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The Bothy Boys were very good.
The Catholics will eventually get a united Ireland if democracy is followed as they will form a clear majority of the vote
What will then happen is the unionist lot who have always supported law and order .....rule brittania and all that ......will suddenly ignore all that to prevent Ireland becoming united
Religion and land , the root of all evil
That stability you mention was brought about by the Good Friday agreement, you may want to read it?
The 'principle of consent' was/is interesting and it gave Republicans hope that things could be changed through consensus.
Only my opinion, but I see a United Ireland happening within 30 years.
Interesting review of the prospects for a united Ireland in the Guardian Briefing this morning.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...land-sinn-fein
Michelle O'Neill saying she can see a unity referendum within 10 years. Possibility of Sinn Fein forming the next government in the Republic. Younger people in favour of united Ireland. Impact of Brexit, support for EU and economic case for unity. Decision in the hands of UK government and indication of the level of support they would need to see to move on this.
10 years seems a bit optimistic to me, but the direction of travel is towards a single Irish state within 20 years.
Is that nutty leader of the unionists who went to bed with the Tories still around ?
She was a woman
Not so sure about that. From Jon1959's link, "Demographic changes favour a united Ireland. Support for reunification in Northern Ireland has been rising steadily since the Good Friday agreement was signed, while the proportion of people who describe themselves as unionists has gradually fallen. Younger voters are much more likely to support reunification: in 2022, 57% of 18 to 24-year-olds said that they would vote “yes” if a border poll were held immediately.
Catholics now outnumber Protestants. And in local elections last year, votes for pro-unification parties beat those for pro-union parties for the first time. Sinn Féin’s success in the 2022 election and O’Neill’s landmark ascent to the first minister post plainly reflect those changes. University of Liverpool politics professor Jon Tonge told the Guardian’s Rory Carroll last week: “I don’t think there ever will be a unionist first minister in Northern Ireland again. It’s over.”
Don't dispute it, but it doesn't change the point that the last quarter century has been fairly stable, so I'm not sure why you didn't mention that, but focused on the quarter century before that?
We could indeed see a United Ireland within 30 years. We could also see a dismantled Spain, Belgium and US. That's the normal state of things really.
Whether we do or not is another thing..
I was looking at the polls a few days ago and there is only one that shows majority support for a united Ireland in the six counties - that is probably a rogue outlier.
But support for a united Ireland has been growing over the past 25 years - even if it has flatlined recently (as has support for the union). The underlying political, economic and demographic trends point to a united Ireland with a generation in my opinion.
You should enjoy this:
https://factcheckni.org/articles/is-...nking-instead/