Exclusive Interview with Tim Pat Coogan - A policy of ethnic cleansing? Who’s to blame for the Irish Famine?
"The Famine Plot" tells the unvarnished truth about that epic disaster
Published Saturday, December 8, 2012, 7:03 AM
Updated Saturday, December 8, 2012, 8:44 AM
40 comments
Return to article
Next
Page 1 of 3 pages
seanomelb | Dec 11, 2012, 06:26 PM EST
When torytory cannot dispute the facts he hides behind the veil of "anglophobia".
Report abuse
curtisjohnson | Dec 10, 2012, 10:38 PM EST
“I also enjoy hearing englishmen describe the Irish hunger, the largest European social calamity of the 19th century, as an 'ethnic grudge.'” The irony being that, as demonstrated by, inter alia, the London Times articles during the famine, the english continued to hold an “ethnic grudge” against the Irish even after enslaving them, robbing all of their property (down to deforesting the island), outlawing ownership, forcing tithes to an alien “church,” and, incredibly, creating a class of felony for educating one’s children (this last one was a nice payback considering, in Spenser’s words, “the Saxons of England are said to have their letters and learning, and learned men, from the Irish). This does not even touch the surface of the centuries of atrocities such as half hangings, pitch and cap, crop burning, etc. It seems that no level of criminal activity can satiate their innate degeneracy.
Report abuse
olovely | Dec 10, 2012, 07:03 PM EST
I also enjoy hearing Englishmen describe the Irish hunger, the largest European social calamity of the 19th century, as an 'ethnic grudge.'
Report abuse
olovely | Dec 10, 2012, 07:00 PM EST
I always enjoy listening to Englishmen like ToryTory calmly inform us of what the Irish are thinking.
Report abuse
phinsman | Dec 10, 2012, 03:57 PM EST
I am not 100% certain about this, but I am guessing that my Irish ancestors migrated to the US during the potato famine. They all came here during the first half of 1800s. I have four connections back to Ireland from the 1800s: O'Neill, Harney, McKenna and Anderson (Scots Irish). I feel so fortunate that they were able to make it to the United States, otherwise I would probably not exist.
Report abuse
ToryTory | Dec 10, 2012, 03:15 PM EST
Thanks Johnshiel for that banal and oh-so-typical Anglophobic diatribe.
Report abuse
ToryTory | Dec 10, 2012, 02:59 PM EST
I'm not being peremptory, but to suppose the psyche of an entire nation is predicated on some ethnic grudge is moronic beyond belief.
Report abuse
johnshiel | Dec 10, 2012, 11:27 AM EST
Enemy ownership of the land and control of the laws was in full exercise in the 1700's, before the Act of Union and the dissolution of an elected Irish gov't in Dublin. Weren't the Penal Laws at their zenith in the late 1700's? The arrogance and ugliness of English imperialism is to blame. "We deserve your lands and your dehumanization because, well, we're English!"
Report abuse
olovely | Dec 10, 2012, 08:06 AM EST
Trust an Englishman to tell you what the Irish are thinking. Or to deliver a timeline that informs them how and when they must put the past behind them like ToryTory just did. They have always been so insightful in this regard.
Report abuse
IrelandNorth | Dec 10, 2012, 07:07 AM EST
Steady on the melodrama, Cahir! They didn't starve in their millions (ie pl). Only approx one million (ie sing) starved. The Act of Union, 1800-1922 abolished Grattan's [Protestant Landed Gentry] Parliament in Dublin, with a little help of British bribes and peerages. It called protectionism, or nobbling a competitor. The great contemporary employment hunger and its consequent emigrant haemorrhage is in part caused by aficionados of neo-Trevalyanism amongst a native home grown ruling class - in thraldom to their former colonial paymasters. Redcoats have been replaced by greenjackets. The Lisbon Treaty was the new act of union. And debt entrapment is the new imperialsm! Hunger strikes in modern Irish history are quite probably unconscious repetition compulsions of the The Great Starvation. Since partial independence, partitionist party mode has been identification with the aggressor. TDs who draw down on over generous expense accounts whilst having real estate portfolios in excess of 40 properties may be overcompensating for a Famine syndrome. Or they just be plaiin greedy? (How many bags of spuds do you need in the attic to overprovision?) And just as those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it, so too are those who prevailed in any given struggle in a position to revise it, ie the establishment. PS The potatoe blight didn't just affect Ireland, (or parts of Scotland, Wales or England). It also impacted the mainland!
Report abuse
curtisjohnson | Dec 09, 2012, 10:10 PM EST
"The past is in the past..." Is that the reason for the continuing displays of loyalist triumphalism every 12th? Is this why they cannot accept democratically elected Sinn Fein in government?
Report abuse
seanomelb | Dec 09, 2012, 08:31 PM EST
Mainland brits are more like the Irish than you ever care to know get it right torytory
Report abuse
anglo-norman | Dec 09, 2012, 06:09 PM EST
The past is in the past...
Report abuse
KevinKehoe | Dec 09, 2012, 04:34 PM EST
Tory brit, and you claim to know the thinking of the contemporary Irish.
Report abuse
Next
Page 1 of 3 pages
- Horse disemboweled and sliced open in horrific.
- Planned Parenthood support for Irish leader...
- Gay porn priest is appointed to new parish...
- Senator Schumer says Irish deserve a separate...
- Irish politician refuses to back down on...
- Irish footballer under investigation after...
- British emigrant group calls on government...
- Chilling testimony before congressional hearing
- Delphi Lodge takes responsibility for turning...
- Bill O'Reilly claims the Obama administration...

40 Comments




Report abuse