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Monday 4 March 2024

A United Ireland a view by Nick Griffin

 

By Nick Griffin
Quite a few Irish nationalists have asked my opinion on a United Ireland. Here's my answer:

The Anglo-Norman elite were as wrong to steal the land of Ireland from the Irish as they were to steal the folk-land of England and Wales from the English and the Welsh. Both conquests, incidentally, were funded by Jews and supported by Rome. The subsequent Irish struggle for freedom and British rule was wholly justified. But the case of the Ulster-Scots is entirely different. Historically, the narrow sea was a highway, not a barrier. The Scots came from Ireland in the first place, so were only going home to where their Cruthin ancestors lived thousands of years before the Gaels arrived from Spain. Who do you think built Newgrange? Neither Gaels nor the Little People! There are two in effect indigenous nations on the island of Ireland, and both should be free and secure in their homeland. It certainly makes no sense to fantasise about "expelling the Orange bs" but approve of the Shatter/Varadkar New Plantation. Personally, I believe that the 'Prods' would have far more clout as a million-strong minority, holding the electoral balance of power, in a united Ireland, than being a tiny minority in the liberal UK. They and Irish traditionalists are in fact natural allies (see the abortion issue, for instance). But that's for them, not for me or even you, to choose, and unless and until they do, I stand with Ulster. "Twas after the fight, that the prophet foretold, no rest would be found by these warriors bold - til they unite and fight a common foe, and then will the battle be won". "No more Brothers' Wars".