GARYXKNIFEDX
Well-Known Member
I'd heard about it and then someone sent me that. I don't even know how real it is,but I laughed
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I reckon filming that on the phone is the exact correct course of action in that situationWhy the fuck wasn't she reporting this instead of fucking filming a preventable disaster happening in real time?
This reminds me of someone explaining the difference between manners and etiquette.possibly someone just jockeying for cultural superiority, but i was talking to a frenchwoman once who claimed that the french had no time for all those rules and regulations surrounding food that the british have; that it's more about ritual and showing your knowledge of arcane rules for the british, and more about the food for the french (the discussion was set off by a comment that you shouldn't lick your knife, and her attitude was 'what in holy hell is wrong with licking food off the items you're meant to eat it off?!!')
This reminds me of someone explaining the difference between manners and etiquette.
Etiquette is laughing at your guest for using the wrong type of fork.
Manners means using the same one so your guest isn’t embarrassed.
A fancy onewhat type of house do i live in that i have a variety of forks for guests or did he bring his own?
Soup is for cunts!Cutlery is not needed for all the best food
Soup is for cunts!
Is this article by Colm Toibín not really crazy?
Colm TóibÃn: will the Brexit fallout lead to a âunited Irelandâ?
With negotiations souring an already uneasy relationship to England, the Irish novelist surveys the mood of his nation, and considers the prospect of unificationwww.theguardian.com
How is Brexit affecting Ireland?
Well, let me spend half the article praising the queen, then I'll talk about all the legitimate grievances the UDF have against the IRA and nothing going the other way, I'll continue to say that Sinn Fein are exactly the same as UKIP, and i'll end saying that the FF/FG/Green coalition are the "careful, thoughtful" bulwark against them.
Do they want to import sectarian hatred and the politics of perpetual grievance from the north into the south?
It's definitely more abstract down South for sure, and it's quite easy to be sectarian when it likely won't affect you.Teh sentence I find the most hard to swallow in that is
The south is more sectarian than the north. The south is full of perpetual grievance. Ten years ago my relatives from 'the south' (I am also from there, but actually southern) would turn white at the concept of going to Belfast, only to return a decade later and go 'it's not that bad'.
Yeah, that sounds about right.Hard to find his centre in that - The cafflick/Irish identifying population of NI always live under the hammer of voting being almost meaningless, but it only becomes a grievance when the same could be a possibility for the protestants. It's more a 'I'm very comfortable with the current sectarianism tnx'?
The furthest north I've been is Letterkenny.
That's further north than most of Northern Ireland. Did you manage to get to Letterkenny without going through Northern Ireland?
I remember when people wouldn't drive through Northern Ireland to get to Letterkenny, such was the fear.
Ps the amount of anti Protestant rethoric ya hear in Dublin still amazes me. Defo not sectarian in the South though...
Went cross country & up through Sligo.
I was trying to say I've never been in Belfast, the furthest north I went was letterkenny. Then I looked at a map....
I hear the term "orange bastard" used to describe protestants most days in work.
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