England originally invaded Ireland in the C12th., and remained in occupation to prevent it from being used as a base of attack on the mainland by a external enemy...Spain, France, Holland, Germany etc.
For such a policy to be successful, the native Catholic Irish had to be kept in subjection. The most effective way of achieving this in the C17th (and thereby laying the foundation for the problems of the twentieth) was to take land from Catholics and give it to English and Scottish protestant settlers who would fight to keep it.
Following the Time of the Troubles in 1921 and to prevent Civil War at that time , The Anglo-Irish Treaty established the Irish Free State(overwhelmingly Catholic) and Northern Ireland (60% Protestant and 40% Catholic), the latter remaining part of the United Kingdom with a majority of its citizens fully in favour of the Union- as they still are.
As tax payers they therefore obviously have the right to the same law and order as UK citizens on the mainland- hence the continued British presence there until the majority in Northern Ireland vote otherwise.
Believe me, from 1967 onwards there is nothing more than successive British governments would have secretly liked to have done than to have abandoned Northern Ireland to its fate!
The tragedy is that the problems of working people in both communities in the North as well as over the border in the Republic, have been the same and that they have failed to recognise that they have far more in common with each other than with anyone else within the British Isles.
2007-06-03 03:36:47
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answer #1
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answered by david f 1
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the clarification is that Britain colonised eire interior the 1600s, and made it formally component to the united kingdom in 1801. maximum Irish human beings did no longer like this, so they spent the subsequent hundred years or so attempting to learn independence. It finally befell in 1921, different than that throughout replace six counties interior the north of the country had to proceed to be somewhat of the united kingdom. those counties are regular as Northern eire and are nevertheless component to the united kingdom right this moment. some human beings (loyalists/unionists) decide directly to maintain it this sort and others (nationalists/republicans) decide on NI to alter into component to the Republic. There truly isn't numerous a feud between eire and Britain in any respect, apart from some Irish people who're nevertheless disillusioned on the way Irish human beings have been dealt with for the period of the British profession.
2016-10-09 09:01:14
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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The Irish are Catholics and they didn't want to convert to the invented state religion from one of those English kings... forgot his name. He formed the Anglican church.
Anyhow, the English people readily converted like little puppets, but the Irish refused.
2007-06-03 03:54:27
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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How do you know he's not intelligent enough to understand. Sounds like a dimwitted judgement call on your part.
There's alot of interesting history pertaining to this subject. It would be worth your research and reading of it.
Also research how the ***** british empire loved to invade and own other countries.( there's simplicity in a nutshell.)
2007-06-03 03:51:41
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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You would really want to check the news more often, both terrorist groups have laid down their weapons, and are engaged in active political dialouge.
The problem stems back over 200 years and you are not intelligent enough to understand all the finer points with regards history, polotics, and religion.
2007-06-03 03:06:14
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answer #5
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answered by conranger1 7
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Not really Irish versus British so much as it is Catholic versus Protestant.
2007-06-03 03:05:09
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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It probably has it's roots in religion and religious intolerance.
2007-06-03 03:04:13
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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