Had A day of Pseudo Irish.
Actually they were pikers, over here and from what I could see working hard because I couldn't afford to do what they did, putting their children through confirmation.
it looked like they spent a fortune on their girls dresses making it special, they all seemed to be enjoying themselves, I was enjoying myself except... ...One heck of alot of the disco seemed to be Patriotic Irish music, (none of which was kind to the British) fairy nuff, you want to be a patriot, why aren't you in Ireland? The little girls looked lovely, well decked out in white, proud of what they were up to, however why should a group of four of these miniature Angels wander around the pub asking the innocent folk for money? When they got to me I suggested that their parents had obviously paid a fortune dressing them up and putting on a bit of a do, could they need anything from me? They seemed to think I should make a contribution, they left disappointed. I left the pub, I don't need the hassle. |
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Re: Had A day of Pseudo Irish.
Not even real pikers then obviously!
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I’m guessing that they had been working harder than those English derelicts that frequent the upper regions of Warner Street or this epitome of the English rose Blackburn woman branded 'filthy and disgusting' for spitting in the face of job centre security guard (From ) They seemed to enjoy themselves…having a few beers and a laugh on an English bank holiday like these English revellers Fight involving fans and Salford Red Devils players breaks out at rugby match | Sport | The Guardian They were playing patriotic music in a foreign country..oh dear..better tell those nasty English not to sing any patriotic stuff at the next World Cup or Olympics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFidRyZIRbo Music not kind to the British…oh dear (yet again)…after all those wonderful things that the British brought to the Irish. Giving money to kids that have been confirmed is a tradition, albeit a dying one…kinda like bob-a-job, penny for the guy and putting a silver coin under the pillow of the pram of a newborn Stereotyping for cheap laughs is so easy ain’t it?.... Next time you want to take a racial pop, you ferret breeding, flat cap wearing, clog dancing, pigeon fancying, matchstick man with your matchstick dog….think on, because those pseudo Irish actually pity you.. 8 things we Irish really think of our English neighbors |
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As to giving money to the one being confirmed, I was led to believe that was just family & friends who gave, not total strangers, aye well, you live & learn. |
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Not sure why the girls, their parents and all, were in the pub after the children had just been confirmed. Things must have changed a lot since my day. Or am I reading this wrong?
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If however you wish to be offended on behalf of the real Irish feel free, I will continue to be offended by the travellers (the Irish won't call them Gypsies they haven't earned the title) that come here claiming to be Irish through and through, in actual fact the real Irish are glad to see the back of them and if they could send us the rest of them they wouldn't hesitate. |
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Next time you wish to post guinness, try it sober.:rolleyes:
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i dont want to seem picky but Guinness used English people singing English songs in England as a counter measure to Irish people singing anti British songs in England ..
i guess he thinks its wrong to be English in England just like most left wing idiots |
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Obviously the title of the youtube link beginning with the words ‘FRANCE’ and ‘MARSEILLE’ didn’t swing it for him, nor, if his attention span allowed, did reading the associated precis stating that it was English fans fighting in Marseille, nor did the bits of the film showing French shops and police permeate his anti-alien tinfoil helmet. It's not wrong to be English in England, you can be English in any country you damn well like, my point, in using this video, was that the Irish (and it doesn’t matter if they are ‘real’, ‘traveller’ or ‘expat’) were being berated for playing a few rebel songs at a confirmation disco, whereas the English pull down their trousers, throw stones, disrupt life and pretty much thumb their noses at the rule of law in a foreign country because of a sport. |
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I for one stayed at the bar. |
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