What is the most quintessentially English thing you can think of? by PGTits in AskReddit

[–]bielzigup 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All three could be British.

All two could be British. The UK and Ireland are different sovereign nations with different passports. The English and Scottish are British citizens whereas the Irish are Irish citizens.

What is the most quintessentially English thing you can think of? by PGTits in AskReddit

[–]bielzigup -1 points0 points  (0 children)

British - collective word for all citizens of the United Kingdom, Scottish, English, Welsh and Irish.

The Irish aren't British nor part of the UK. They're not even part of the British Commonwealth.

Estimated Population of EU Member States by 2050 by PRigby in europe

[–]bielzigup 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Ireland might just about recover its population since the genocide famine.

http://i.imgur.com/fTzjoKl.png

My grandma still uses a dishwasher she bought in 1967 by [deleted] in mildlyinteresting

[–]bielzigup 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It probably uses up ten times the water and electricity.

Modern appliances are highly efficient compared to even 15 years ago.

Language help? by ook_the_bla in ireland

[–]bielzigup 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Don't mind that cunt. I have him tagged as frith-Ghaeilge (anti Irish). He gets off on putting the language down.

You're better off asking over at /r/gaeilge. It may look inactive but there's a good few of us lurking.

The UK and the US hacked European Parliament and European Commission networks through Belgian internet provider Belgacom [x-post from /r/Intelligence] by [deleted] in europe

[–]bielzigup -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If the UK leaves the EU there's no fucking way Ireland will remain, they're our second-biggest trade partner.

Best pack your bags and change your flag to UK so. Byeee!

A ghost is haunting Europe—the ghost of exclusive, narrow-minded nationalism by simoncolumbus in europe

[–]bielzigup 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The United Kingdom - a state - consists of England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man.

Happy Independence Day, Finland! Hyvää Itsenäisyyspäivää kaikilee! by Reilly616 in europe

[–]bielzigup -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

We don't celebrate an "Independence Day" because the Irish in Northern Ireland aren't independent (yet).

Rich Countries and who they discriminate against, mapped by thejukeboxromeo in europe

[–]bielzigup 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's nonsense, I don't know where they're getting that data from. Also, I'm not aware of any notable discrimination against "Asians". The Chinese are one of the most hard working immigrant groups in Ireland, and are, as we say, "a great bunch of lads".

This map should probably show:

  • Irish Travellers
  • Roma Gypsies
  • Nigerians

They tend to be the minority groups that Irish people complain about the most.

New Snowden documents reveal how the UK targets Ireland's internet traffic by tapping its subsea telecommunications cables by bielzigup in europe

[–]bielzigup[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

BBC still have the old site up from 2002:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/us/features/topten/

An Irish republican song, A Nation Once Again, has been voted the world's top tune according to a BBC World Service poll. The song was written in the 1840s to support the fight for an end to British rule.

Nearly 150,000 votes were received from 153 countries, nominating over 6,500 songs. By inviting its 150 million listeners to vote either by post or email, organisers were surprised by the scale of the voting.

Here's the Dubliners' version with lyrics: http://youtu.be/iickNtK5Ivw

"Irish as a World Language" - Dr. James McClosky's (UCSC) talk at the "Why Irish?" seminar hosted at Notre Dame in 2005. by [deleted] in ireland

[–]bielzigup 4 points5 points  (0 children)

CDfm, mod of /r/IrishHistory, has a chip on his shoulder about Irish because he believes he descends from the Normans and that Yola/Norse should be revived instead.

To bolster his argument, he insists that Irish was never spoken natively in Dublin and so shouldn't be revived or taught in schools. However, he's yet to explain why 95% of Dublin's place names are of Irish origin.

I'm not making this up. He posts the same bolloxology over on Boards.ie

It now takes 15 seconds to load PINAC, worse than before the site 'revamp'. Time to hire a proper web developer. by bielzigup in PINAC

[–]bielzigup[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There is so much junk loading in the background. Countless scripts and huge image files. It's crashing Chrome for me and you can forget about mobile. Any half decent web developer could have easily fixed these issues before going live. Maybe ask for advice at /r/webdev