The Irish Tricolour flag represents the country of the Republic of Ireland, 26 counties of the island, which in fact doesn’t include the 6 counties that St Patrick mainly operated in. In fact, it can be quite offensive to many people living in the place St Patrick mainly operated in, due to a civil conflict.

St Patrick also has his own flag - a red saltire on a white background - which deliberately represents him.

Making St Patrick’s day a festival of Irish Nationalism specific to the Republic of Ireland makes zero sense, and using a flag which only represents part of the island, especially since many Americans are also descended from Ulster Scots in Northern Ireland.

  • The Octonaut@mander.xyz
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    3 months ago

    chose to opt out

    lol

    I promise you I read the rest of your crap (I promise you, the only means by which I am “uneducated” is by virtue of not having been brainwashed by the British education system which is incredibly light on British history…), but I almost didn’t when you opened with this outright farcical statement. Oh and the St Patrick’s Saltire is part of the Union Jack and yes, was used during the terrorism against Irish people, both government sanction and otherwise.

    It isn’t my job to educate you on your own history (our own history), and I suspect if you’re the type of person who thinks what Belfast City Hall does on St Patrick’s Day matters a tap to anyone, there wouldn’t be much point in trying. The good news is that my government will happily do so in a generation or so. Irredentism is alive and well my friend, since the DUP broke the Good Friday Agreement by joining government and trying to establish a border on the island of Ireland. The consequences will be long remembered.

    • FlaxOP
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      3 months ago

      Ever heard of the Ulster Covenant? Northern Ireland literally chose to opt out of independence. That’s a fact.

      • The Octonaut@mander.xyz
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        3 months ago

        “The Prime Minister of Northern Ireland”

        The artificial division was already in place and a non-representation puppet state did the thing they were told to do without any input from the affected population. The partition away of part of Ireland, including non-unionist areas, had already happened. The ability of the British government to fabricate history with nonsensical language long predates this (“The British Isles”) and continues to the modern day (“confidence and supply”).

        • FlaxOP
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          3 months ago

          There was still a Unionist majority then. It literally says the nationalists didn’t participate in the parliament. To this day, Sinn Féin still don’t participate in Westminster. So Unionists basically had free reign