Irish to lobby U.S. Congress to have St Patrick’s Day as national holiday
San Antonio, TX, local wants the U.S. to acknowledge the impact the Irish have had
Published Wednesday, January 2, 2013, 5:25 AM
Updated Monday, January 7, 2013, 10:21 AM
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IrishJets47 | Mar 16, 2013, 11:56 PM EDT
Lets get this Message out to Obama's that we want to make St, Patrick Day a National Holiday.
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harp579 | Jan 12, 2013, 12:41 PM EST
I think this would be counter productive for Americans with an Irish heritage as it's another brick in the wall separating us from 'true' real American status. (there is no similar English or German holiday) It works to relegate us to a second class hyphenated citizenship and engenders hostility from those who see us as trying to separate from the larger American culture.
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Will Hamilton | Jan 08, 2013, 09:54 AM EST
What happens in Ireland is no business of Hindu's in India, Iranians in Iran or Plastic Paddies in the US. "St" Patrick was a pathological liar who displace native Irish religions with an insidious foreign religion from Italy. What they do in the UK has nothing to do with it either. You can't call the 17th of March a "national" day when it's named after an icon of a foreign occupying power that spends it's time poisoning the country. If it's a national day it should not involve any religion at all. Neither should it pander to deluded foreigners in another country who can't figure out where they were actually born.
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WoundedKnee | Jan 05, 2013, 02:32 AM EST
This is nonsense and garbage. The Irish would do better to put Ireland back into their own St Patrick's Day. I've been in Dublin on March 17. It's a teenage boozefest, no more. As to culture, if you look at the floats in the Dubln parade all you see are Nepalese tribal dancers, Pakistani singers, Romany panhandlers etc etc. There's nothing Irish about the St Patrick's Day "festival" in Dublin, they just copied everything directly from the Notting festival in London.
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curtisjohnson | Jan 04, 2013, 08:20 PM EST
St. George's day - is that sectarian? Is it sectarian when the northern supremacists deify bill the orange in their vulgar displays of protestant triumphalism? Moreover, the protestants have as many abuse scandals as Catholics – just much less publicized.
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Smyrnian | Jan 04, 2013, 03:29 PM EST
Hamilton - Go back on your meds and take anger management classes.
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Will Hamilton | Jan 04, 2013, 01:14 PM EST
Any so called national parade that celebrates or commemorates any religious figure is sectarian. Religion in general has no place in anything national. In particular it's nonsensical for Ireland to have anything to do with a man who was responsible for helping a child abusing insidious organisation like the Vatican gain a foothold on the island.
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Smyrnian | Jan 04, 2013, 07:49 AM EST
Steven - relax pal-no need to be aggressive. Visiting the US and living and working here are two vastly different experiences, especially as you live and work around this vast country it differs greatly by geographic region. As an Irish born person I can assure you there are excellent expressions of authentic Irish culture here and a pride in Irish heritage I do not often see expressed on this anti-Catholic website or in Ireland itself. You simply don't know what you don't know. Furthermore, Ancavker has it right, Irish culture is dying fast in Ireland as we, thanks to the liberal Irish government, gleefully exchange third world immigrants for our own people that are being exported at the rate of well over 1,000 a day. You also imply emigration and the immigrant experience is all green grass and flowers and warm puppies but I can assure you it is a very difficult experience with zero guarantee of even modest success.
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curtisjohnson | Jan 03, 2013, 11:29 PM EST
swill, take your meds. It's been celebrated by Protestants for ages and any loyalist don't even consider it sectarian. Moreover, the pre-Roman Celtic Church was not adulterated by toxic materialism such as the later Roman Church and, in particular, Protestant denominations of the degenerate calvinist variety (which arguably led to supremacism and mass consumerism).
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seamus60 | Jan 03, 2013, 08:18 PM EST
Will. How many Sectarian St Patrick day parades plough through Protestant areas causing offence ?
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Will Hamilton | Jan 03, 2013, 03:31 PM EST
"St" Patrick's day should be abolished in Ireland for the sectarian festival it is and especially since the introduction of the foreign religion he supposedly introduced has proved so toxic for the people of Ireland. Had the deluded Briton not landed how many children might not have suffered rape and torture at the hands of Catholic clerics. Romanism has poisoned Ireland, corrupted it's politics and psychologically scarred millions of people. The Pope is a relic of the Roman Empire: he belongs in the dustbin of history where most of his speeches seem to be written.
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ancavker | Jan 03, 2013, 02:59 PM EST
STEVEN: Relax. First off it
will never happen. Second I am
Irish born and live in the U.S.
The Irish-Americans(for the most
part) are a great community. And have
done much to preserve and enhance
Irish culture. And they do not
disparage it like so many
Irish in Ireland do. We
will continue to do a great job
keeping that culture. The way
things are going in Ireland
there will not be any Irish culture
left in Ireland.
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curtisjohnson | Jan 03, 2013, 02:57 PM EST
Searlit "
think they should make President Kennedy's birthday, in May, a National Holiday. He is beloved by most Americans, Irish or other nationalities around the world. I know there's a few here on the page that will have gasped at that suggestion. Catch your breath though, it's a dream I've had since I was 12."
I agree - we owe the major technological advances of the 20th century to the space program he pioneered (not to mention that he was the first president to fully support civil rights). However, the anglo establishment on both sides of the Atlantic take every conceivable opportunity to trash his legacy and inflate toxic racist vipers such as Woodrow Wilson (not to mention Churchill who saw no problem with bombing "brown" people with chemical weapons).
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STEVENSTAR | Jan 03, 2013, 01:16 PM EST
@@Smyrnian | Jan 03, 2013, 07:32 AM EST
Stevenstar - lighten up, pal. I am Irish born and living in the US. You have no idea what you are talking about. How could you; you don't live here or have a notion of American or Irish American culture.
>>>>> MATE I HAVE BEEN TO AMERICAN MANY A TIME... THE CULTURE THE PEOPLE THE FOOD THE WHOLE COUNTRY IS TOTALLY DIFFERENT TO US AND THE IRISH.. IM GLAD THAT YOUR WORKING THERE AND MAKING $$$ MY FRIEND BUT I DONT SEE THE POINT IN SELLING OUR CULTURE, TRADITIONS AND WHAT NOT TO A BUNCH OF PLASTIC SPOILED PADDIES WHO THINK THEY CAN LITEALLY BUY WHATEVER THEY WANT ... THEY MAY HAVE IRISH ANCESTARY BUT THEY ARE STILL AMERICAN ..END OF STORY ..
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