Originally posted by Dowding
Toad, your anachronistic analysis of the British treatment of Ireland continues unabated I see.
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There are a lot of anachronistic things that continued unabated during the British occupation of Ireland.

Originally posted by Dowding
I assume your qualified condemnation of the IRA does also.
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You assume a lot of things. You know where that leads, don't you?
Please post any quote you can find showing me "qualifying" a condemnation of the IRA.
Oppression of Catholics in Britain has to be put into context.
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Of course! Putting it in "context" makes it right!
How's this for context: It wasn't until 1829 the Catholic Emancipation Act was put through parliament.
From 1727 until 1793, Catholics could not vote.
From 1793 to 1829, all who met the forty-shilling qualification, Catholic and Protestant, were entitled to vote.
The Catholic emancipation in 1829 came with a catch; the basic qualification for voting was raised to ten pounds. The electorate in Ireland, roughly 200,000, fell by 80%.
Legislation in 1884 created a uniform qualification to vote that was everywhere the same and included most adult males.
1884! You mentioned "anacrhonistic"?
The view from the saddle must be pretty spectacular, Toad. We all know America has no 'secret history' and not a blemish on its moral record...
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Attack me if it makes you feel better, Dowding. Attack the messenger, not the message.
See anywhere in either thread that I've said the US doesn't have some pretty sorry parts in it's historical record? No, I didn't think you did. Don't blame you for trying to change the subject though.
Some of us have the moral fibre to recognise our country's failings and historical wrongs... others just excuse them and call it patriotism.
Yep. We have both types in the US and you have both types in Great Britain.
Which type are you?