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how do you feel about it because it use to be part of ireland now it is different county apart of UK.
are you angry.
do you not care because you feel your better off with out them and good ridenst to them.
do you feel they are different country or do you feel they are forigen country(in your mind).
do you want them back.
do you not care what happens.
should they join ireland or not
even if they dont want to join

answer any way you want to with long answers or very short ones
thanks

2007-12-04 05:05:49 · 7 answers · asked by 10 out of 10 4 in Travel Ireland Other - Ireland

7 answers

As an Irish person I am eternally grateful to the men and women who fought for my freedom, I won’t believe they died for nothing; Ireland will be united once again.
When I go to Belfast I see it as no different to going to Cork, Galway or Dublin, I'm on home soil considering my ancestors were from counties in all the provinces.
If the British love England so much and want to be a part of it they can move, and finally leave us Irish in peace.

2007-12-06 03:07:38 · answer #1 · answered by Aingeal 5 · 1 3

Northerners have the best of both worlds, they're british and irish whether they like it or not. Before Irish independence britain owned the whole country, ireland let them have the north because it was better to get 26 counties at the time than to have to wait to get the last 6, and most of the north aren't too bothered about that these days

2007-12-07 18:19:44 · answer #2 · answered by zzz311 3 · 0 0

before everything there is not any Southern eire, even regardless of the undeniable fact that there is a Northern eire. The 'south' is talked approximately as the Republic of eire. some do communicate over with this state as eire, yet that's incorrect, the call of the island is eire. Currencies are distinctive. Humour is an identical The Northern state has OwenC who's a humourless cretin and fairly uneducated. The Republic does not have an OwenC.

2016-10-19 03:32:47 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's a complicated situation... at the time most Irish people wanted to keep the country together and thought that it would be a temporary situation but that is all a long time ago although emotions still run high in some parts over the situation.
I think at this stage it is a decision for the people of the North regardless of what the rest of us think. Personally i would consider people from the North as Irish and not British but I know not all people from the North think of themselves as Irish

2007-12-04 06:05:12 · answer #4 · answered by stevie 4 · 3 2

According to the Friday Agreement anyone living on the island of Ireland is entitled to call themselves Irish, It is an unfortunate history, I am angry about things in the past and of course would love a future with a united Ireland
However peace and ceasefire at the moment is more important, and in my mind we are one country.

2007-12-07 09:56:44 · answer #5 · answered by myprecious 3 · 1 1

We're kind of used it now, it's been this way for almost 90 years .... they are a very different region, regardless of the political situation. Northern Ireland in feel is neither British nor Irish, but has much of both.
No, I'm not angry at them, but I do get very pissed off at people asking awkward questions and attempting to stir up trouble about something that is very complicated and goes back many generations.

2007-12-04 10:47:24 · answer #6 · answered by Orla C 7 · 1 4

Don't really care either way.
The Irish look at people from Northern Ireland as "dos people from da Nort". Some people in Dublin, especially, can be quite cheeky to Northerners. As a studnet some taxi drivers used to run around town, until they found out we actually lived in Dublin. Before the whole 'discrimination' in pub entry thing, we were actually refused entry in nightclubs. Sorry, no northerners, lol. The Northern accent came in handy to scare people though. The English people think of people from Northern Ireland as "Irish." In London, people are quite cheeky and condescending. One question I heard in London "Do they have mobiles in Ireland?" That was not a joke.
So, in sum, Northern Ireland is its own entity. I guess Ireland is glad not to have Northern Ireland, lol.

2007-12-05 03:13:46 · answer #7 · answered by CCBB 4 · 0 5

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