy St Patty’s Day, btw.
@andreasfroby8 ай бұрын
@@spoonkus5893you know Ireland has freedom of religion
@Bushflare8 ай бұрын
@@davidpeterson5647 They gave up the right to have cultural autonomy when they voted in a referendum to get more cultural autonomy? Do you ever actually think or do the words just tumble out of your mouth wtf?
@khar12d88 ай бұрын
I don't think it will happen for a long time, if ever. NI joining the Republic is so complicated. Does NI stay devolved but in the Republic? What do you do about all the angry unionists that may be a minority but still a minority that refuse to be Irish? Even getting to a referendum would require probably many years of 60% plus saying in opinion polls they want to join the Republic. And the centrist, not strongly republican or loyalist, type of person has reason to fear the turmoil of leaving the UK and joining the RoI which makes them er toward staying in the UK.
@yermanoffthetelly8 ай бұрын
50%+1, that's what the treaty says. Turmoil? It's been nothing but turmoil for 100 years because it was designed as a apartheid sectarian statelet. They'll actually have stability for a change when it's run like a normal country again.
@fortheloveofnoise8 ай бұрын
Deport them to Belfast.
@petrokemikal8 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree and for some reason people are overlooking that very very key point... Theres a lot of people living in the north that dont want to be part of the Republic..Doesnt matter why...Thats irrelivant !!! What are you going to do.. Tell them your no longer a british citizen ? Or better yet ask them to leave and move to England ?? !!! Dont think so...
@JayM-wg7dd8 ай бұрын
False. The GFA is very clear on the threshold, which is a majority. So 50+1. It’s Happening, it’s happening soon, and anyone who thinks otherwise has their head in the sand. In from a unionist background but my wife’s from south as are most of our friends. I don’t fear it, plus f*ck it, means my £40k student loan won’t be paid. By me at least. Edit: Petrokemikal. The situation you described as being unlikely already happened when the North was partitioned. Catholics were told if you don’t like it move South.
@petrokemikal8 ай бұрын
The situation you describe between catholics been told to leave is somthing akin to walking around a building site in the 70s with no hard hat and no boots.. That wont work in todays culture..Those days are gone Mate..@@JayM-wg7dd
@emil3f8 ай бұрын
According to STar Trek this is the year of the Bell Incidents and the Irish Reunification
@tradtke1018 ай бұрын
It may indeed be an ugly year for America
@purgruv8 ай бұрын
Self-fulfilling prophecy’s gonna self-fulfil
@tradtke1018 ай бұрын
@@purgruv yes, lest The Time Wars begin again
@1916jamesconnolly8 ай бұрын
Unless the Borg invade and assimilate everyone into the collective. "It's Life Jim but not as we know it".
@bornhoffer8 ай бұрын
Anyone who has the chance to get out of Great Brexitannia and back into the EU, should grab it with both hands.
@mtr37548 ай бұрын
As a Palestinian, I support the reunification of Ireland. One Ireland, free of the English. One Scotland, free of the English.
@bigrobsydney8 ай бұрын
Ireland for the IRISH!
@fortissimolaud8 ай бұрын
Good video. Just one nitpick: all violent struggles are also political, because they involve humans having grievances against other humans.
@HenryAndersen2 ай бұрын
It is natural for Ireland to become united.
@Niall0018 ай бұрын
A key consideration is demographics. A majority of those under 45's want unity while over 70% of OAPs identify as unionists. Unionists are dying (due to old age) at a far higher rate than nationalists. They are replaced as voters by those turning 18 - who tend to support reunification. In 20 years, support for reunification would be overwhelming (everything else being equal), however, the point at which a majority would support reunification (in principle) is likely to be reached during the coming decade.
@StephenTurnerVlogs8 ай бұрын
Just FYI, That's not where Dublin is. Also, the Republic government is required to provide funding and work cross border. So the A5 money isn't us trying to bring a poll closer.
@emperorsean18 ай бұрын
The Republic doesn't fund NI Britain funds it.
@Cofarl8 ай бұрын
Casement park
@johnhughes37968 ай бұрын
Great report as usual guys, keep up the good work.
@hungrydavo8 ай бұрын
The problems created by the British continue...
@jakdmavika92338 ай бұрын
The Star Trek fans are gonna love this.
@Shane-ln5zz8 ай бұрын
British have been looking to dump it for years, it's been a headache ever since it's beginning, the southerners would be crazy to take on that place
@gabealtf8 ай бұрын
If that were true, we wouldn’t have had to fight hard to get that piece of paper that said "one day maybe"
@Americium-1208 ай бұрын
@@gabealtf As an American, I can kind of understand what the opening comment was saying with regard to a region being a headache in a way that counters the whole fighting over it issue. We in the United States have been trying to give Puerto Rico independence for years (it currently sits in a become state, become independent or status quo). If Puerto Rico had an armed revolt for independence, we'd fight those people over that. However, if they voted to leave us we'd probably have a sigh of relief. The UK seems to want to dump NI in the way we want to dump PR. For you, NI is part of the UK despite the UK giving them plenty of referendums to leave. For us, PR keeps wanting to join as an official state even though we give them every chance for an out. So yeah, I can understand what they mean.
@Lichenroc5 ай бұрын
@@Americium-120 You talk as if the Puerto Ricans aren't Americans themselves.
@silversurfergw8 ай бұрын
Been divided for too long
@DioTheGreatOne22 күн бұрын
As soon as Ireland becomes obviously much better and much richer than the UK (something that is already starting to happen) the Loyalists will change their mind and join the republic.
@hwica27538 ай бұрын
Funny how the English populace are never asked if they want NI to continue to be part of the UK. As someone born in England I would be very happy to see unification with Ireland.
@IrishSon8 ай бұрын
Why would the English populace get a say on the future political status of Northern Ireland? The role of the English populace has already been defined, cough up £13bn per annum to keep Northern Ireland afloat. If you want a bigger say, then that will obviously come with a higher price tag.
@sigmascrub8 ай бұрын
@@IrishSon"Why would the English populace get a say on the future political status of Northern Ireland?" Give them a break. They're English. They can't help it. 😔😉🤣
@chrisw82846 ай бұрын
Little Engerlander your country is ivet run with Muslims and foreigners. You have more important things to concern your self with😂😂
@WarWulf7788 ай бұрын
One last point, SF didn’t increase their vote numbers by any significant margin to claim top spot. The DUP voters stayed home in protest of their handling of the Brexit negotiations. They were down over 60,000 votes; more than enough to leapfrog SF. The issue is that their base is pro-Brexit, but the party funders are pro-EU, leading the party to be very quiet during negotiations. Most DUP voters I know "hold their nose" while voting, just as long as the party "do, as best they can, to protect [their] place in the Union."
@miakeogh68448 ай бұрын
778 when will the DUP and all the other unionist parties realise that the English could not care less about them
@WarWulf7787 ай бұрын
@miakeogh6844 could you be more specific, please? What do you mean by the "English"? What do you mean by "could not care less"? I lived in England for 6 years in various places, both North and South, and never met anyone that wished to see Northern Ireland removed from the Union against its will. In fact, whenever the subject came up, a lot of the English were very passionate about making sure we had the right to stay. Thirdly, what does this have to do with my point?
@autarchprinceps8 ай бұрын
The other main thing that changed, is that for the first time again, the Republic of Ireland has become the bigger union, as it part of the EU, and the richer country. Heck, there is even immigration from other UK parts to Dublin, mostly based on economic factors. While Scotish independence has become a little less likely in recent months again, the UK is still in a process of shooting itself repeatedly in the foot, and not even just with Brexit related policies, and threatening to tear itself apart. In comparison the Republic of Ireland has become much more stable and pluralist in comparison to the past, removing also fears of negative consequences of a reunification. There are still extreme positions on this in significant parts of the population on both ends of course. At the moment an outright flip for reunification without any issues by 2030 seems a bit ambitious, but unless the UK, and let's be honest that mostly means England in this context, changes course significantly, it seems eventually inevitable. Then again, I don't think even most people in England think things can continue the way they have gone, as polls also clearly show. Maybe we are going to see the Tories disappear first, or even EU rejoining, at which point the exact details of whether NI is or isn't part of the Republic of Ireland would matter much less again, and it would be less of a priority as well.
@gothicgolem29478 ай бұрын
Richer only in one section of gdp in the other the Uk is far ahead
@ab-ym3bf8 ай бұрын
@@gothicgolem2947huh? There are sections of gdp? The only thing that matters when it comes to gdp is the amount per capita ppp, and the ginincoefficient. You will find numerous countries that leave the UK (far) behind, Ireland especially.
@georgelonghurst26728 ай бұрын
I wouldnt say ROI is the bigger union, the uk is still one of the richest countries in the world and thats not gonna change any time. I highly doubt northen ireland will join ROI it will cost ROI i imagine taxes would go up, some have even est that it would cost the goverment €6.7 billion to €15.7 billion annually.
@strandkorbst96438 ай бұрын
Ireland is not as rich as it seems, I moved here last year and the infrastructure is shockingly bad, no metro in Dublin, very little rail service, complete over reliance on buses. Rent is insane, and people here have a lower quality of life than people in many other EU countries
@ab-ym3bf8 ай бұрын
Uk membership of the EU is at least 30 years away. Sound like Irish reunification will be done and dusted way for that .
@CapAnson123452 ай бұрын
For the love of God if the Gallagher brothers can get back together (for now) surely Ireland can. It's not like the British army is going to invade you these days.. you just have to want it.
@thomasjgallagher9248 ай бұрын
Just a production critique: your bar graphs aren't intuitive. You're talking about increases, but the dates read from right to left. I think having 2011 on thr left and 2021 on the right makes more sense when you're talking about increases or decreases over time.
@ville828 ай бұрын
I was visiting as a tourist in Dublin, Galway and Belfast recently and seems everything was almost 50% cheaper in Belfast. I wonder what will happen should there be reunification.
@AndreVictorGoncalves8 ай бұрын
This is not a good thing. It means that the average income in Ireland is far greater than in NI. Possibly double the income
@rkan28 ай бұрын
Ireland GDP is 4x NI GDP. But the real earnings for people in Ireland should be much closer to other EU countries and the UK. This is evident by the living standards, which are not much higher than the UK or France. Thus the median salary in Ireland is 45k€ and the average 42k€. In NI the numbers are 42k median and 39k€ average. Not that much different, but Ireland would definitely face challenges when it comes to taxation of multinational corporations when supporting Northern Ireland. It would not be easy and compared to the status quo there would be little economical benefits for either side.
@charlotteinnocent87528 ай бұрын
Dublin's always been touristy and expensive. I doubt that would be where you would see change happening. Look for change in other areas.
@godlovesyou19958 ай бұрын
@@AndreVictorGoncalvesincome is pretty similar, with north a good amount cheaper.
@gloin108 ай бұрын
@@rkan2 "reland GDP is 4x NI GDP."? More like TEN times, actually. About one sixth the size of the UK's, with a population about 1/13th of the UK's "...but Ireland would definitely face challenges when it comes to taxation of multinational corporations when supporting Northern Ireland"? No, Ireland would definitely NOT "...face challenges when it comes to taxation of multinational corporations when supporting Northern Ireland" Corporation Taxation is simply NOT an issue when it comes to re-unification. The Irish state, in 2022, had an overall income from taxes, rents, dividends from semi-state companies, and other things, of more than €83 BILLION. And why do you assume that we will continue "....supporting Northern Ireland"? There would be a need for a cash injection to bring the economy of Northern Ireland(NI) up to Irish productivity levels. There will NO need for "....supporting Northern Ireland" once its economy has been brought up to scratch. All available research indicates that the all-island country would be looking at a 'Unification Dividend' of €30-35BILLION after ten or 15 years. "...there would be little economical benefits for either side"? Automatically regaining full EU membership status would be a MASSIVE "...economical benefits..." for NI.
@awolpeace17817 ай бұрын
I'm going to be alive when Ireland unifies, what a day to be alive!!!
@yeomanie8 ай бұрын
Great to see a well informed and objective piece of journalism which for a British media outlet is refreshing and new. Pity about some of the comments tho...
@urNbrTotoro8 ай бұрын
gotta love that the video threw in that "banned" phrase from Star Trek: The Next Generation
@smileyface7028 ай бұрын
I wish there was a local Irish or northern Irish-based KZbin channel that made similar, high quality, explainer videos about local politics.
@thomasetienne8971Ай бұрын
[4:49] religion / [5:04] self esteem / [5:24] Sinn Féin
@seamusmcgee96528 ай бұрын
Missed out on the very important point that when you take the over 65 voters out of the polling data there is overwhelming support for a UI. The 18-30 vote is overwhelmingly in favour of a UI. This suggest a trend as older voters pass away and younger people become eligible to vote then in 5-10 years there will be a significant swing and growing momentum for a UI
@Kobe-s2i8 ай бұрын
Until they need to go to the hospital and realise they'd have to pay for it themselves
@bennallen16028 ай бұрын
Until they own their own home and don't want to pay ROI taxes
@jimmyryan58808 ай бұрын
ROI doesn't have any kind of home taxes
@seamusmcgee96528 ай бұрын
@@Kobe-s2i this isn’t true. Hospital care is free. There is a charge to visit a gp which is subsidised for those who cannot afford it. Free education, no rates (which are going up in Ni), basically all social and economic outcomes are better for a kid in Louth as opposed to a kid in Armagh, unfortunately
@bennallen16028 ай бұрын
@jimmyryan5880 everything has sky high taxes in ROI
@quinnalexaroyer24938 ай бұрын
They should have put the Star Trek clip of what Data said in the section titled, "What Does the Data Say?"
@Finnbobjimbob8 ай бұрын
If that’s what the majority there desires, then the vast majority of Brits have no problem with it.
@ronbyers99127 ай бұрын
Another result of Brexit. Another British own goal.
@TheReykjavik8 ай бұрын
I got the chance to visit Northern Ireland (and also the Republic of Ireland, England, Wales, and Scotland) about 15 years ago, and the sense I got from people was that the status quo was fine, much better than the violence of the Troubles, and while some people wanted reunification and some wanted to stay part of the UK, the sentiment was very much that making that decision should be a peaceful and democratic choice. Brexit threw a wrench into things, because when the UK was in the EU, travelling between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland was quite easy, they were different nations, but they were part of the same union and as a result, the different administrations wasn't honestly a huge deal. There was a lot of concern that brexit would cause a lot of problems at the RI/NI border, and it seems they've managed to handle that situation reasonably well so far, while there may be problems there, none of them have been so severe that the news made it to an outsider like myself. My read on the situation is that Northern Ireland would be better off with reunification and being part of the EU than continuing with the UK post brexit, but the difference isn't so huge as to be worth creating or escalating tensions. I think as long as the UK honors its commitment to letting the people of Northern Ireland decide, Ireland will eventually reunify, which will be a good thing. In the meantime, Northern Ireland appears to be doing ok as part of the UK, they are not facing the oppression of times passed, so until a majority wants to reunify, things as they are are fine enough.
@taintabird238 ай бұрын
Your analysis is better and more honest than the analysis of some from either Northern Ireland or the Republic.
@simian_essence8 ай бұрын
This video was OK as far as it went...but it didn't go far enough. What I'd like to know more about are the underlying economic, social and cultural drivers of the changes discussed.
@directdebit60788 ай бұрын
The video is simplified. The channel is literally about simplifying news, its in the name.
@dukeon8 ай бұрын
Maybe The Economist or a recent book might have that kind of information. Or a think tank type website.
@mick94198 ай бұрын
I served in the army, I never referred to Derry as Londonderry, always Derry. And I never favoured prods over Catholics. Maybe because I grew up in a part of London that had a huge Irish community.
@chrisMthepoet8 ай бұрын
As I commented in another place I believe that if the UK and USA provided serious funding for say 10years after unification, I believe the Unionists could be brought to the table to negotiate a new Ireland which protected their interests.
@human84548 ай бұрын
Free Ireland from palistine 🇵🇸❤🇮🇪
@Irishman08553 ай бұрын
Free Palestine brother love from Ireland🇮🇪🇵🇸
@DioTheGreatOne22 күн бұрын
Free Palestine from existence
@jarrodyuki70817 ай бұрын
Ireland will unite!!!!!!!!!!
@XelitexX3608 ай бұрын
I'm not Irish or European but I do hope they reunify! Just like Korea or Cyprus. I just hope people can live in peace together as in these cases they were all separated due to idiology/religion.
@johnm27148 ай бұрын
Don't assume reunification will bring peace. Things are as peaceful over there now as they have been. For all the slightly warmer words from SF towards the Loyalists in recent years, reunification could very easily kick the Troubles off again. And I doubt the Garda will cope. But at least the British Army won't be going back in to crank up the tension.
@hey125428 ай бұрын
Re unify would imply they were united previously and that was never the case. The reason NI is in the state it's in is cause it chose to be part of the UK 🇬🇧. People should really do there history and get it from unbiased sources. If they unite it will be a new unification and a new Ireland 🇮🇪. That will come with new requests from the North that might be a bitter pill for the republic to swallow. Also I agree with the previous comment, just cause they unity doesn't mean it will be peaceful. This will be a watch and wait moment.
@XelitexX3608 ай бұрын
@@hey12542 wow you mentioning people should really do their history and get it from unbiased sources is ironic. Ireland was majority Catholic and united before protestant settlers from Scotland and England were planted in the northeastern part of the island to bolster the authority of the English Crown. Ireland was united before being part of the UK. I can say the same comment as you that people should really do their research before commenting on subjects. You and the previous comment agreeing/saying to don't assume peace with reunification, when did I assume it? If something I clearly said I just *hope* they could reunify and live peacefully. Not affirming, just hoping. Not really following how a comment wishing the wellbeing and peace for both united ended with these response but whatever floats your boat.
@burp20198 ай бұрын
Ireland's the only one of those 3 that has any chance of reuniting peacefully
@lighting75088 ай бұрын
You sound extremely ignorant. Who are you to tell the northern Irish people what would bring them peace? Only they can decide. Right now they want to be in the UK if that changes we have an agreement to fulfil their wishes.
@billywiththebulgingbaloonb51058 ай бұрын
England thought Brexit would lead to a resurgence of nationalism and a return of the empire. In reality it tore the nation to pieces.
@ALavin-en1kr4 ай бұрын
They thought they still had the commonwealth and that counted for something. The commonwealth is a fantasy most countries are who they are as a country now, not based on who their settlers were. They have moved far away from that in time and space.
@Teag_Brohman158 ай бұрын
what does Northern Ireland have to gain by being with the UK at this point? the UK is in the middle of a recession AND a cost of living crisis, helmed by a hilariously incompetent conservative government. if they join with Ireland, they'll at least get their EU membership back
@Dublinby8 ай бұрын
What does it have to gain? the question should what does it have to lose, and it can lose so so much. Currently the UK government puts millions/billions into NI, which is why you see it is a much better position in terms of government funding compared to the rest of the UK. This includes road work, includes funding for police and hospitals as well. Furthermore NI is unique in that it attains its education system primarily through grammer and state schools, which are significantly cheaper than the GB system, where grammer schools are dying, and this has worked in there favour as usually non-private/public schools perform best in NI. With all the situations the UK has, NI would experience it worse within a united Ireland for the moment as the south has a significantly worse housing crisis, and cost of living, such as in Dublin is far and beyond that of most cities in GB. Economic reasons are enough for some people to support remaining, giving NI is a cash-cow system country within the UK. Once it crosses over, economically things will get worse. If it does get unified, there will be a process of an intermediate period to adjust to the changes, similar to HK's transfer from the UK to China in 1997. Even though Ireland is in the EU, I welcome you to ask the people on their economic situation and how they feel independent of whether they are in the EU or not. It is worse there than the UK!
@Teag_Brohman158 ай бұрын
@@Dublinby you're a Unionist, aren't you?
@Dublinby8 ай бұрын
@@Teag_Brohman15 I'm neither unionist or a republican. I'm an ethnic minority born in Belfast. What I say is what I have experienced being in Dublin, it is an incredibly expensive place to live and economically I do feel it will be worse as NI receives a huge amount from the UK government (which is probably unfair given its only populated with 2 million people max). I'm sure if it unifies with ROI, everything will increase in price especially property and health care won't be public anymore. This is my take as an observation. I do believe people complain more financially in Dublin than Belfast. Note I'm not using this as a reason to justify it should not unify its notnmy part or place to say. I'm simply responding to your question on what benefit NI has in terms of staying.
@peterroberts44158 ай бұрын
Tories and Labour are two sides of the same coin in terms of mass immigration, and Ireland proper is no better
@larsoftheredhotlovers62208 ай бұрын
@@Teag_Brohman15 - Gives a valid and fair response. -"You're a Unionist aren't you?" Unironically shut up kid, just because you don't like what he had to say doesn't mean you can just throw it all under the bus. I live in Northern Ireland and I am so sick of random people throughout the world shouting about reunification like its as simple as getting 51% of a vote or something. These are valid concerns that MUST be addressed or the whole thing will come crumbling down. And before you ask; no, I'm not a Unionist. I voted Alliance, my dad is from here and my mum is English, so I am about as 50/50 split as you can get. All I care about is what's best for my country, in whatever form that takes.
@Aphfaneire8 ай бұрын
Instant like for the TNG reference. (It was originally banned from BBC 2 broadcast, before the peace process)
@Rapscallion20098 ай бұрын
It wasn't. Or, if it was, someone didn't get the memo. I watched it in 1987 in England I recall it distinctly because I thought it probably a good idea at the time.
@stevenej98948 ай бұрын
If I were a younger person in NI, the prospect of being part of a progressive, non-sectarian Ireland that allows abortion, divorce, and gay marriage, and is a part of Europe would have a lot to recommended. Right now, people in NI, Scotland, and Wales are trapped in an isolationist UK that seems to want to re-live the glory days of a century ago.
@kavic12347 ай бұрын
The problem is the EU and the massive immigration into Southern Ireland. Even the the south is now rejecting it.
@kindneybeanjoe5 ай бұрын
That's not the main point. Ireland's GDP per capita is three times of that of the bloody English, and being part of the EU furthers it anymore... So economic prospects are the main point. Besides, Ireland has better welfare than in England. You're right though, as the English seem to be going backwards with racial violence with foreign immigrants and local English and the collapse of welfare systems, the shitty aftermath of Brexit...
@XandateOfHeaven5 ай бұрын
@@kindneybeanjoe Ireland's GDP per capita is largely inflated by it being a tax haven for large American corporations, so it doesn't necessarily reflect the economic realities of an average Irish person. However, the average wage in Ireland is about 15%-20% more than in the UK, which is a huge improvement over 30 years ago when it was substantially less.
@TheAmericanAmerican8 ай бұрын
As someone who obviously doesn't have a horse in this race, BUT who has visited Ireland, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Britain, I can honestly say that in my opinion, NI would most likely benefit a great more by joining ROI. The UK had suffered a MASSIVE blow to its economy and society similar to what happened in the USA back in the 1980s when Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher forced the insane and barbaric Trickledown "economics" on both countries. Ireland has been doing much better since then and should continue on that path. NI should jump from the sinking HMS UK and join Ireland 🇮🇪
@tomricketts78218 ай бұрын
The demographics of Northern Ireland make it inevitable particularly as the people of Northern Ireland come to see the advantages of being in the EU
@warrenpaine8 ай бұрын
Thinking Irish Unity is "inevitable" is the most dangerous attitude that an Irish Nationalist can take. Irish Unity is not going to just drop in your lap.
@Captainumerica8 ай бұрын
@@warrenpaineOr in your head?
@calumcookson7408 ай бұрын
If the Romulans and Vulcans can do it I'm sure the Irish can do it
@da90sReAlvloc8 ай бұрын
I want Northumbria to be its own country like it once was
@johnm27148 ай бұрын
Yes, but then you'd have to take Yorkshire (Cumbria, Lancashire and Lincolnshire) with you. Are you ready for that? 😅 Greetings from Mercia.
@Journey224058 ай бұрын
If we did this now we’d probably be one of the poorest nations with some of the worst infrastructure in all of Europe. ATP I’m convinced half the reason thatcher and the Tory’s don’t develop the north is because it means they can continue to fuck us over knowing that we can’t do anything about it.
@DerekLangdon8 ай бұрын
Kernow/Cornwall. Englands first and last colony! Language and culture destroyed in the process.@@johnm2714
@jontalbot18 ай бұрын
I lived in Geordieland for a few years so all power to your elbow. I come from the land of the Angles but we don’t want to be part of anything that includes Norfolk
@Robbiewa-bg4lu4 күн бұрын
I am a Brexit supporter. I don’t see a United Ireland happening soon being honest. I don’t think the majority in the North would vote for a United Ireland,and the biggest reason is the NHS as there isn’t one in the Republic. As for the Northern Ireland protocol I think in all honesty it is probably as good as it will get,and the Windsor Framework I think has made the protocol more palatable and was a good piece of work by Rishi Sunak. I think the United Kingdom will remain intact with little or no change. And the U.K. will not rejoin the EU.
@asmith24068 ай бұрын
I pray there will be a united Ireland. It would be a great thing.
@JustanotherGuy-xx4gy8 ай бұрын
UVF was formed in 1966, before the IRA resumed its activities
@ostlandr8 ай бұрын
And the Troubles ended in 1998. Let the dead lie.
@JustanotherGuy-xx4gy8 ай бұрын
Not the point. The average Brit thinks it just happened in a vaccum.
@eyeballseesaws8 ай бұрын
The IRA killed people in the 1950s and early 60s
@kastalomas8 ай бұрын
Was it not 1913?
@miorboy44478 ай бұрын
As an Irishman i think people underestimate the changes that will come with a united Ireland. A new flag, a new national anthem and absorbing 1 million citizens that feel british and dont want to be goverened by Dublin. I would be anxious about the unforseen consequeneces, could b very likely loyalist paramilitries woukd rise up and now will be the Irish security forces that will have to deal with them. We have no real army and gardas are retiring on mass.
@ab-ym3bf8 ай бұрын
I don't understand why there should be a new flag or anthem, an existing country adds territory doesn't require any of that. And on the other hand, if for some reason people find that necessary, what's the problem? It's just a piece of cloth and a song. Big deal. Wat more profound is indeed absorbing aotnofnoeiple that do not want to be part of it. There lies the real problem.
@tiglishnobody87508 ай бұрын
We would just united under same flag and anthem just like Germany reunification
@miorboy44478 ай бұрын
@@ab-ym3bf we are proud of our flag and anthem, but it is an anti british song, A soldiers song. We have to play Irelands call for the rugby games so not to upset the ulstermen in the team. A united Ireland will be a new country and i would not expect an orangeman to salute the tricolour the same as i could not salute the union jack. Identity is complex for Northern Irish people and being from munster myself, even i do not fully understand their point of view.
@liammcevoy32128 ай бұрын
The only person talking sense here. I think a lot of the Irish forget that if Ireland becomes united, we have to accept the Unionists as part of our country. It’s something I notice a lot of my neighbours forgetting, on top how recent the troubles are (I live just south of the border). It’s just asking for trouble.
8 ай бұрын
@@ab-ym3bfthere’s a lot of people on both sides that are vehemently against living under either UK or Irish flag and other cultural symbols. There are quite a few people that would support unity but under no circumstances to be seen to be ‘absorbed by the existing republic of Ireland’. Unity and cultural identity has to be considered for everyone. It would likely be a new state because it’s incredibly divisive and complex.
@oreodepup8 ай бұрын
They really need to angle the discussion on economics. Being part of the EU and the Schengen Zone is crucial for any nation in Europe. While a case can be made for Britain to go it’s own way as a major power, tiny Northern Ireland would only benefit from continued integration with the EU. With secularism sweeping the whole of Ireland, religion is not the focal point anymore. To make a convincing case Dublin needs to make the conversation about economics and must highlight the British recession and hardships due to Brexit.
@67daltonknox8 ай бұрын
Only a matter of time... and the end of a headache for Britain.
@lervish19668 ай бұрын
The beginning of a bigger headache.
@FionanUaMurchadha8 ай бұрын
@@lervish1966won't be Great Britain's problem though
@lervish19668 ай бұрын
@@FionanUaMurchadha Removing the Irish Catholics from Britain and taking refugees from Ireland would be a big problem.
@alynwillams42976 ай бұрын
@@FionanUaMurchadha it will. Because it’ll fuel Scottish and Welsh independence as well as English independence.
@FionanUaMurchadha6 ай бұрын
@@alynwillams4297 Thats their problem because its their Island, Northern Ireland is my problem because it is on my island
@cob79798 ай бұрын
Good job. Nicely put and balanced.
@zokiv1838 ай бұрын
Hopefully they will get their independence once and for all, they are overdue on independence, stand for freedom and independence 😊
@atilla43528 ай бұрын
Just to troll :D because people always pull this to the Palestinians "Why don't the neighbouring countries take them as refugees" But seriously, why don't those who identify as British come back to the main island or go to Scotland.
@blubre8 ай бұрын
what a time to be alive lads
@JeMeSouvienPu8 ай бұрын
Unify Ireland, one of the nicest country and people ever. Its the only logical choice.
@peixeserra91168 ай бұрын
RE-Unify Ireland, under Republican Irish rule, as it should have always been.
@geofflepper32078 ай бұрын
Hopefully Ireland and Northern Ireland will someday unite but I don't think much of the idea that a political entity should drastically change its status because on a particular day 51% of the people who turned out and voted said that they wanted drastic change. When change is going to be complicated, expensive, wrenching and very difficult to reverse one should have a solid majority voting for that change - 60% or at least 55% - not 51% or 50% plus one vote meaning that if another vote was held a few days later the results might very well be reversed. Brexit was an example in which it was absurd to go ahead with it and turn everything upside down and cause chaos based on a tiny majority yes vote which was so close that by the time Brexit was implemented enough yes voters had died off that they had become a minority. Another example is the Quebec independence referendum of the 1990s in which by a couple of percentage points Quebec residents voted against independence or sovereignty association or the right of the Quebec government to try to negotiate sovereignty association with Canada (whatever that means). If the Quebec vote had changed by a couple of percentage points then based on a tiny percentage majority Quebec might have separated, a result that might have been reversed if another vote had been held the week before or the week after. One thing that concerned people who wanted Quebec to stay in Canada was that the 1990s referendum was the second Quebec referendum on independence and they wondered if pro-separation Quebec politicians would just keep holding referendums until they got the result they wanted and then they would ignore all the referendums in which they lost and demand the right for Quebec to separate. What if over time there are three straight referendums in which the voters of Northern Ireland reject joining Ireland and then in a 4th referendum 51% of the voters of Northern Ireland vote to join Ireland. Is that enough of a mandate to make such a major change?
@rcyadav97467 ай бұрын
Ireland northern will be loyal ylto uk because of Protestant haritage Magna Carta glorious revolution
@mystation57078 ай бұрын
Why not? Like the rest of the UK it’s been shafted by Westminster in favour of the south of England.
@Carl-hs420a8 ай бұрын
What doesn't get a mention is the growing animosity toward the UK by the English themselves. England isn't united; there's a clear north/south divide that has been an issue for many generations.
@Kobe-s2i8 ай бұрын
South east*
@lighting75088 ай бұрын
@@Carl-hs420athe dirty secret is the south has been shafted by Westminster too! Only the rich southerners are thriving most of us normal people can’t afford to do anything in the south. Tell your average homeless southerner about the “north-south divide”. Mind you it definitely exists, I’m just saying that as a people we should unite on class rather than region.
@latinoburger1238 ай бұрын
We might get a unified Ireland before we get GTA6
@sightseeingberlin8 ай бұрын
Irish Border? It's the British imposed border in Ireland.
@liamb86448 ай бұрын
I hope so - and I say that as an English person.
@dddz9618 ай бұрын
This is a great opportunity to bring back The Troubles.
@fishyq50778 ай бұрын
A great opportunity to have a successful Ireland where sectarian bigotry is consigned to history.
@davidty20068 ай бұрын
Funded by soviet arms. because everyone can get AK's for some reason. And last i checked the Irish army doesn't have much if any experiance fighting against partisan warfare. And doubt british army is going to be willing to help em.
@richardneedham138 ай бұрын
Exactly. I think many commentators really believe this 5 minute report tells a story..
@theshadow58008 ай бұрын
Tory governance is the best argument for unification. It's clear that Irish best interests are best served by the Irish, not the English overlords emblematic of the Tories.
@Eyyoh7557 ай бұрын
Article One of the Constitution of the United Republic Of Ireland has to be: "All Irish people are equal. No matter what kind of faith or national heritage they got."
@me-cu7ds8 ай бұрын
Well we have ( or had) 3 leaders from the sub continent who seen very keen to break up the UK. Revenge for partition ? Having been to India a few times I got to know that people of a certain age pass down the stories of partition and not from a positive view point
@elainecameron55458 ай бұрын
If both sides want to then they should.
@michaelsnelling33388 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree. If all done freely and democratically then let it be.
@wesamalaeldin79206 ай бұрын
Bro simplified the whole video in just one sentence😂 you're not wrong
@hughofIreland8 ай бұрын
One more, potentially uncomfortable point for some. In the context of reunification, Ireland will have to join the Commonwealth of Nations. It would be better to start the ball rolling on that point sooner rather than later. Perhaps Ireland could start by participating in the Commonwealth Games.
@fishyq50778 ай бұрын
What games 😂? Nobody cares about the empire games. There is no must about it.
@yermanoffthetelly8 ай бұрын
It's ironic that it's called the Commonwealth when most of its members are dirt poor 3rd world countries that only have their experience of British slavery in common. Nah, I think we'll stick with the UN and Olympics.
@TheLastAngryMan018 ай бұрын
Hasn’t the Commonwealth Games been cancelled? Or at least is struggling to find hosts due to the massive cost of staging them.