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Farm Business
Politics, Covid19 and Brexit
Would you support a united Ireland?
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<blockquote data-quote="wanderer" data-source="post: 5508180" data-attributes="member: 109902"><p>I've lived in both Northern and Southern Ireland and the difference between the two is pretty stark. In the south they tend to have a very laid back view of the world and are generally unconcerned about what happens. In the North the people are much more intense and politically minded... religion being a major divide.</p><p></p><p>My time in Galway and Kerry couldn't have been more different than that spent in Co.Down... but the decision to re-unite has to lay with the whole of Ireland at the ballot box, but like Brexit which ever way it goes there would be trouble from those who lost.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wanderer, post: 5508180, member: 109902"] I've lived in both Northern and Southern Ireland and the difference between the two is pretty stark. In the south they tend to have a very laid back view of the world and are generally unconcerned about what happens. In the North the people are much more intense and politically minded... religion being a major divide. My time in Galway and Kerry couldn't have been more different than that spent in Co.Down... but the decision to re-unite has to lay with the whole of Ireland at the ballot box, but like Brexit which ever way it goes there would be trouble from those who lost. [/QUOTE]
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Would you support a united Ireland?
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