The Boycott

Sure, there's much more than boycott going on.
The quiet as the grave-Ghost towns are symptomatic of the Irish Civil Cold Wars being fought in the minds of Irish People/Citizens. It's ages old and still ongoing - Bad as ever!

What are you worried about?

I always felt that if elements of the Town don't suit one's(group's) liking then surely invest and build your own quarters.
Failing that then simply re orientate to the places that are no.1 on your list (which is what most people are delighted to do).
 
Sure, there's much more than boycott going on.
The quiet as the grave-Ghost towns are symptomatic of the Irish Civil Cold Wars being fought in the minds of Irish People/Citizens. It's ages old and still ongoing - Bad as ever!

What are you worried about?

I always felt that if elements of the Town don't suit one's(group's) liking then surely invest and build your own quarters.
Failing that then simply re orientate to the places that are no.1 on your list (which is what most people are delighted to do).
Sorry, can u plain English that for me.
 
Boycotting is a natural feature of being Irish - Then & Now

Boycotting - So what??
It was organised once to great effect, or where u missing from school that day? I'm glad there are a few able people willing to give it a go again. If it fails it won't be a reflection on them either.
 
It was organised once to great effect, or where u missing from school that day? I'm glad there are a few able people willing to give it a go again. If it fails it won't be a reflection on them either.

What on earth are you talking about?

The Boycott is a way of life, it's a part of ones religion, practiced 24/7/365, it never fails, It's a process of self improvement, it always shows results.

As I alluded to earlier, Quiet-As-The-Grave Ghost Towns are symptomatic of The Boycott.

The boycott
is symptomatic of the wider state of Irish Society at Cold-War with itself.

Again . . . What does "Giving it a Go" refer to??:geek:

 
What on earth are you talking about?

The Boycott is a way of life, it's a part of ones religion, practiced 24/7/365, it never fails, It's a process of self improvement, it always shows results.

As I alluded to earlier, Quiet-As-The-Grave Ghost Towns are symptomatic of The Boycott.

The boycott
is symptomatic of the wider state of Irish Society at Cold-War with itself.

Again . . . What does "Giving it a Go" refer to??:geek:
I hear fintan o toole is leaving the irish times, u hav the same windbaggery about u, time to start getting paid for it, give it a go.
 
I hear fintan o toole is leaving the irish times, u hav the same windbaggery about u, time to start getting paid for it, give it a go.
A classic reply from the fringe. Nothing to offer us(the public) but a sidetrack into a dead end.

No wonder the country is the way it is, thanks to you.

What a waste of time.
 
Easy on, all shams have a delicate constitution
 
A classic reply from the fringe. Nothing to offer us(the public) but a sidetrack into a dead end.

No wonder the country is the way it is, thanks to you.

What a waste of time.
Have u a little guest house by any chance?
And yes, the country is the way it is, thanks to me.
 
Wow, you've really got the hump. You and goons like you will never do anything, nada, except bitch in echo chambers online.
Funny, I thought it was you with the Hump since your guest house has gone out of business due to the DP centre on the door step.

People like me sympathize with people like you who are negatively impacted by plantation . . .
Until we realise what you're up to . . .
 
BTW Fam, I wish you well and do support your current boycott here.
I know/remember the area and lived there too at one time, at the back of the dual carriage way (opposite the racetrack there runs a quiet parallel country road (also used to have a few B&B's on that road IIRC'ly) leading to pleasant quiet cosy residential estates(or used to be 20 years ago)
There were new foreigners coming into town then, started to appear on the sites(cheaper labour?), I went back to Dublin to find better pay and continuity, I noticed then that the poor aul Dublin Taxi drivers were also hit with a foreign wave of African drivers who seemed to be directly planted into the Taxi Industry.

We all lost out and had some very bad experiences from foreigners in various ways. . . .
 
BTW Fam, I wish you well and do support your current boycott here.
I know/remember the area and lived there too at one time, at the back of the dual carriage way (opposite the racetrack there runs a quiet parallel country road (also used to have a few B&B's on that road IIRC'ly) leading to pleasant quiet cosy residential estates(or used to be 20 years ago)
There were new foreigners coming into town then, started to appear on the sites(cheaper labour?), I went back to Dublin to find better pay and continuity, I noticed then that the poor aul Dublin Taxi drivers were also hit with a foreign wave of African drivers who seemed to be directly planted into the Taxi Industry.

We all lost out and had some very bad experiences from foreigners in various ways. . . .
Drove a taxi here for nearly ten years. Seen it all aulstock.
 

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