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Old Thursday, December 27th, 2007
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Default Re: England and Scotland: a disunited kingdom

Quote:
Originally Posted by Highland Thistle View Post
I agree, but I really think Loyalists will put up one hell of a fight to avoid it.
How much of a fight can a bunch of criminals and gangsters put up when no longer receiving intelligence, weapons and orders from the British state?
I doubt the vast majority of them would be willing to pit themselves against even dissident Republican orgs, far less the PDF, without some kind of backing from their handlers across the Irish Sea.

They have never had to "go it alone" so to speak, and only the most hardline and foolish would attempt to, imo.
Of course, the 26 County State itself is as much a problem as the Loyalists in the six counties anyway....
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The traditions of the Irish people are the oldest of any race in Europe north and west of the Alps, and they themselves are the longest settled on their own soil
- Edmund Curtis (A History of Ireland: From Earliest Times to 1922)

The Irish are one of the most ancient nations that I know of at this end of the world, and are from as mighty a race as the world ever brought forth.
For it is certain that Ireland hath had the use of letters very anciently and long before England; that they had letters anciently is nothing doubtful, for the Saxons of England are said to have their letters and learning, and learned men, from the Irish.
- Edmund Spenser (writer, and British Government Official in Ireland, AD 1596).

The renaissance began in Ireland seven hundred years before it was known in Italy. And Armagh, the ecclesiastical capital of Ireland, was at one time the metropolis of civilisation.
- Arsene Darmesteter, Professor of Old French and Literature

Ireland can indeed lay claim to a great past; she can not only boast of having been the birthplace and abode of high culture in the fifth and sixth centuries . . . but also of having made strenous efforts in the seventh and up to the tenth century to spread her learning among the German and Romance peoples, thus forming the actual fountain of our present continental civilisation.
- Heinrich Zimmer, Professor of Celtic and Sanskrit, Member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences
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