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21 commenti

  1. TalkDirty2MyIVR on

    Doesn’t this just mean they could be from the north though? Would they not be considered Irish?

  2. RossaDeVereMcNally on

    Devils advocate; these people could be living in NI.

  3. CheraDukatZakalwe on

    Yeah, that’s why they keep talking about the “Irish Parliament” and “Irish Police”.

  4. Spursious_Caeser on

    Hardly surprising. The same idiots were probably radicalised by Russian bot accounts themselves and are now dedicating their pathetic lives to spreading their indoctrinated xenophobia here and elsewhere. The far right is full of bad faith actors.

  5. MrTuxedo1 on

    How do you check this for others? It only works on my own profile

  6. Not at all surprising, in fact I’m only somewhat surprised they are UK based and not Russian. In my view the far right movement is meant to do only one thing: disrupt western societies, cause distrust in western governments, and eventually replace them (through elections) with Russian puppets.

    I might be considered a conspiracy theorist with this, but it’s the only thing that makes sense to me. That and the fact Aleksandr Dugin wrote about Russia doing this exact thing in his 1997 book *The Foundations of Geopolitics: The Geopolitical Future of Russia -* I refuse to believe the strategies outlined in that book are a coincidence to what is happening in the world the past 10 years

  7. zedatkinszed on

    Anyone who listened to any of the City West rioters streams could hear english accents.

    Anyone who listened to the Dublin rioters would have hesrd English accents.

    This isn’t news.

    After the Blue Shirts, Irish fascism has been British

  8. designatedcrasher on

    Us department of homeland security got outed as Israeli

  9. Couch-Potayto on

    Well, I mean, everyone knows that the US has way more Irish lads than Ireland itself. /s

  10. MilBrocEire on

    This actually tracks. In a lot of countries, the diaspora ends up more right-wing than the people living back home. You see it with Turks in Germany voting for Erdoğan, Hungarians abroad voting for Orbán, Poles abroad screaming about ‘woke gay stuff,’ Romanians, etc. Once people move away, or are second-gen, they build up a weird nostalgic fantasy version of the homeland, and then vote for the most nationalist, conservative option. And of course, they don’t have to live under the consequences they’re voting for. Turkey and Hungary literally had elections swung by diaspora votes.

    I was visiting Lisbon once, and heard massive cheers and parties and shouting in the streets the first night I was there and assumed Benfica or Sporting had won something, but when I eventually went to meet my friend, I found out it was Turks celebrating Erdogan winning.

  11. Accomplished-Try-658 on

    Was there any doubt?

    On Facebook in 2014 (I guess?) there groups FILLED with Brits stirring up the Water protests in Ireland. They weren’t even hiding.

    Then it was Brits who tried to will “Irexit” into existence also.

  12. boardsmember2017 on

    That platform needs to get in the sea tbh, anyone who posts links/content from there is worthy of an immediate block. With a bit of luck the hate speech bill will end its influence in Ireland

  13. Future_Jackfruit5360 on

    Is there a chance they are in the north of Ireland which is still stuck in Britain.

  14. Future_Jackfruit5360 on

    Is there a chance they are in the north of Ireland which is still stuck in Britain.

  15. saggynaggy123 on

    I checked a load of them too and it was Canada, USA, UK and other random countries. For people who hate immigrants they seem to love the foreign interest in Ireland!

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