Timesuck with Dan Cummins - 74 - The IRA: Freedom FIghters or Terrorists?
Episode Date: February 12, 2018The Irish Republican Army. Guys and gals who have, since their inception, been viewed as a liberation force by some and a terrorist group by others. They fight for the liberation of Northern Ireland f...rom whom they view as British oppressors. But, as you’ll find out today - their case isn’t so simple. Their cause not obviously just. They’ve been lighting up Northern Ireland and England with bombs and gun fire for damn near 100 years. Why? Does Northern Ireland even need or want liberating? We dig deep into Ireland’s history and the formation and latter evolution of the Irish Republican Army on a boom boom edition, of Timesuck. Wanna be a Space Lizard" Go here: https://www.patreon.com/timesuckpodcast Sign up through Patreon and for $5 a month you get to listen to the Secret Suck, which will drop Thursdays at Noon, PST. You'll also get 20% off of all regular Timesuck merch PLUS access to exclusive Space Lizard merch. You get to vote on two Monday topics each month via the app. And you get a download link for a new comedy album, Feel the Heat. Check the Patreon posts to find out how to download the new album and take advantage of other benefits. Merch - https://badmagicmerch.com/ Want to try out Discord!?! https://discord.gg/tqzH89v Want to join the Cult of the Curious private Facebook Group? Go directly to Facebook and search for "Cult of the Curious" in order to locate whatever current page hasn't been put in FB Jail :) For all merch related questions: https://badmagicmerch.com/pages/contact Please rate and subscribe on iTunes and elsewhere and follow the suck on social media!! @timesuckpodcast on IG, @timesuckpodcast on Twitter, and www.facebook.com/timesuckpodcast And, thank you for supporting the show by doing your Amazon shopping after clicking on my Amazon link at www.timesuckpodcast.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today, we're going to be talking about an IRA, an individual retirement account.
Your guide to financial freedom and retirement free from the stress of monetary concerns.
Compound, tax-free interest.
Ride that Dow Jones.
No, don't turn this off.
I'm kidding.
Please, don't turn me off.
We're going to be talking about something much more exciting, although it will not help
your financial future nearly as much to learn about today's real subject, the Irish Republican
Army.
Those guys and gals who have since their inception been viewed as a liberation forced by some
and as a terrorist group by others.
They fight for the liberation of Northern Ireland, from whom they view as British foreign
oppressors, but as you'll find out today, their case is not so simple.
Their case, not obviously just.
They've been lightened up Northern Ireland and England with bombs and gunfire for damn
your 100 years now.
You know, and they're still around.
And why?
Why are they still around?
Does Northern Ireland even need or want liberating currently?
We dig deep into Ireland's history and the formation and then ladder evolution of the Irish
Republican Army today on a boom, boom edition of Time Sun.
What's going on Time Sunkers and Space Lizards Happy Monday.
Thanks for all the recent reviews and ratings.
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I'm Dan Cummins aka the suck wizard aka old dirty suck master aka
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time now for the Irish Republican Army. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUT [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUT [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ When he is on the aisle right very wildly, some seithem is honorable and courageous group
of freedom fighters refusing to lie down against overwhelming odds in the battle for the
unified island, free from British rule. Other seithem is no better than ISIS and his guided
group of terrorists fighting for a non-sensical and outdated ideal. They claim to fight for a unified
island no more Northern Ireland under the bomb of the UK, under the Thames, one big island under Irish rule. How many
Irish listeners are agitated right now at the patronizing accents I've tried to sleep
into this podcast. There's a fairly large contingent of Irish time suckers. How furious
are you right now that I was unable to completely figure out your
Irish accents but it sounds good to my ears and I'm proud of myself. Even though it's terrible.
How native all the native Irish Catholics do they really have any more legitimacy to the claim
for the island at this point than the normal invaders? Who does Ireland really belong to?
How much longer am I going to try to keep this as axing to app before inevitably cracking and falling into some kind of American redneck, Mishmash.
We'll turn the stand, the roots of the IRA and the conflict with Britain.
We have to dive into a brief history of Ireland.
Not going to go into too much detail in any one era.
Got to save in-depth research for future sucks on Irish historical figures and groups like
the Druids.
But let's get into their origins.
Let's timeline it right now.
Let's get into this shit.
Shrap on those boots, soldier.
We're marching down a time-sub timeline.
All right, so here we go, a little timeline.
Get into the history of who the people in Ireland used to be
before we can examine why there's a conflict now.
8,000 BE, what is that?
I don't know.
No, 8,000 BCE, roughly 10,000 years ago,
historians estimate that Ireland was first settled
by humans kind of.
Initially it was just genders, who we all know
are human-ish at best. Redheads have
long been understood by scientists to have, you know, most, but not all human attributes,
missing, of course, the ability to reason, quietly consume alcohol and defend themselves against
sunshine, the force of nature that literally gives life to most organisms, but spell certain
death or at least a lot of wrinkles and possible skin cancer for weak, fragile, clown hair having ginger motherfuckers.
Kidding, of course.
Just wanted to fire up some of you firecrotches.
Love you, peeps, love you.
Anywho, actually, the original settlers were contrary to popular belief, most likely,
not Celtic.
Celtic also an acceptable pronunciation for that word to all of the pronunciation police
out there listening.
I prefer Celtic because I like hard consonant sounds,
which is partially explains my affinity for profanity.
Fuck, mmm, like it.
Hey, Lucifina, a DNA ancestry research conducted
at Trinity University in Dublin and Queen University
has revealed at least two waves of migration
to the island in the past millennia.
And the Celts were not the first wave.
This is important to note in this episode.
When a group says they're fighting for their land, did they really have it first?
You know, like whose land is it really?
I think it's a very interesting thought to keep in our heads in this episode.
Like America, Americans fought to liberate themselves from the British, but we were not
the first to settle this land.
We being, you know, those of a European descent.
The American Indians have a far more legitimate
claim to America than Americans do, but they don't have, you know, they didn't have the
right immune systems and weaponry a couple hundred years ago to hold on to it.
Again, just an important note regarding what it means to be Irish or what it means to
be of any culture.
Analysis of the remains of a 5200 year old Irish farmer suggested that
the population of Ireland at the time was closely genetically related to modern day populations
of southern Europe, especially Spain and Sardinia. That's right. I would not have thought that,
that the Sardinians originally snuck over to Ireland. Yeah, this farmer's her ancestors,
originally migrated from the Middle East to cradle of civilization
The Kels would later arrive from Northern Europe now
I should also note that before humans made it to the Amelisle back in 11,000 BCE
Ireland was settled of course by leprechauns
They lived happily enjoying the rainbows and shit and gold and green top hats and all that's fun stuff
And they were undisturbed alongside pixies and unicorns
for good 3000 years before humans showed up.
And then you know, around 8,000 BCE leprechauns
were tragically hunted for their sweet leprechaun
meet into extinction.
Pixies went into hiding only to return occasionally
to inspire Disney characters.
And unicorns were sold into sexual slavery
where they remain.
Now this is the kind of stuff traditional educators
are afraid to talk about,
mostly because it's fucking nonsense.
Around 4,000 BCE, it is estimated that farming
made its way to Ireland.
No one knows who figured it out.
Maybe people living in Ireland
or possibly some more evolved non-ginger showed up
and showed those backwards redheads
how to use simple tools.
Again, sorry, not sure why that is so fun for me to do. Farming marked the arrival of the new Stone Age, around 300 BCE Iron Age warriors known as the Keltz. Yes, here's the Keltz.
They came to Ireland, Ireland from mainland Europe. Yep, the origin of the Galic culture that
is so important to modern Irish identity. The Keltz have had a huge influence on irland and there is a lot of renewed interest
in their culture
many famous irish myth stem from stories about keltic warriors
uh... the current first official language of the republic of iran
or irish or gaelic stems from the you know the keltic language
uh... today by the way only roughly one percent
of uh... the irish still speak gaelic uh... little random trivia about the keltz roughly 1% of the Irish still speak Gaelic.
A little random trivia about the Celts, since modern notions of Irish culture seem to
be based in Celtic pride, the Celts were something else.
It was said that the Celts would strip completely naked before going into battle, something meant
to impact their enemies psychologically, seriously.
Very terrifying, too, where the appearance and the gestures of the naked warriors in front,
all in the prime of life and finally built men and in and all in the leading companies
richly adorned with gold torques and omelets, wrote the Roman, uh, Polybius, uh, he's 218
BCE, when he lived in an account of a battle fought against the Romans by the Celts, man, naked
warriors.
I can't believe that it in at least like Tyler Wiener's up,
or something.
You know, I feel like that would be distracting,
running into battle with your junk bouncing around,
or maybe it was worth it because it was distracting
to the enemy, you know.
It would be especially distracting to the enemy
if they had boners.
Think about that.
Can you imagine a bunch of jacked, muscular dudes
fully erect, charging you with swords
and spears and shit. That would definitely give them a psychological edge. You'd have to
assume that if you didn't kill them, best case, you getting raped on the field of battle,
worst case killed, actually worst case raped, then killed, best case killed and raped,
terrifying. And I guess they really were ripped
too. Just ripped naked floppy weiner showing or you know, raging, boner, sporting warriors.
Ancient sources say that the the killets were jacked. They detested being overweight and actually
had penalties against it. They were like Spartans. An ancient student of world history,
a name of forest, wrote that the they endeavor not to grow fat or potbellied and any
young man who exceeds a standard measure of the girdle is punished. Oh, men suck from
me. I tried and suck in my gut for pictures, but I don't know if I would meet that girdle
that girdle measurement that standard. I doubt it. I doubt it. I'm rocking a serious 34
waistline right now. I bet that's over the line.
The Celts were also interested in druidism, or there's more commonly known now cosplay.
I'd like to dress up and weird costumes, pretend to be a mis-series.
Sorry, again, I actually like cosplay.
Not for me, but I love costumes people come up with.
Anyway, Robert, Robert Tung Twister, Robert Wizen Youski of the University of Warsaw,
fucking Polish people and their dumb fucking names.
Notes that an AD, sorry, my wife is Polish.
That's why if you've new to the show, Polish stuff comes up,
I'm gonna take a shot because it's fun for me.
And they do have the fucking worst names.
Wizen Youski, I mean, it's way too many vowels, all right?
Just put a fucking decent like like wise and then ski,
wise ski. See, that's not bad, but you gotta fucking throw 17 other vowels in there.
It's unnecessary, all right?
Somebody talk to the Polish name committee and tell them to change everything.
It's Smith or Johnson from here on out.
You're either Smith or Johnson.
No more skis, no more fucking crazy, but sh- S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S-S, no more fucking crazy, but sh- sh- sh- sh- ski.
It's f-
garbage.
Okay, anyway, uh, in 8043, Pomponious Mella wrote about the Gauls as follows, and yet they
have both their own eloquence and their own teachers of wisdom, the druids.
These men claim to know the size and shape of the earth and the universe, the movements
of the sky and of the stars, and what the gods intent.
One of the precepts they teach, teach obviously to make them better for war has become
common knowledge namely that their souls are eternal and that there is a second life for the debt.
Oh man, so that's interesting. They had an after life.
And the old Romans thought that that was just kind of, you know,
to get them to fight harder. Like, hey man, go, kind of like, I guess, you know, modern day
or as Islamic fundamentalist warriors, man, get out there and get out to fight harder. Like, hey man, go kind of like, I guess you know, modern day, what is it? Islamic fundamentalist warriors, man, get out there
and get out there and fight.
It's okay if you die.
It's good for you actually.
You get to go straight to heaven.
The Keltz had a little bit of that back then as well,
apparently.
And yeah, yeah.
And now the Keltz really get going in Ireland,
and then contrary to the beliefs of some,
the Keltz race never had a cohesive kingdom though.
They were a loose amalgam of tribes, communities, you know, various groups that came together
for shared purposes such as defense, worship, trading, hunting.
Kind of, you know, unlike the classical civilization, degrees, and Rome, the Celts left behind,
you know, very little that scholars today can classify with any degree of certainty.
The Celts were primarily an oral tradition.
I think that's part of why they're popular today.
People have a sense of mystery.
Interestingly note about the Celts,
women held a high status in Celtic Ireland.
Ancient tales from this era,
tell of women going to war long.
Side their men, which made me wonder
where they naked as well.
I didn't come across that,
but if the dudes were naked,
why wouldn't the women be naked in fighting?
That seems even riskier for them,
especially if you're rocking some big old Irish deacups.
Right, some of those milky white Irish decaps,
that's the flopping out in the field of battle.
It's got to fuck up your balance.
When you're trying to let an arrow rip from the saddle,
women also had a lot of control over whom they married.
If they wanted to get married at all,
the ancient custom of hand fasting meant that couples
who intended to marry would live together for a year first.
At the end of the year,
either party could dissolve the relationship.
Too bad that custom isn't around today.
I think that's a great idea.
In 82 CE, the Irish narrowly avoided war with Rome.
The Rome, the conquerors of Europe, but they never made it quite to Ireland.
According to Roman historian Tastitus, Rome's military governor and Britain, Neus Julius
Agra Cola, a very successful military campaigner,
turned his attention to Ireland.
He defeated England's Queen of Budica in 61 CE,
and then continued to subdue the entire nation,
bringing under Roman rule,
and then Tastas claimed that a minor Irish king
who had lost his throne in battle,
approached Agri Cola and offered to help him conquer Ireland.
Fuck Trader.
Agri Cola considered an Irish invasion,
and even drew up a loose battle plans for a takeover.
But then he had to deal with the mutiny
within his own army and a Scottish rebellion.
Once he subdued the picked uprising in Scotland,
another ancient, you know, kind of tribe, the picks,
he was recalled to Rome by emperor,
demit, demit, demit, demit, demit, demit, demit, demit,
demit, demit, demit, demit, demit, demit, demit,
and then that was the closest
the Romans ever got to Ireland.
However, there is some evidence that Ireland may have attacked Roman forces in Britain.
Numbers, Roman coins and artifacts have been discovered in Ireland and they may have come
back from ancient Irish raids or the rating of various British Roman towns taking some
loot back to Ireland.
Not only did Raiders take coins, they also took people, they brought slaves back to Ireland, one young boy slave taking one of these raids went on to win his freedom
and become one of the most important figures in Irish history, palladium patric.
Better known as St. Patrick, the patron saint of leprechauns and St. Patrick is famous
for, of course, bringing leprechauns back to life with some black magic so that Irish
gingers could feast on their sweet, sweet tender meat once again and live like the savages they were.
Legend holds that nothing tastes as heavenly as leprechaun ribs marinated with some pixie
tears.
And that's how we got the recipe for Shepherds pie.
Now you know, of course, that's nonsense.
No, St. Patrick's regard is a founder as the founder of Christianity within Ireland.
Following the arrival of St. Patrick and then the arrival of other Christian missionaries
in the early to mid-fifth century, Christianity took over the indigenous religions
of the Isle, the Druids are out. They began replacing and or absorbing old pagan and
Celtic traditions and beliefs by the year 600 CE. This reminds me of what we learned way
back in time, sucks seven. Getting the Halloween origins episode, getting into that mixin
of pagan and Christian mythology. Well, Irish Christian scholars are now selling
in the study of Latin, which I need some Latin, right? Growing up, that would have helped
my pronunciation. A ton, Greek and Christian theology and various monasteries throughout
Ireland, the arts of manuscript illumination, metalworking and scopes are flourished and
produced such treasures such as Ornate jewelry and the book of Kells an old calf-skin book of the Christian
Gospels bound in 384 CE and then the Viking showed up right at the end of the 8th century CE and during the 9th century Vikings from what we now call Scandinavia
Began to invade and then gradually settle into a mix with Irish society
Man the Vikings might be talking about them very soon some Viking Viking topics been climbing the charts on the topic, uh, voting portion of the app.
Uh, the first attack by the Vikings in Ireland was recorded to have happened in 795 CE by Irish
monks in the annals of Ulster, the burning of race through by the heathens and ski was overwhelmed
and laid waste. Fucking heathens ruined shit for locals, burning villages to the ground,
laying entire towns to waste.
988 CE, the Vikings founded Dublin,
Ireland's capital city.
Thought that was interesting.
Dublin is easily the most known Irish city in Ireland
among Americans and it turns out it was founded by Vikings.
Following the defeat of the Vikings by Brian Boru,
the high king of Ireland at
Clonturf. Now in 1014 Viking influenced fades, but they had a presence, you know, pretty heavy
presence in Ireland for a few centuries. Despite that, only about 3% of Irish DNA is now scanned
in avian, according to some DNA studies I found online. So, you know, maybe they didn't rape and
pillage as much as the legends say, at least not in Ireland. Scotland and England have a much higher percentage of Norse ancestry.
Maybe, maybe it's against their religion to mate with genders. I don't know. I don't
know. Don't get all riled up for people. Just tossing out ideas. Just tossing out possibilities.
Or maybe DNA tests aren't testing for the blood of the right kind of Scandinavians like
the Norman Scandinavians. Let me explain that.
12th century saw the arrival of the Normans in Ireland.
The Normans are associated with Southern France, but before that, the Normans are believed
to have hailed from Scandinavia.
All of that reminds me of last week's time suck about the colonial devastation of Africa.
We're all Africans.
Isn't genealogy interesting?
I mean, seriously, people say stuff all the time like, you know, I'm a quarter French,
I'm a quarter Irish, a quarter British, another quarter Swedish, but really you, you
might just be a hundred percent Scandinavian.
You know, your British, French, Irish and Swedish roots might all hail from the same tribe
of people from like a thousand years ago.
I mean, we're all the same in the end, aren't we?
You know, one of the main reasons racism is just so fucking stupid. We're all just a hundred percent meat sack, right? The British
and Irish historically, you know, fought tremendously, but also if you go back, you know, a thousand,
two thousand years, you know, share many of the same ancestors, the DNA of Irish and British
people very closely linked. Okay, so back to the Normans. In the 12th century, the Normans
invade Ireland, begin a long, long period of English rule,
subjugation, exploitation that would lead centuries later to the formation of the IRA.
At that time, Ireland was a collection of several kingdoms with a high king overseeing
all.
And then Pope Adrian IV gave the okay on invasion to the English king Henry II, and Henry
allowed Norman mercenaries to take over most of the Isle, and then King
Henry sent in his own large army to control all of the Isle.
And then the Normans built Walt Towns, Castles, churches, increased agriculture, commerce
in Ireland, and while the Norman invasion marched the beginning of foreign rule, the Irish
were initially treated more as a colony by the Normans.
The culture remained largely gaelic.
Brits who settled into Ireland fell into Irish customs,
generally sided with locals against their British rulers
as they, you know, became acclimated to the land.
You know, so I guess what I'm saying is
despite a new foreign presence,
Irish culture not destroyed at that time.
If anything, the country was ignored
for the most part initially by Britain.
Pay us some taxes, give us some of your goods,
and we'll leave you alone to be Irish and shit.
And then that would all change in the 16th century.
In 1534, King Henry VIII declared himself
head of the church in England,
and he ensured that the Irish parliament
declared him King of Ireland in 1541.
He paved the way for the British culture
to spread into Ireland,
and by the way that Irish parliament
was, you know, underneath the crown. So I don't want you to think that like Ireland was
independent at that time. They weren't. They had their own parliament, but, you know, basically
the British parliament can kind of overrule them when they needed to. Okay. And he paved
the way for British culture to really spread the island like never before. He created a
huge religious cultural rift that has yet to this day to fully heal.
He so I mean, really, if you want to blame anybody, like any one person for the IRA, easily,
it is King Henry VIII, no joke.
He so deced for its future formation in several ways, including his formal condoning of what
was called British plantations.
Now quick backstory on King Henry VIII before I explained with the panty plantations are Henry the eighth is famous mostly for having six wives
And a disagreement regarding an oling one of those marriages led to the English
Reformation which was the split
When the Church of England moved away from Rome and the Pope so basically Henry or Hank is I'd call him
One in one of his marriages, you know, annulled. And the Pope was like, enough.
You can't just keep getting new wives all the time.
And Hank was like, yeah, I hear you, but fuck that.
I'm the king, and I wanna do what I wanna do.
And then the Pope was like, nah bro, no can do.
Church won't allow it.
And then King Henry was like, fuck that shit.
I'll start my own church.
And it's gonna annull whatever the fuck I want it to annull. And it's gonna, and no, whatever the fuck, I want it to a no.
And then the Pope was like, uh, please don't,
please don't do that, please do not do that.
And Hank was all, hmm, already done, bro.
Already done, son.
Uh, and that was it.
And then I have a nation of Protestants.
So unfortunately Ireland,
still firmly a Catholic island, right?
Very much so in culture.
And now, Hank doesn't care for Catholics.
So he officially bans it.
No more Catholicism.
It doesn't go away, but he wants it to.
Irish Catholics have to maintain a connection
to Rome and secret now, priests who refuse
to pay allegiance to him and turn their back on Rome
or killed.
So he lets his new English Protestant friends
head on over into Ireland
and basically just take whatever they want
from Catholic Irish people already live in there.
The seeds of discontent really start to be sewn.
The Protestant settlers, settlers could have their quote unquote plantations, free land
or Scottish and English Protestants kind of pilgrims heading over there.
And the Irish Catholics, you know, not surprisingly, they don't care for that.
You know, so this migration and land grab would last until the late 17th century, and from that period
on Protestant Catholic, kind of British Irish conflict would become a common theme in Irish
history.
The 17th century was a bloody one indeed for Ireland, indeed, culminated in the imposition
of a harsh regime of penal laws to further disempower Catholics, denying them, for example,
the right to take leases or own land above a certain value at all, continued to outlaw the Catholic clergy, which did still exist
in Ireland.
Irish refusing to give up the religion and basically outwardly saying, yeah, yeah, yeah,
we're Anglican, but in reality, it continued to be Catholic.
The new laws forbid higher education and entry to various professions for Catholics,
impose oaths of conformity to the state church, the church of Ireland during the 18th century,
strict enforcement of the penal laws eased.
But by 1778, Catholics held only about 5% of the land in Ireland.
Wow.
You know, to go from the overwhelming majority, you know, we're all of it to about 5%.
Irish Catholics have been virtually just completely and totally disenfranchised.
And their Irish Catholic descendants would later form the majority of the IRA.
Okay, so before the IRA, Irish Catholics and some Protestant nationalists tried to stand
up for themselves politically.
In 1782, a parliamentary faction led by Henry Gratton, a Protestant, successfully agitated
for a more favorable trading relationship with England and for greater legislative independence
from the Parliament of Ireland.
And again, so it wasn't even just the Catholics.
He's Protestant.
Some of the Irish Protestants also wanted to be a little bit more free from Britain.
However, it did not work.
Little was accomplished despite Gretens' efforts.
London still controlled much of what occurred in Ireland.
And then a decade later, inspired by the French Revolution in 1791, an organization called
the United Irishman
was formed with the idea of bringing Irish people of all religions together to reform
and reduce Britain's power in Ireland.
Its leader was a young Dublin Protestant named Thielbald Wolf Tone.
And Tone wasn't interested in trying to work things out politically.
He was ready to go to war.
Well the United Irishmen were the inspiration for the armed rebellion of 1798, despite attempts at help from the French, the rebellion failed.
Tone was captured in battle by English soldiers. He was tried, executed for treason, and
in 1801, the act of union was passed, uniting Ireland politically with Britain into the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. So they'd like reformalize it. And they call it the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. I they'd like reformalize it and they call it the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
I love how the name great is added to Britain and Ireland gets nothing. Like I wonder if anyone when they were, you know, they'd lost,
but they were kind of coming up with the name was like, um, can it be called a great great Britain and awesome island?
Or maybe Great Britain and impressive island? Maybe impeccable island. No, can it be at least
called Good Island? No, not even like Great Britain and pretty good island. Can we have so so
island? That's all we can have is so so island. So it would be the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and so so island. You know that one doesn't really roll off the tongue now does it? Sounds worse
than just island really. How about we stick with just island?
Now does that.
That's fine.
Yeah, then in 1829, more political efforts are made
towards Irish independence.
One of Ireland's greatest leaders, Daniel O'Connell,
known as the Great Liberator was central
in getting the act of Catholic emancipation passed
in parliament in London.
He succeeded in getting the total ban
on voting my Catholics lifted.
And they can now also become members of the parliament in London
After this success Oconnell aimed to cancel the act of union and reestablish an Irish independent parliament
You know, so maybe like to be part of the Commonwealth
But they would have you know way more independence. However, this was a you know a much bigger task to accomplish
For Oconnell and his approach to nonviolence was just not
supported by all of his countrymen.
And then, you know, political issues such as this were overshadowed by the worst disaster
in tragedy in Irish history, the great famine.
Now, potatoes were the staple food of a growing population of Ireland in the 19th century.
When blight, it's a plant disease, struck potato crops nationwide in 1845, 1846, and 1847 disaster
follows.
Potatoes are suddenly inedible.
People begin to starve to death, especially since it had been centuries since they'd
hunted those leprechauns and their sweet leprechaun meat into exchange, and they're really
fucking regretting that now.
And the British government stepped in and makes it worse.
While hundreds of thousands of people are suffering from extreme hunger, Ireland is forced
to export
abundant harvests of wheat and dairy products to Britain and further overseas.
Kinda reminds me of Stalin's Ukrainian famine, right?
Starving the farmers who are feeding your nation.
And a lot of people do starve.
Between 1845 and 1851, roughly a million people starve in Ireland and two million more people
in those six years just get the fuck out.
It is leaf and
another five million gingers died, which would almost kind of be sad, you know, if they mattered.
Sorry, sorry, you get no, but for real, a million died and two million left.
And over 150 years later, the population of Ireland still has yet to reach its pre-Famined
level of approximately eight million. Today, there is still less than 7 million people on the island
in its entirety, that's counting Northern Ireland and the rest of the the island itself.
So really thought there was more people in Ireland than that, by the way, on the on the aisle
of Great Britain, over 65 million people. And the UK is about three times the size of Ireland
geographically, but it has over nine times the population. So after the famine, Ireland continues to lose a lot of
people to immigration, especially to the United States. And they've been turning our nation
cities into drunken shit shows every year on March 17th ever since. There was a little
effective challenge to Britain's control of Ireland after the great famine
until the efforts of Charles Stewart Parnell at the age of 31, he became leader of the Irish
home rule party, which became the Irish parliamentary party in 1882.
While Parnell did not achieve home rule, you know, the fight for self-government, for Ireland,
his efforts towards this movement earned him the title of the Uncrowned King of Ireland. And the impetus he gave to the idea of
home rule was to have lasting implications. It was really fucking up the Irish
independence cause. Now was the residual effects of King Henry VIII,
oh, Hank split from Rome, right? He'd opened up the door for Protestantism
in Ireland. And then he encouraged Protestants to move to Ireland with his,
the whole plantation program we talked about. And then Northern Ireland,
closest to the UK is where most of these initial Protestants
settled.
And now they've been there for a few hundred years, you know, and they've been breeding.
There's been a lot of Protestant penis in and out and back in and back out of Protestant
vagina action happening, right?
They've also remained culturally tied to England.
They've created a majority culture of Protestantism
on the island in Northern Ireland.
And now they have no interest in succeeding
and suddenly becoming the minority in a country
that overall is still largely Catholic.
So fucking Hank, man, he messed everything up
with his constant need to bang a new wife.
Isn't it crazy that it's like the butterfly effect?
You know, like that action,
this reverberation is still being felt today. People still dying today because that it's like the butterfly effect, you know, like that action, this is the reverberations is still being felt today.
People still dying today because that guy was like, no, I want to fuck who I want to fuck.
It's crazy. So in the late 19th century and Ulster, a province of Northern Ireland, the majority of people are
Protestants. They're concerned about the prospect of home rule. They favor the union with Britain, the unionist party,
based on remaining with England, it's formed in 1891. By the early 20th century,
it was led by Sir Edward Carson and he threatened an armed struggle for a separate Northern Ireland
if independence is granted to Ireland. So shit's getting more complicated. You know,
you got one group of guys being like, hey man, if you don't give us our independent, we're
fucking out. We're going to cause some shit. We're going to war. We're going to fight.
And then you have this other group going, hey, if you can let these guys out, we're going to go to war.
And then the home rule bill actually is passed.
I didn't know this man.
Ireland came very close to being, you know, its own nation back in 1912, but it doesn't
quite make it into law.
And then basically the home rule act is suspended, you know, just kind of shelved because of World
War one in 1914.
You know, first famine slows down the movement and then now a war, a world war slows down
the movement.
Well, the Irish nationalist convinced themselves that home rule is going to be granted after
the war if they support the British war effort.
And so John Redmond, the leader of the Irish parliamentary party, encourages his people
to join the British forces and fight, and many do just that.
However, a minority of nationalists don't trust the British government, and their distrust
leads to one of the most pivotal events in Irish history that Easter rising and the Easter
rising really leads to the IRA.
On April 24th, 1916, Easter Monday, two groups of armed rebels, the Irish volunteers and
the Irish citizen army sees key locations in Dublin.
The Irish volunteers led by Padregg Pierce Pierce and they'd been training for the defense of
islands since 1913 under the pretense of defending British led Ireland, but really they'd
been preparing for this moment.
They've been dying their hair black for several years and then one day they wash it out and
it's fucking ginger.
It's fucking sneaky ass ginger army has been built and right up on their British noses.
No.
The other group of rebels was the Irish citizen army led by James O'Connelly.
I just added a no.
His name is James Connelly.
I've been reading so many Irish names this week.
I'm just adding an O in front of everyone's name.
This group also began forming a 1913 and it formed out of a labor union strike.
ICA leaders organized a militia force to protect workers interests in Dublin. Well, on April 24, 1916, the conflict began when Irish forces attacked Dublin castle in Dublin,
seat and symbol of British power. It was a royal residence, home of the Viceroy of England,
the British monarchies, Irish representative. Other rebels took over the post office where
the proclamation had been read. They raised the Irish tri-color flag, Padreg Pierce, read the proclamation of the Republic, which declared an Irish Republic independent of
Britain. The proclamation opened up with In the name of God in the dead generations, Ireland,
through us, summons, or children, to our flag and strikes for her freedom.
Battles ensue with casualties on both sides and among the civilian population, the British,
or caught by a surprise, but after the initial tax quickly regather, turn the tide in their
favor, they outnumber the Irish rebels 10 to 1.
So the Easter Rising doesn't last long.
It finishes on April 30th.
The rebels surrender at the GPO, that post office.
They take in five days earlier and been defending against British police soldiers in militia.
485 people lost their lives in the struggle over those few days, over three quarters of
those killed.
We're non-rebell and just over half were civilians.
And initially it looked like the cause for Irish independence suffered a huge set back
with this loss.
The majority of the Irish public was not in favor of this attack, not in favor of this
uprising.
They were opposed to it.
However, the British fucked up.
Public opinion turned back in favor of the rebels when the British administration responded
to the uprising by quickly executing many of the leaders and participants in the rising.
It kangaroo court trials quickly executed all seven, you know, dudes who signed the proclamation
and seven others were hastily court-martialed and executed, including Pearson Connolly.
Now, the British had turned them into martyrs in the fight for Irish independence.
Two of the key figures who were involved in the rising, who avoided execution were Amon
Devallera and Michael Collins.
Michael Collins, if his name sounds familiar, he's the dude who wrote Jurassic Park.
Apparently, he wrote Jurassic Park while going on to fight for Irish independence. And
really interesting here, Jurassic Park is about the fight for Irish independence. So I made
me like that movie, you know, even more, the dinosaur island represents Ireland. And Jeff
Goldblum represents British imperialism. Laura Dern represents Scotland. The plant eating
dinosaurs represent the people of Ireland. And the velociraptors are the IRA.
And that big pile of shit that Laura Dern
and Jeff Goldblum investigate in the movie
represent Irish redheads.
All right, I'm done.
I really, I really have no problem with redheads.
That was a long way to go,
just to take another cheap shot at them.
Other than I did have an Irish redhead for a stepmom
and I was not a big fan of her.
That part's true, actually.
But actually I find, yeah, I don't wanna say anything more about redheads. I think there's a lot of Irish redhead for a stepmom and I was not a big fan of her. That part's true actually. But actually, I find, uh, yeah, I don't want to say anything more about redheads.
I think there's a lot of beautiful redhead women.
I'll just stop there for my wife listens.
It's like, what the fuck?
Why are you talking about redhead women?
Okay.
And, uh, I highly doubt any of you are still with me.
So I, I will stop as well and let you know that Michael Criteon wrote Jurassic Park.
Michael Collins, he did not write Jurassic Park.
Michael Collins was an early 20th century Irish freedom fighter and politician and he and
a moaned of De Valera were not done fighting for Ireland when they were not executed.
In December, the December 1918 elections, the Sinn Fein party led by a moaned De Valera,
one majority of the Ireland based seats in the British House of Commons.
Now, the House of Commons, by the way, is a lower house of the two-house British Parliament,
which is comparable to Congress and the U.S. kind of.
Elected officials representing the needs of various political populations gathered to vote
on legislation, the leader of the largest party in the House of Commons is the Prime Minister.
Technically the Prime Minister has to be appointed by the King or Queen, but it's really just
a formality.
The British crown, it doesn't have any real political power anymore.
Just a vestige from a former life, a relic kept for the sake of tradition, national pride.
UK government is such an interesting mix of old and new monarchy and modern democracy.
Like it functions, but it's strangely complicated.
I studied British government years ago, in London, where I studied for a semester.
I remember the professor, who is a a British professor a lot of times basically saying
the equivalent of like, yeah, it doesn't make a lot of sense.
It's odd.
Like they still have the house of lords that works with the House of Commons, the Parliament
to pass laws and some of the seats in the House of Lords are hereditary like going back
to actual lords.
Like you have to be born into the right family to get a seat in government in that particular
seats.
But now some of the other seats are appointed, but not voted on.
It's very confusing.
One foot in the past, one foot in the present, the house of the Lord is called the Upper
House of Parliament, but really has far less power than the lower house, which is people
who are voted in.
Anyway, anyway, very complicated.
On January 21, 1919, the Sinn Fein members of the House of Commons gather in Dublin to
form an Irish Republic parliament called, uh, Du-Yerren.
Du-Yerren.
And they unilaterally declared power over the entire island of Ireland.
And now we have the IRA.
They were like, fuck your House of Commons.
We've built our own.
Now what followed, uh, Du what followed do yearns declaration is known
as the war of independence the Irish Republican army is formed the army of the newly declared Irish
Republic and it begins to wage guerrilla war against British forces from 1919 to 1921 the IRA
morphed directly out of the existing Irish volunteer army now it started officially on January 21st
1919 that was the day Ireland officially formed a breakaway government declared independence.
At the same day, two members of the British organized armed police force, the Royal Irish
Constabulary, were shot dead in RIC in County, uh, tip array by IRA members acting on their
own initiative.
The IRA was convinced that a free Irish Republican only began by force.
Some have been preparing for this action since shortly after the Easter Rising incident.
From necessity, they adopted a guerrilla campaign, a conventional war on a large scale, kind
of open conflict situation was not feasible, given their lack of men training and arms.
They were seriously outmaned, seriously outgunned, and then they were also organized initially
into numerous small, small, fragmented, fiercely independent units who acting on their own initiative launched frequent
low level surprise attacks. So it wasn't initially a terribly well organized organization either,
just like these bands of freedom fighters independently led but all fighting for the same
cause. And you know, they would attack and then just slip back into, you know, civilian population.
They were never a traditional army.
It was never a traditional war.
It wasn't two armies fighting in an open field.
The volunteers attacked government property, carried out raids for desperately needed weapons
and funds and to disrupt the British administration, assassinated prominent individuals.
Their most significant single target was the Royal Irish Constabulary.
This police force was the eyes and the ears of Dublin Castle.
Had the prime responsibility for maintaining law and order and its members were vulnerable,
increasingly unpopular in Ireland and the best available source of arms.
So the IRA would ambush, ambush, you know, RIC patrol cars, toss a grenade inside one,
you know, kill everybody, take their weapons, that sort of thing, assassinate an RIC officer
from an apartment window
have some of the other grab his gun disappear
uh... they drove the r.i.c. mad the r.i.c. couldn't fight back if they couldn't find
the enemy
you know the civilian population was at first shocked by the ira's actions but
rapidly came to support them
at a patriotic sentiment and because of the repressive nature
of the british government's response
the r.i.c. uh... soon needed reinforcements and the RIC special reserve was formed,
temporary constables recruited 1919,
largely from Irish World War I veterans.
And their uniform gave rise to the nickname of black intans.
And they were basically a British-backed militia.
Now, interesting trivia for real trivia here.
Today, a black int tan is a pint of half
Guinness and half bass ale and Irish style in an English ale. But because of its association
with Irish soldiers fighting to help the British, and many parts of Ireland, it's still called
a half and half to this day due to the negative association with the old black and tan militia.
Well, the more the IRA attacked the RIC and the black and tans, the more frustrated those
groups got unable to find IRA members, they started taking their frustrations out on those
suspected of harboring IRA members, just innocent civilians.
And innocent civilians start to be killed.
They started destroying businesses such as dairy creameries.
They suspected of being used to fund IRA efforts.
Violence towards citizens turns public sentiment further against the British support
increases for the IRA. On September 20th, 1920, and RIC officers killed in a small seaside town
of Belbragan near Dublin. So here's an example of the IRC really overreacting to attacks. And obviously,
you know, never cool to have one of your officers gunned down, but, but this is very, very not cool how they responded.
They break in, loot, and burn for pubs, just fucking burn them to the ground, burn a
hosiery factory, and also burn down 49 homes in retaliation because they think that, you
know, some of those people were supporting the IRA.
After the attacks in Belbriggand, other similar incidents, Sinn Fein's strategy of making
Ireland ungovernable by the British is beginning to work.
The Sinn Fein government backed the IRA campaign, Michael Collins, a leading figure in both
Sinn Fein and the IRA played a pivotal coordination role in all of this.
He provided volunteers with funds, arms, equipment appointed their officers, encouraged them
to act, identifying targets, issuing instructions, offering military advice, his most critical
contribution lay in the provision of intelligence, using military advice, his most critical contribution
laying the provision of intelligence using his sources, his network of informers.
They even penetrated Dublin Castle and the police forces, his squad, a group of hand-picked
agents, eliminated many of Dublin's detective constables, the G-Men, and the IRA was never
a huge military organization over the course of the war for independence.
Only 15,000 total volunteers were actively involved.
With around 3000 in service any given time, they provoked Westminster into more brutal
and repressive retaliatory responses.
They rallied more IRA support via Sinn Fein publishing propaganda relating to the police
atrocities.
Their publications were confirmed by independent journalists printed in British and American
newspapers and a mounting course of criticism begins to rise and Britain and America regarding
the British government's actions.
Okay, so the violence in Ireland peaks on November 21st, 1920, bloody Sunday, the first
bloody Sunday in Ireland's independence battle.
Not the later one in 1972
that you two would go on to sing about on this bloody Sunday, every woman in Ireland had
their period at the same time.
They have been building towards this training for years, staying in the same homes, getting
aligned.
You know, they wanted to make an incredible statement of solidarity against the British,
and they all had their periods heavy flow tossed their bloody knickers in the face of British police officers many of
them died instantly have discussed a few died of blood poisoning and a couple perverts
died of food poisoning.
Was that too far even for the suck?
I don't know, I guess I'll find out soon enough was a meme else.
And the battle is over.
No, Britain packs up leaves the island, grants you know, freedom and never returns.
Of course, that didn't do.
I have it. Of course, that was made up on this bloody Sunday, grants freedom and never returns. Of course that doesn't have to happen. Of course that was made up.
On this bloody Sunday, Michael Collins IRA squad, gunned down 19 suspected British Army intelligence
officers, living in civilians in Dublin houses and hotels.
Damn it, 19 in a day.
It's a lot of assassinations.
Well the incident illustrated the quality of his informants and the continuing devastating
capability of the IRA.
Sadly, it immediately
stung the security forces of, you know, the British security forces into brutal retaliation,
hours later, newly recruited members of the police force fired indiscriminately into the
crowd at a football match in Dublin, killing 12 innocent people. Do to the Dublin football
shootings, Irish public sentiment turns further against England. Now, in response to the Dublin football shootings, Irish public sentiment turns further against England.
Now, a response to the escalating attacks to British Army, given the powers to intern
persons on suspicion without trial by the end of 1920.
A consequence of the arrest which followed, 4500 by August 1921, was that large numbers
of volunteers go on the run.
They became in effect professional revolutionaries now, differentiated from their part-time colleagues and with no prospect of a normal life until
the British rule is ended. And Munster, especially the organized themselves into flying columns,
they're called mobile units of about a hundred men based in remote camps or safe houses,
ideally suited to guerrilla warfare, and they attack the IRC with increasing relentlessness
and effectiveness. Despite their success, by mid-1921,
Sinn Fein, the leadership of Sinn Fein favors negotiations
with the British, instead of continuing to fight
for total independence.
They're worrying that the continued violence
is gonna break the volunteers,
gonna break the, they have a lack of men,
you know, they don't have as many men, arms and funds.
There was an increasing buildup of British troops in Ireland.
They doubt the capacity of the Irish people to endure a lot more fighting and all the
retaliatory attacks, you know, that are involved.
And they know that the British are sick of the insurgency and the relentless guerrilla
attacks.
And they just basically feel like, okay, now it's a time to kind of, you know, make a move,
get a good deal done,
you know, one that will not require IRA surrender and imprisonment.
So in December 19, 21, a treaty assigned by Michael Collins and the Irish and the British
authorities, a clear level of independence is finally granted to Ireland kind of.
They were initially only given the original Guinness Brewery and Dublin.
And for a decade, that was enough.
And many of the Irish felt they got a good deal, actually.
They were able to drink stout Irish beer to discounted rate.
And that felt in their drunken state as good as freedom.
Ketting, of course, being ridiculous.
Now, with the bar again table, it was agreed that the Northern, largely Protestant portion
of Ireland was still belong to Britain.
The contents of the treaty would end up dividing Ireland both geographically and politically. Ireland was divided into Northern Ireland,
six counties and the Irish free, free state, 26 counties established 1922 and not all
of the Irish freedom fighters are pleased with this decision and division, of course.
And this division has kept the IRA alive to this day. Without this division, there is no reason for the IRA.
So people were so divided about the treaty in Ireland that a civil war follows from 1922
to 1923 between pro and anti-treaty forces with former brothers and arms in the fight for
the Irish independence, Michael Collins, who was pro treaty.
Obviously, he was the guy who broke the deal.
And then there was a moan, Dave Lera, who was anti-treaty. And now they're on opposing sides.
So now the IRA has split into two.
Anywhere from 2000 to 5000 die in the fighting that follows.
Eventually, Michael Collins pro-treaty forces are able to pressure Dave Lera's anti-treaty
IRA forces into a cease fire.
But not before Collins himself is shot and killed in an ambush by anti-treaty forces on
August 22, 1922. And then the consequences of the civil war can be seen to this day. The two largest political parties in Ireland have their roots in the opposing sides of this
civil war.
There's a Finnegale, the pro-treaty party, and then there's a Fienna, Fienna, Fienna, Fienna,
foil, anti-treaty.
You should see these words, by the way.
Fienna foil is FIA and NNA, F-A-AXET-Mark-IL.
Mm-L.
That's fun.
A period of relative political stability
follows the Civil War.
And then the IRA just go away.
And everyone gets along and the British and Irish work together
to create lucky charms.
The Irish cereal made with the tasty marshmallow bites.
Those represent the Irish, they made those.
And the British create the shitty crunchy wheat puffs or whatever the hell those things are.
And they split the profits evenly.
Yeah, right.
Following the ceasefire of 1923, the IRA morphs into the organization we think of today, basically.
Their leadership may have signed a treaty to stop fighting, but they still consider the
war to be fucking on.
They still want an island free of British control.
They want Northern Ireland. You know, most isn't good enough. And many Catholics living in Northern Ireland,
they still want this as well. So fucking King Hank, man, the mess he has made attacks and
recruitment continue by rogue IRA fighters against Protestant targets over the next few
years, especially in Northern Ireland, leading to the organization being declared illegal in
1931. The Catholic Church even denounced as the IRA.
The Roman Catholic bishops issue a pastoral letter declaring that the Irish Republican army
is sinful and irreligious and no Catholic can lawfully be a member of them.
An excommunication order is given and extended to members of all organizations outlawed under
the Public Safety Act.
After a series of IRA bombings in England in 1939, Doyle Aaron, the lower house, the Irish
parliament, took stringent measures against the IRA as well, including a provision for
internment without trial.
The bombings were masterminded by Shemus O'Donovan.
Now that's an Irish name.
Shemus O'Donovan.
What's your name?
Shemus O'Donovan.
I'm Shemus O'Donovan.
I'm Chinese.
I'm clearly Chinese. shay miso donovan shay miso donovan i'm uh... shay miso donovan i'm chinese
i'm clearly chinese
uh... that's very irish name and explosive expert in ira member since the war
of independence shay mis orchestrated what
was called the sabotage plan or s plan against england a two year
ira rain of explosive terror
on british soil
and ira identities become very uh... intertwined with bombings and this is when they begin, you
know, truly began, became their main way of attack.
Shamist plan, various bombings in the British cities of Manchester and London, they bombed
the main power supply and for Birmingham, they bombed the main gas lines for Williams,
Deacon's Bank and London in response to these and other attacks.
All power stations, gas works, telephone exchanges and the droidwitch transmitting station are put under police protection.
They bombed the London Underground, mined the gap, the city's subway system,
the Tottenham Court Road Station, and the Lycester Square Station were bombed in February of 1939,
plans to blow up Buckingham Palace were reported by the Times to have been found in Belfast.
Belfast, the Irish government responded by passing the Trees and Act in 1939.
They gave them the power to execute members of the IRA.
The Offences against the State Act is also passed in 1939.
Give them the power to detain IRA suspects without a trial.
So now they could just capture, detain, execute suspected IRA members.
The legislation does little though to slow the violence.
Seven separate IRA bombings occur in just one day in 1939 on March 31st.
On May 5th, tear gas bombs explode in two Liverpool cinemas causing 15 injuries, four
bombs explode in Coventry, two more bombs explode in London.
On June 9th, letter bombs exploded in 20 English post boxes.
Every post box in London was searched for further IRA devices.
And these are just a few of the many, many examples from this bomb are going off in England
virtually every week, all through 1939, railway stations are bombed, banks are bombed, bridges
and power stations are bombed.
In a few years, over 600 IRA members are imprisoned during the two-year
S-plan during this time. There were 300 IRA planned explosions. Incredibly only 10 deaths
in 96 injuries result from these attacks. The IRA wasn't trying to kill in these attacks. They
were trying to destroy infrastructure and wreak havoc on Britain's economy. And for a while,
pretty effective. And then organized attacks cease temporarily. Five IRA leaders are executed, increases in the securities surrounding rich infrastructure.
Targets in Britain made it a lot harder to blow shit up.
English police also seized large quantities of rock explosive material from the IRA in
1940.
The seizure of war material and inability to get newly acquired war material into Britain
under wartime restrictions made bombings even more difficult.
The campaign also generated a good deal of anti-Ira sentiment in England, which increased
the British public's suspicion of Irish people in general.
That makes sense.
Making sneak attacks even more difficult.
All these factors lead to the IRA attacks tapering off around early to mid 1940.
By mid 1947, the IRA will be down to about 200 members in total.
In the 1949, the IRA convention, the IRA orders as members to join the political party,
Sinn Fein, which would now become the civilian wing of the IRA.
While Sinn Fein publicly denies association to this day, they are still thought to be tied
to the IRA and have been long thought to historically been tie very closely to the IRA.
Between 1951 and 1954, the IRA began to really rearm itself with armed raids on British military
bases in Northern Ireland and England and stealing guns.
Over the next few years, the IRA divided into various factions, each carrying out an occasional
raid here, bombing there.
They also reorganized into a more or less cohesive military unit by 1956 planned what would be called Operation Harvest
Fighting what they called a border campaign on the 12th of December 1956 the campaign is launched with simultaneous attacks by around
150 IRA members on targets on the Irish North Irish border in the middle of the night a
BBC relay transmitter is bombed in dairy a courthouse is burned and
A BBC relay transmitter is bombed in Derry, a courthouse is burned in, uh, Mahirafelt as was, uh, a B specials post near Newri and a half built army barracks at
Inus Killing was blown up.
A raid on it go, uh, barracks in Armagh is attempted as well.
The IRA issued a statement announcing the start of the campaign saying,
Spitter headed by allens freedom fighters, are people of Canada to fight to the enemy.
Either this national liberation struggle, a new Ireland will merge upright and free,
and a new Ireland, which will build a country fit for all the people to live in.
That then is our aim. Our independence united, the democratic artist republic,
from this which we'll fight until the invader is driven from all soil and victory is ours.
Exactly like that.
Oh, fuck, you didn't just feel like you were in Ireland for a second?
I did.
Kind of.
On the 14th of December in IRA column under Sean Garland, detonated four bombs, one of
which blew in the front wall outside Linasca, are you, are you see station before raking
it with gunfire?
Further attacks on Darlin and Roslia, RUC barracks on the same day or
beaten off.
The RUC being the royal Ulster Constabulary successor to the RAC.
Roughly 9,000 of these police officers will be injured during the troubles.
Another series of IRA attacks that lasted for years, we'll talk about soon.
On the 30th of December, an IRA forced attacks at Darl and RUC barracks again killing RUC Constable, John Scalley, the first fatality of the campaign.
And then in 1957, the IRA intensifies their efforts, committing a total of three hundred
and forty one attacks in Northern Ireland, just in that year.
But then by 1958, the frequent capture of IRA members and waning public support, people
are sick of the fucking bombings. The movement begins to fade away again and attacks cease by 1961. Although it
had peedered out by the late 1950s, the campaign was officially called off on February 26,
1962 and a press release issued that day, the IRA Army Council stated the leadership of
the resistance movement has ordered the termination of the campaign of resistance to British
occupation launched on 12 December 1956. Instructions issued to volunteers of the resistance movement has ordered the termination of the campaign of resistance to British occupation launched on 12 December 1956.
Instructions issued to volunteers of the active service units and local units in the occupied area have now been carried out.
All arms and other material have been dumped and all full-time active service volunteers have been withdrawn. Foremost among the factors motivating this course of action has been the attitude of the general public's minds
Have been deliberately distracted from the supreme issue facing the Irish people the unity in freedom of Ireland
The Irish resistance movement renews its pledge of eternal hostility to the British forces of occupation in Ireland
It calls on the Irish people for increased support and looks forward with confidence in cooperation with other branches of the Republican movement
To a period of consolidation expansion and preparation for the final and victorious
face of the struggle for the full freedom of Ireland. What an interesting way to
call off the fighting. That was a very violent way to call off fighting. That's
hilarious to me. Look, we've done fighting for Ireland because not enough of you
fuck us already to fight for us as well. So it's time for peace.
But hopefully you'll come to your senses and we can get back to fighting very soon.
We can get back to killing as soon as possible.
We would love nothing more than to mow down every British Protestant man, woman and child.
It was a very least, send them to hell or back to England.
But today is the time for peace.
Hopefully tomorrow will be the time for fighting again.
We're really hopeful that we'll be fighting again soon.
Or even later today we could fight as well if that suits you.
We're ready to fight the drop of hat.
Yeah, so they're very, very still ready to fight.
And then in 1969, the violence does pick up again.
And it was all because of an early 20th century comic book, Pudian Juju.
And Pudian Juju started the NRA part back up.
A young IRA member, shameless,
so Donald McFlandigan on McRiley, Donald McDonald picked up Poodie and Juju issue 82
fools.
Goed, excuse me, fools.
Gold and Poodie town in that issue.
Poodie, Barles, Juju's life savings, it buys 100 acres of barren land in Oklahoma, specifically
because it looks like he had seen a rainbow rainbow in there.
See, Poodie had become convinced there must be a leprechaun hiding some gold
in the dust bowl, brushy planes outside of Tulsa.
He started mining and also partition the land in the little mining camps to
encourage other hopeful prospectors to move to a place.
He petitioned the US Postal Service to call Poodie Town.
And this did not set well with Juju.
First off, Poodie had just wiped out Juju savings, which was mostly built out of inheritance.
He'd recently received from his antting tanks passing from a tragic accidental overdose of
high fructose corn syrup the year prior.
When she'd found seven boxes of twinkies that were set to expire the very next day and
ate them all in one sitting because you ain't done supposed to let the food go twice now
here.
And you feel that?
That's a direct quote.
And Juju was going to use that money to have a giant twinkie sculpture made out of Aunt
TingTang's remains, built to commemorate her untimely death.
And Juju was pissed.
And then Pudy wrote some salt and Juju's wound by not at least having the decency to call
his money camp Juju town or at least TingTang town.
It was his aunt's money for God's sake and juju screamed to Poodie, put your lunch box surely.
And then Poodie knew he gone too far.
And he said, sorry, juju, I'd done for sure.
Thought we'd both be more rich and the money wouldn't be missed.
And juju said, two little, two little Poodie.
And then they'll have to really hard
for no reason for a very long time.
Because the author of this issue had a firm deadline
couldn't think of a better way to end the story
due to being distracted by working on a new book for a religion he'd recently invented
to recover from from financial ruin.
Yes, that author's name was Elrond Hubbard.
An old shameless O'Donnell McFlandigan O'Donnell McFlandigan O'Donnell McDonnell read all that
and assumed that the pot of gold represented Irish independence and Pudi represented the
IRA and Judeo represented the Anglican british oppression and elrond hubbard represent british government and the crown and elrond
wanted him to think a unified ira state comprising the whole island was fools gold in a possible
dream and he wasn't about to let the brits confuse him like they did putt putty and he
was going to bomb the fuck out of them and that is how he would spend ant-ting-tang's money on arms, the ant.
What's he doing?
If you're confused by the last few minutes, you should be.
If you're a first-time listener, well sometimes odd characters make time suck cameos, and by
some times, I mean a lot of times.
Hashtag keeps suck weird.
Anywho.
Enough of that nonsense for now.
In 1969 the violence did pick up again and it would last for 28 straight years.
And what would become known as the troubles.
A civil rights movement had formed in Belfast in January 1967 drawing inspiration from
the campaign for equal rights in the United States led by civil rights leader dr. Martin Luther King
subject of time suck episode
42 since the creation of northern Ireland in 1921 the Ulster Unionist party
UUP had held power in northern Ireland now the UUP drew its support from the predominantly Protestant Unionist loyalist community and many of the policies
It enacted marginalized and discriminated against
the Catholic nationalist minority.
In the 1960s, the Catholic working class in dairy lived under pretty dreadful conditions.
Halgina's terrible.
They tended to be very heavily unemployed.
For the most part, they lived in an area which has now become known as the bog side.
The people of the bog side actually represented the majority of the population in the city
of London, dairy, aka dairy, and yet
they were politically impotent. They were seen as second-class citizens. They had no control over
their own city because of the gerrymandering in the local government system, and that's what led
to the becoming foot soldiers for the civil rights movement. And they started protesting in the streets,
peaceful protests, organizing marches. But then riots began breaking out, riding, continuing to be
commonplace, and dairy and bellfast throughout the summer of 1969, a period which also saw the first deaths of
this new conflict on, well, new but also very old. On August 12, 1969, a protest sparking,
spark riding in the Catholic Boxide area and two days of serious violence broke out across
Northern Ireland with the police unable to cope with the scope
and scale of the disturbances,
Northern Ireland's government at Stormont requested
that the British Army be sent in to restore order.
Initially envisioned as a brief intervention,
Operation Banner was to become the longest
continuous campaign in the history of the British Army,
only coming to an end in July 2007. By the end of 1969, various
no-go areas have been established. Peace walls are being built in Belfast and dairy, separating
Protestant and Catholic neighborhoods, just these huge walls, separate neighborhoods, paramilitary
groups on both sides begin to re-emerge, the IRA being the biggest. In theory, the British troops
were sent to dairy in Belfast to maintain order and to protect the Catholic minority in theory.
However, the army soon came to be seen as a tool of the Protestant majority by the minority
Catholic community.
This is reinforced by events such as Bloody Sunday in 1972 when British forces opened
fire on Catholic civil rights demonstrators, Marching and Dairy, killing 500 genders and
more importantly, 13 actual
people. This is the bloody Sunday, uh, Bono or the song about. And of course, I made this
shit up about 500 gingers. Gotta hope you know that. Okay. January 30th, 1972, let's talk
about bloody Sunday in the bogside area of dairy, Northern Ireland, British soldiers shot
28 unarmed civilians during a peaceful protest march. 14 people die, right? I said 13 earlier, I was 14.
13 die outright right there immediately, but another guy actually dies four months later
and his injuries, or his deaths was attributed to injuries from bloody Sunday.
Many of the victims were shot while fleeing from the soldiers and some were shot while
trying to help the wounded.
Other protesters were injured by rubber bullets or batons
and two were run down by army vehicles.
Two investigations were held by the British government
about the shootings.
The wigerie tribunal held in the immediate aftermath
of the incident largely cleared the soldiers
and British authorities of blame.
Described the soldiers shooting as a border non-reclist
but accepted their claims that they shot at gunmen
and bomb throwers.
The report was widely criticized as a whitewash
and in sixteen years later the civil inquiry was established in nineteen ninety
eight to re-investigate the incident and following a twelve year inquiry
uh... civil report was made public in two thousand ten
concluded that the killings were both unjustified and unjustifiable
uh... it found that all of those shot were unarmed
that none were posed a serious threat, that
no bombs were thrown, and that soldiers, quote, no one Lee put forward false accounts
to justify their firing.
On the publication of the report, British Prime Minister David Cameron made a formal apology
on behalf of the United Kingdom.
Bloody Sunday increased Catholic and Irish nationalist hostility towards the British Army and exacerbated
the conflict,
support for the IRA rose, and there was a surge of recruitment into the organization,
especially locally. The troubles are generally agreed to have finished with the Belfast,
or good Friday agreement of April 10, 1998, between 1969 and 1998 estimated that well over 3,000
people are killed by paramilitary groups on both sides of the conflict.
Some of the most significant tax attacks of the troubles include the Birmingham bombings
of November 21, 1974.
That's when bombs went off and two central Birmingham pubs killing 21 people, injuring
121 others.
In 1972, the official IRA declares a ceasefire that has lasted ever since, technically, a
splinter IRA group the
Irish national liberation army has kept the violence right on going uninterrupted.
On August 27, 1979, the IRA killed 79 year old Lord Montbatten, a British naval officer
who was one of church hills, favorite naval commanders in World War II, and the second cousin
once removed the Queen Elizabeth.
He was killed while on vacation, dude survived two world wars on the sea and then the IRA blew up his fucking boat.
Three other people were killed with him, Lady Braeborn, the elderly mother of Montbatten
Sun and Law, two teenagers, a grandson of Mountbotten and a local Bowman.
The same day, 18 British soldiers, mostly members of the parachute regiment are killed by two
remote controlled bombs in the Warren Point ambush at Warren point county down.
And the explosive weren't the only tactic the IRA used to try and force change 10 IRA members
starved themselves to death in a hunger strikes in 1991 in a bill fast prison.
Man, I've never understood a hunger strike.
I, in 1987 IRA prisoners in North and in North Irish prison launched a hunger strike as
a protest against a revocation by the UK government of a prisoner of war like special category status for
paramilitary prisoners in Northern Ireland.
They just wanted to be seen as soldiers, they wanted to be seen as soldiers fighting a
legitimate fight not as terrorists.
Well the strike is called off the 40 deaths when the government seems to offer to concede
to their demands.
However, the government then renegs on the details of the agreement.
So the following year IRA prisoners call another hunger strike. And this time, instead
of many prisoners striking at the same time, the hunger striker start fasting one after
the other, after the other, after the other in order to maximize publicity over the fate
of each person. And then 10 IRA prisoners die in a row. Holy shit. Talk about dedication to a cause.
I am not dedicated to any cause enough to starve myself. I cannot imagine, I mean, I just,
you know, I'd love to say I'm more noble than that or more heroic. Uh, I can't, I definitely
can't imagine being the 10th guy to do that, right? You've watched nine comrades in the
struggle starve to death. And now it's your turn, turn. Man, and you know they're offering you food, right?
They don't want you to starve,
that they're trying to get you to eat.
You think they'd be start off and you're some good food.
Man, once they started doing that to me, I'm fucking done.
Well, it's gotta be such a rough way to go, man.
It's such a slow way.
I still understand how instinct doesn't kick in
on day six or seven at most.
You know, and you still don't eat food being brought to you.
Ah, there's no way I could have that willpower.
I wouldn't make it two days, you know? It may be I try to be tough, you know, you can take your oatmeal
You can shove it up your ass. I'm not cabing in on my principles not not damn comments. No way. No how
No, oh, hmm, you can take you can take that butter biscuit. You can go fuck yourself buddy. This guy doesn't quit
Ah shit, is that sausage gravy?
Is that sausage gravy with a lot of pepper on those biscuits?
Oh man, is that sea salt?
Oh god, the apple cider?
Son of a bitch!
You know what, nice try.
Nice try, but it's not gonna happen.
Oh man, two over medium eggs?
Home fries?
Let's fresh catch them.
Fuck!
Whatever, whatever, you know what, whatever.
I'm strong, I'm a little dizzy, I'm strong, but I'm strong.
A hot turkey sandwich with real mashed potatoes,
freshly carved turkey gravy made from drippings,
cranberry jelly, and a whiskey ginger,
and a dutch apple pie, and a fucking root beer float,
and devil's food cake made from scratch
with a good dive of dark chocolate.
All right, enough, I'm so hungry,
I don't remember why I went on a strike in the first place just get it over here get over here pass
it over uh... give me ten minutes to eat and i'll just say whatever you want me to say
uh... and then after the hunger strike more bombings uh... there's a theme of this episode is
bombings on april 10th 1998 the good friday agreement uh... is reached that ends the troubles
the agreement you know reached uh... was that northern island was part of the uk and would remain
so until the majority of the people uh... of Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland wished otherwise.
Should that happen, then the British and Irish governments are under a binding obligation
to implement that choice.
Also irrespective of Northern Ireland's constitutional status within the United Kingdom or part
of the United Ireland, the right of the people of Northern Ireland to identify themselves
and be accepted as Irish or British or both is recognized. So they can hold British or Irish citizenship or both.
And the IRA agrees to end their fight. I gotta say that does seem like a pretty good deal.
Right. I mean, you understand what I'm saying? The citizens living in Northern Ireland,
who wish to remain part of the UK, get to do so. So they win. But if the Irish Catholic pro-unified
kind of Ireland minority should ever become the majority. They can vote to unify with Ireland if the rest of Ireland wants them to be a part of them
still, right?
You know, so either way, if you're an Irish citizen, you know, you get to live where you
want on the island, you know, north or the rest and you get more recognition.
And it's been peace ever since, right?
No.
Not even six months later, a car bomb goes off and Oma, a little city of about 20,000 in
Northern Ireland, carried out by a group calling themselves the real Irish Republican army,
a provisional Irish Republican army splinter group who opposed the IRA ceasefire in the
Good Friday agreement.
And that bombing kills 29 people, including a woman pregnant with twins, fuck, and injures
some 220 others.
More casualties in this attack after the ceasefire than an anyone single attack during the
troubles.
And the violence continues to this day.
Is it going to end ever?
Let's hop out of this timeline and really talk about that.
Good job, soldier.
You made it back.
Barely.
Okay, a lot of information today, and there's so much more, some form of the IRA has been
active for almost a hundred years now, and the fight for the entire island to be under
one rule, a rule free from British influence has never completely gone away.
Last of this day, and we'll look into the current status of the IRA and examine if it still
has aspects of being a revolutionary group, or at this point, it's just a bunch of terrorists.
I mean, the majority of the population doesn't want a revolution.
How do you justify continuing to fight for one?
But before we dig into that,
let's check in with the idiots of the internet.
The idiots of the internet.
The idiots of the internet.
The idiots of the internet.
Okay, before we get into idiot, idiotic,
I can't comment, say, I think it's worth sharing
some comments that are not necessarily idiotic
under a video called the Republic's dissident youth, Ireland's young warriors uploaded
by my favorite YouTube channel, Vice.
It's a video from 2015 about a group of militant teens who operate under an IRA Splinter group.
Right, there's so many IRA Splinter groups.
Kids who are willing to die to get British influence out of Northern Ireland.
And here's what some people have to say, user Matt Hopkins posts inspirational, intelligent
and brave young men and women.
I'm a Brit, but these people have more morality, strength of character and courage than any
Brit kid.
Iris, people need to understand that Ireland will never be free until the entire 32 counties
are united as one and the two Brit puppet parties, which have dominated Irish politics for the last few decades, are rejected wholesale at the ballot box.
Wake up Irish people, reject your puppet masters.
So interesting posts, a British sympathizer to the IRA costs.
Another sympathizer is user king of all goyms who posts good lads, keep up the honorable
fight, respect and support from Texas. Then, we get to use your Thor 117, who is not a sympathizer, and who posts.
These fools are not warriors in any sense of the word, and they disgrace this country with
their carry on.
They have no idea about what they are fighting for.
Shinfane, the IRA, are all one and the same.
All scum, the bomb double in the city, killed innocent civilians, robbed banks, credit
unions, post offices, post offices,
every week or every other week during the troubles.
As it stands today, more ons like these
are no better than neo-Nazis.
They claim to be Republicans
and that they have no issue with all the murder, theft
and other criminal activities
that their own worthless little groups
act out against the people of this nation.
The basic truth is the rich, steaming buffet of bullshit
that these kids have been served
to get them into line with this mindset
has no relevance.
The existence of these fools only causes
more problems than it solves.
And there are a lot of posts like that one.
A lot of posts comparing the IRA to ISIS
and other terrorist groups.
And also a lot of more support posts
like user andabolic horse who posts brilliant,
I'm from the UK, get the English out of Ireland. So the Irish fight for independence, still
a hot button, still a hot button right now, important issue across the pond of videos about
the IRA regularly get millions of views. So many people on each side of the debate, a lot
of respect for the use in the comments section, plus a lot of people basically saying enough
already, you guys are fucking terrorists.
And then there's the comments of users like Andy Aguilar,
who thinks he saw the whole situation.
I love that.
I love that when there's been a struggle for like decades,
if not centuries, and then some dumb shit on YouTube,
thinks they can just throw out a sentence
and just fucking wrap it all up.
And he just says, why don't they move to Ireland
from Northern Ireland?
Question mark.
God, good job, Andy.
You did it.
You figured out what no one else could
for the past 100 years.
Way to oversimplify an incredibly complex issue.
You fucking dumb bastard.
Now, when I just walk around Northern Ireland
with a megaphone for the next few weeks,
just clear everything up for everybody.
Just, you know, just go attention Irish,
who want to join up with the rest of Ireland.
I have figured out what you need to do. You don't have to keep fighting. You don't have to wait. Just uproot your lives
and move. No big whoops. There's room for you to live in Ireland. There's lots of forms
in land. Please just move south. No biggie. An independent Ireland already exists. Just
head south and find it. You're welcome.
Love Captain Oblivious.
Just Captain Obvious idiots like this.
You know, someone doesn't like everything about the country.
Why don't I just fucking move to a different country?
This is perfect for them.
I love how that's an option in people's heads.
You know, like, you know, you don't like your country.
Well, just fucking move.
You know, if there's one thing this world is full of,
it's amazing opportunities waiting in other countries.
You don't like working at 7-11 in Tennessee?
At no big whoop.
Just go become a doctor in Montreal.
They have a shortage of doctors.
They don't even need degrees.
They're waiting for you and your whole family
and just community to head on over.
Yeah, you don't like, you know,
fucking mop and floors.
That's okay.
There's a bunch of stockbrokers jobs in Bolivia right now,
just for the taking.
Just get over there.
Just move your whole entire community over there.
User Richard Gonzalez really supports the IRA cause.
Even offers his help posting as a Mexican.
I pay my respect to you, lads.
And I'd be happy.
Help.
I'm gone.
Visit you lads soon.
My support from East Los Angeles, California, hashtag,
mechs, mechs, I wish alliance.
I'm going to go out on the limb and say that old Dick and Zalas is never going to make it to
bele fast.
And how has been a Mexican Revival into this fight?
What battle for independence is Mexico fighting?
Mexico has been free for almost 200 years.
Or are you trying to give California back to Mexico?
Mexico only had it, California, for like 25 years, and that was over 150 years ago.
And you edited this message.
How did you edit it and still write, I'd be be happy to help I'm gone, visit you lads.
User Loannis, uh, Casas Boccas makes, uh, quite the pivot with his comments saying,
the IRA are freedom warriors.
My mother's maiden name was Casey alert, vigorous.
I sinny early Britannic tribe, land Kingslin Norfolk, Budukas tribe.
Huh, okay.
So the IRA are freedom warriors.
Your first sentence while stating the obvious
definitely makes sense.
But then you try to connect your mother's made name
to vigilance because the word case is similar to Casey
and Casey is Galic for alert.
And that makes you part of their cause.
And then you bring up Icini land, Icini,
being a tribe of Celts, living in Britain,
way back in the Roman era,
a couple thousand years ago, near present Norfolk,
and their leader, Queen Budica,
revolted against the Romans,
and when she lost the revolt, committed suicide
rather than be subjugated to British rule.
And you think your genealogy goes back to her even though there are no birth records from that entire civilization
because it completely disappeared from the records by the time the Normans showed up.
But you're really stretching shit thin to align yourself with the Irish independence movement.
Why can't you say you support him? Why do you have to try so hard to be part of their movement?
I feel your pain. I've never been to Ireland, but my last name is Cummins and Cummins,
a Scottish, uh, it's a Scottish name. And I had ancestors in
Scotland a few hundred years ago. And if you trace it back far enough, some of my ancestors
definitely probably took a trip or two to Ireland. And one of them married an Irish woman.
And, uh, you know, there's that and my grandmother's maiden name is Johnson as in John, as in
John O'Reilly, a guy who definitely seemed at least part Irish
I'm headed to pub in Boston, but I got to say it seemed like a pretty cool dude and I've also had sex with a few gingers
And I wasn't even grossed out by it. So you know, so you know what fight to good fight. I'm right here with you
I'm in the fucking trenches right right here same team same team
So you know, there's that and I'm gonna end on end on a little reason now, instead of more idiocy.
A comment that leads to my conclusion about this episode.
YouTuber Jonathan Hersh reposts, the northerners want to remain in the UK.
So why not let them?
Land and government belong to its inhabitants and citizens not abstract ideals like Ireland.
Very interesting and important thought,
not just idiocy today in the idiots of the internet.
It is the intro that gets back.
All right, so first,
well, these conclusions, where is the IRA at right now?
Well, here's a little excerpt from an article
in the Guardian UK from just two weeks ago, that a dissident Irish Republican terror group that severely remained a Catholic
police officer in Northern Ireland and has been responsible for shooting dozens of young
men and so-called punishment attacks has declared a ceasefire.
The mainly bell fast-based real IRA splinter group organization said the environment is
not right for armed conflict. Two other hard-line Republican factions, a new IRA, and they can continuity IRA, continue
to back the use of armed struggle, and their opposition to the peace process in Ireland.
So yeah, I'd say the fight wages on still.
Another big question to me is, is it worth it?
You know, is the IRA and its various forms, you know, a terrorist group or a bunch of freedom
fighters?
Well, I guess yes to both actually.
I mean, I think way back in the early 20th century,
I'd say they leaned far more towards freedom fighters
than terrorists.
They were, you know, in an oppressed group of people
fighting for freedom and independence.
Now, I gotta say, they lean a lot to me
more towards terrorist group, you know,
because they're not fighting for freedom
of a culture anymore, you know.
I think there's, it's like they're just fighting just to fight.
I don't know, to pick it back on Jonathan Hertz,
you know, what does it really mean to be Irish?
Think about the timeline we just marched through.
You know, which Ireland are the IRA fighting for?
Are they fighting for the pre-British plantation Ireland?
You know, are you really fighting for a culture
from the early 16th century?
Do you really feel that connected to that? Or are you really fighting for a culture from the early 16th century? Do you really feel that connected to that?
Or are you fighting for an earlier culture?
Are you fighting for pre-12th century Ireland?
Are you fighting for Ireland before the Normans invaded?
So, no, are you fighting for the Ireland that existed from 300 BCE to the 12th century CE?
Is that it?
You know, but what about the 8th century through the 11th century CE?
When the Vikings were mixed into Ireland, are you fighting for the Vikings?
Are you fighting for that? I mean, look, I
get the logic. The British Protestants marginalized the Irish Catholics following Henry the
AIDS split with the Pope and the resentment lingers and discrimination has continued. But
Irish Catholic is now the culture of minority in Northern Ireland. If somehow the IRA
did convince the UK to give Northern Ireland to the Republic of Ireland and have one unified
emerald aisle, it only makes sense that decision would kick off even more war.
Right? That the Northern, you know, Irish, the Anglican, you know, equivalent, you know, they'd have
their all militia. They'd be fighting now, you know, for Northern Ireland to go back to the way it
was for them and for their parents and grandparents, go back to the UK. So again, what the fuck are you
really fighting for? It reminds me of various battles in the Middle East and in the South and
Eastern Europe, you know, terrorist groups fighting for? It reminds me of various battles in the Middle East and in the South and Eastern Europe.
You know, terrorist groups fighting for the land
that their ancestors laid, can't claim to hundreds of years
before the occupiers came in and took it.
But is it still really your land?
I mean, or did you lose it?
You lost the fucking war.
You know, except a new normal and move on at some point.
If you're not currently being oppressed,
stop living in the past and killing innocent people
over some vague notion you have over independence.
You know, the living Protestants of Northern Ireland
aren't the oppressors.
There are people who didn't ask to be born in Northern Ireland
any more than Catholic minorities did.
You know, they're just there.
You know, they're just born there
and they're just living their lives.
And whether you like it or not,
it's now their land just as much as it was, you know,
is your land.
Fight for equality, you know?
Not just another setup for another civil war.
You know, fight for, you know, political equality
So everybody minority group and majority group all get treated equally, but don't but for a takeover
It just seems fucking silly at this point to me looking at it from an outside perspective, you know
It's a it's a weird mindset man to want things to go back to the way they were long before you even born
You know, it's our land. No, it's not actually used to be
Sometimes it feels like, you know, fighting's our land. No, it's not actually used to be. Sometimes it feels
like, you know, fighting that situation isn't brave or noble. You know, it makes about
as much sense to me as like if I were to go back into Spokane to a home, I own in Spokane
and then I lost. And what I consider unfair circumstances in the 2008 housing market crisis,
you know, I mean, what if I just shut up there tomorrow and, you know, just knocked on
the door, people answered, I'm like, all right, man, get the fuck out. I used to live here.
And I want things to go back to the way they were when I owned it.
It wasn't fair how I lost it.
So get the fuck out of this house.
People who bought it fair and square.
I don't know, that's just how I feel.
It's just my opinion.
I don't live there.
I don't really notice like, from an outside perspective, though,
I gotta say, hard to feel that the armed cause
of the IRA is still just.
I thought I would come to a very different conclusion.
I've always identified more with the Irish in the British, because supposedly I have a lot of Irish blood in
me and I've always romanticized the Gaelic Irish culture. But maybe it's time to focus
on improving life for all of people who live in Ireland and, you know, people who feel
marginalized through political channels and peaceful protests. Maybe it's time to make
peace with the divided islands, right? It is just geography and we are all just meat
sex. Okay, time for some top five takeaways. But first, last week I did wonder if the IRA characters
in the FX series, Sons of Anarchy, those gun traders
were based on reality for those other people
who watched the show.
Do the IRA have a history of smuggling guns?
Well, after a little research, yes,
but the TV shows seem to have it backwards.
In the Sons of Anarchy, the motorcycle gang buys guns
from IRA members.
Doubtful much or any
of that has went on.
There are numerous cases though cases investigated by the FBI and other organizations of the IRA smuggling
guns from the U.S. back to Ireland.
That appears to be very, very valid and true.
Future times like topic, Widy Bulger, the Irish mob boss, Johnny Depp played in black
mass.
He did claim to smuggle guns to the IRA, built it, supporting the cause of Irish independence, legitimized his criminality a little bit.
The IRA dealt in a lot of guns, but doubtful they sold them to California biker clubs.
Okay.
Now time for top five takeaways.
Time suck.
Top five takeaways.
Number one, the culture not the original inhabitants of Ireland and Galik is not thought to be the original
language.
Ireland is an island that was settled in waves of different cultures going back several
thousand years as opposed to islands like the Samoan islands, settled by one culture
and inhabited by only one culture for thousands of years before Europeans found them just a
few hundred years ago.
So what does it really mean to be Irish?
Number two, the first Irish Republican army fought the British in the 1919 through 1921 war of independence, and the group has been led by many men and fought under a variety of different
names ever since. The only thing that has unified the various IRA groups over the years is an entire island of Ireland unified under Irish Catholic rule.
Is that cause number three?
The IRA historically have been really, really into blown shit up.
I now have a totally different appreciation for the Irish car bomb and alcoholic beverage
composed of a half shot of Bailey's, a la Cour, half shot of James whiskey dropped into
a pint of Guinness.
Thousands of people have died from bombs.
Most of them civilian since the IRA's inception. No exact count has ever been compiled,
but 3,637 deaths are attributed to the IRA during the period of the troubles,
which accounts for only about a third of their total history.
Number four, over 1 million genders were killed in IRA bombings in just 1986 alone, the least active year
for the IRA and no one cares.
And number five, new info, two-parter, part one.
Number four of this list was complete horse shit.
And part two, you two isn't the only famous Irish band to sing about the IRA.
The cranberry song, zombie, is about an IRA attack.
It was inspired by the IRA bombing in Warrington, Cheshire, England on March 20th, 1993.
Two children, Jonathan Ball and Tim Perry were killed.
Lead singer and songwriter Dolores O'Reardon
claimed that Zombie speaks about the Irish fight
for independence that seems to last forever.
The lyrics even say it's the same old theme since 1916, right?
I love that song I love that
cranberries album no need to argue that and everybody else is doing it so why
can't we college staples of mine fantastic 90s rock I'd sing along to the whole
song of the zombie right it's the same old theme since 1916 in your head in your
head that's still fighting
With the tanks and their bombs and their bombs and their guns in your head in your head
They are dying and then she goes to that fucking yodeling shit
Right until today I thought you were talking about World War One. Nope the IRA
Uh, who knew who knew I was singing about the IRA all those years
Rest in peace to loris by the way, uh, she died on January 15th in a London hotel room. Ahtopsie results will not be complete until April. We lost. Fuck man. Another good singer. Another good vocalist.
Another good songwriter. Been a terrible last couple of years. We've had as far as that.
Hopefully we can add rest in peace to the IRA soon. And that's enough. The war of independence is over.
Time, suck, tough, five take away.
The IRA sucked.
Now, no way more about Irish history now.
Hopefully do some more Irish sucks going forward until I can get that accent down.
Now come on, see me, dammit.
Come have a great time.
Charlotte, Atlanta, Birmingham, Huntsfield, Nashville, Houston,
Dallas, San Francisco, all coming up in April, everything but San Francisco in one big week.
There's night after night, different city, most of the time, different state show after
show. More info coming up at Dancoma.tv. Check out those dates, matches and tickets.
The more stand up tickets, I can sell them more markets. I can return to later with some
little live time stock tours. The Patreon account is live for those of you who want to sign up to become space
lizards.
Thanks to all of those you who have already done so man over over 1200.
It's been amazing.
And again, five bucks a month to be a space lizard access space lizard features on
the app for some.
I'll get into that for a second and the website for everyone.
A vote on topics send invoice messages to the secret suck.
Listen to the secret suck on Thursdays.
Get a new stand up album.
Feel the heat for signing up the age of the space lizard. It is here.
Password for 20% and merch discount access to the space lizard merch is on Patreon on
some of the posts. You can check out patreon.com slash time stock podcast for that secret info
and explanations of how to use everything is on the Patreon site. And as soon as time allows
in mid-fabuary,
some video tutorials to make using it all as easy as possible will be done.
And like I said, at the beginning of this episode, I have, if you want to listen to the
start of this episode,
laid out instructions on how to get, for you Android users, how to get the secret suck
installed in your other podcast apps.
So you can have an easy listening experience, and then you can go to the website,
timescookpodcast.com for the voting,
topic voting, and for the voice message features,
until Google Play their store finally releases the update.
It has been maddening, but just know that BiddleLixer
is literally messaging them through the,
for the App Store portal, which is the only way
they allow themselves to be contacted every single day,
and we are working every single day.
And we are working every single day on trying to give you as many other options until that
solved.
Thanks to social media manager, Sydney Shives, events coordinator, and amazing patron
saint of the at secret space, lizard social media accounts, harmony, velocamp, show notes,
editor, extraordinary, Jesse Doberner, and the entire time suck team.
Thanks for all the reviews. thanks for spreading the suck.
Every review helps every time, and you guys write the most wonderful things, and I read
every review, helps so much.
This Friday on TimeSuck, we're going to have a bonus topic, and it's going to be whatever
one of the most recent vote on Instagram at TimeSuck Pocket, follow the suck to know
it advance what the bonus topics are going to be and to be able to vote on them.
Winter of the vote becomes that topic every time.
And now time for some time, sucker updates.
First update today, goofy one about the topic voting, sent in by Carl LaFong with all
the app and website troubleshooting.
And I've been dealing with lately.
It was a nice little breath of fresh air.
A nice little fantastic reminder
that many of you are having a great time
with the app functions.
Carl wrote in saying,
dear spearfaced, beard puke-licken,
soft cock shaming Lord of the Suck.
Being a space lizard has given me the ability
to continually vote up haul notes
as a time-sack option.
I had no idea how much I wanted to know
the true story behind Manator until I sought on the list.
Keep up the great work and remember that pronunciation
is a tool of the lizard illuminati
to keep the mushed mouthed proletariat down.
Keep on sucking, Carl and Topanga.
Oh man, well thank you Carl.
I love the name Topanga by the way.
Uh, it's random, but thank you.
And yes, so many topics on the list.
As of Tuesday, February 8th, when I recorded this episode,
Jack the Ripper and Nordic Gods, man, neck and neck
to become the March 5th Monday time subtopic.
Hollinotes only a few hundred votes behind with 12 votes.
12 votes total, not 12 votes behind.
And thank you for the kind words
regarding my mush mouth.
And now a little doc holiday update.
I thought was cool from Matthew Isaacson. Dearest Reverend Dr. Lord,
whom suckest thy most, I love the doc holiday episode of the suck. Tombstone is possible
by favorite movie of all time. So I was happy to hear that it was somewhat historically accurate.
Hell yes. The idiots of the internet portion really got my hackles up and hearing some
dip shit talk trash about the confrontation between Dawkins Ringo
had me yelling at the radio as I was driving home.
User Don Stone should be hung by his thomas from a tree
so that Luciferina can repeatedly kick him
in Helios worthless Apple bag.
While Bojangles impregnates him,
yes, Bojangles seat is so powerful
that he can impregnate a man.
Praise Bojangles with disciples of Nimrod.
Hail Nimrod and keep on sucking because you serve our daisy indeed.
And thanks for making me spit soda out of my mouth and nose with your mispronunciation of papyrus.
Love your comedy and love the suck.
Oh, man, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Matthew.
And yeah, papyrus, papyrus, starting to feel normal now.
I feel your doc holiday rage. I feel it, doc holiday.
He would have modelled Donnie dipshit down.
Okay, and now another, another doc holiday update
from Tyrell Cruz saying, what's up, master succington?
I've been listening to your comedy for a long time
and been religiously listening to your podcast.
It's fucking awesome.
Got my girlfriend listened to it as well.
We love it.
Quick update, at least I think. Doc holiday's famous quote of, I'm your Huckleberry may not be correct.
He may have said, I'm your Huckleberry. This is interesting. Huckle are the handles on
the side of coffins used by the pole bear. So docs basically saying, I'll carry you to your
grave. Now I haven't researched this from what Tyrell said, but I just I threw this
in right before recording,
just because that is fucking awesome,
if that makes it even cooler.
And then Tyrell says, I do have to say
they'll huckleberry sounds cooler than the latter,
and I've confirmed this is,
and I haven't confirmed this is true,
but it makes sense.
You're doing a badass job, keep up with the good work.
Thank you, Tyrell Cruz.
And he says, P.S., I don't think you've done any musicians yet,
so I suggest Frank Zappa, the crazy jazz oddball of the 60s and 70s. Listen to the thing
Listen to fish. It's crazy and hilarious. Well Tyrell, I did do Kurt Cobain. That was a while back and that was my only one and
Yes, man, more musicians in the future. I have all always been fast and about Frank Sapa because he does seem crazy shit
And I appreciate you just you know again, it's been a kind of a crazy week with all the tech stuff. I appreciate the kind words and
And Huckle Bearer. I hope you're right on that. I hope that is true because that to me that actually does make it even cooler
Like Huckle Bearer is fun and random, but if you're saying like I'll carry you to your grave. Oh, that's some badass shit
Okay
Now a more serious email from Christina Carmato or sorry Camardo
Regarding the Cobain episode. I was just mentioning she says hi Dan
I've written it in the past about topics suggestions
But never had much more to say until I finally listened to the Kurt Cobain episode
I'm a counselor at the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and while I deeply appreciate you advocating the line and urging listeners to call
I have an issue with you calling Cobain selfish. Calling someone who commits suicide selfish or cowardly,
I think is a drastically unfair criticism.
People who have severe mental health issues
are in a constant and painful battle
every single day of their life.
It wears them down emotionally, mentally, and physically,
and leaves to thinking that others will consider irrational,
or leads them to thinking about actions
that others will consider irrational or logical.
But in these people's minds, suicide can be their only way out.
You called Kurt Selvich because he was leading behind a family and fans.
While I understand Colin Selvich was leaving a family and responsibilities behind, I think
it's selfish for people to expect him to continue living a painful life every single
day just to deliver them more music since he was so musically gifted.
So he's supposed to bear the weight of his daily debilitating pain for your appeasement?
Who's the selfless person then?
I, of course, do not advocate suicide, but find it very close-minded when people call it
suicide victims selfish.
While it's a touch analogy, would you consider someone who dies from cancer selfish?
Mental health issues like cancer are a disease.
It's not feeling sad.
It's a biological makeup of the mind that makes it work differently. Just like a cancer victim
whose biology is making them physically sick, it's an illness of the body versus an illness of the
mind, and I find that frequently illnesses of the mind are judged much more harshly because it
cannot be seen or fully understood. A suicide victim was at a place in their life where death was
the only way out. And like cancer, cancer victim who has exhausted all medical possibilities that failed, death
is inevitable for both people.
I just want people including you to have more awareness of the seriousness that mental
health issues can have on a person.
You stated that after your wife left, you were having suicidal thoughts.
Now imagine that pain and having it every single day for years.
Sometimes a person's whole life. And to make it worse, you can point out
the origin of your pain. For people with depression, there is no origin. Because of the makeup of your
brain, you're just depressed. Like Kurt, you could have beloved fans, great career, wealth, fame,
and family, but yet there is always something constantly there in your head tearing you down.
Anyway, sorry for the rant. The issue is just very close to my heart. And I wish to spread
more mental health awareness to our society. So everyone has more understanding.
Would love to hear your thoughts if you have time. Thanks, Christina.
PSO fucking pump for becoming a space lizard. Well, Christina, I hope you are a space lizard.
And I hope you're enjoying it already. And you know what? I appreciate that message because
you really did make me think and really kind of made me change the way I do feel about suicide.
You know, I think I even talked about in that episode where, you know, it is hard to
see what's going on people's heads.
You know, mental illness isn't treated with the same respect as physical illness.
And I didn't even realize that I was perpetuating that by kind of shaming the people, I guess,
in a sense, or people that have committed that act because yeah, I was just thinking of
it like, like, as the way I would think about suicide where I can't imagine leaving my kids
But I'm not
Mentally ill in that way. I probably have some shit going on
You guys have listened to enough episodes. No, they're not completely stable
But I don't have that. I don't know what it's like to feel just depressed all the time and to carry that weight all the time
And like a chemical part of your brain way and so just to say that selfish is oversimplifying
a very complex issue, and that's not fair
to the families of the victim to basically say,
like, oh yeah, well, he was just an asshole
who abandoned you guys.
You know, that's not fair to like the family
of Chris Cornell.
That's not family, if fair to the family of the Lincoln Park,
you know, Chester Bendington, I believe his name is,
you know, Leitzinger.
So, yeah, so thank you, Christian. I will, I will actually work on being more tolerance and more
understanding of of that particular situation going forward. And again, I and I know you're not saying I think I always thought in my head
I was like advocating it in a way or endorsing it if I didn't come down on it
I don't want people to just lightly take their lives
But you know if they've been through that much pain,
I also don't need to shame them post-mortem.
So thanks for bringing some awareness, Christina.
Last one, real quick, from Jessica Cassias,
immigration updates.
Now, she says, master reverend of all the mother suckers.
I love this podcast and have been on the episodes
over a few times.
Oh, that's awesome.
I know it's in the past,
or I know in the past,
our brother's subject about you doing an episode of immigration, and I'm definitely well aware of how touchy the subject is, especially's awesome. I know it's in the past, or I know in the past, I brought up the subject about you doing an episode of immigration, and I'm definitely well aware of how touching the subject is,
especially right now.
But my husband and I have been going through the process to get his papers for the last
two years.
And recently, my children and I have been without him since he was recently temporarily denied,
and now is stuck in Mexico until further notice.
I want to give you our side.
I have no issues in talking about it for the main purpose of educating people that don't
see the whole picture and only know what they see on the news.
When you're up for the task, let me know.
Hail Nimrod.
Give a pat to both jangles for me and Dan Lucifina be gone.
Sincerely, your shortest red-headed sister, time sucker, Jessica Cassias, PS.
I hope to hear from you soon.
Well, Jessica, I did just mess you real quick.
And yeah, I am gonna do an immigration episode.
I will do it.
I've only been putting it off because some issues are easier
to kind of narrate than others,
and that one is gonna be a motherfucker.
It's very touchy, and I wanna do it justice,
and I feel like it's very important.
And with all the secret stuff I've been dealing with,
you know, the next few weeks,
it's just I'm not gonna have the brain space.
I think to tackle it properly,
but I do want to do that episode, will do that episode.
Yes, so I hope to hear back from you.
We can figure out a time to talk.
And I know there's some other listeners
who are experiencing on a personal level as well.
And it is something I think that is important
to kind of educate people about.
Because if you don't have anybody,
you know, dealing with your life personally,
it can be very easy to say, well, just get the fuck out. Just fucking get
them out. And that's a very simplistic way of thinking. And that's not what we do here
on TimeSuck. And thank you, Jessica. Hail Nimrod to you. Sorry, you're dealing with that
bullshit.
Thanks, time suckers. I need a net. We all did.
All right, everybody. Well, thanks for listening again. know that we're working on smoothing out everything with a secret suck
Don't blow anybody up this week. Please don't do that and goddamn it keep on sucking
Yeah!