September 15, 2005

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The dangers of patronage politics Interesting thread over on Slugger about the dilemma which the England - Northern Ireland game presented for northern nationalists. It highlights an intriguing article by Eamonn McCann which is well worth a look: It's because some Nationalists are uneasy at their own acceptance of Northern Ireland that they feel they have to make a show of rhetorical opposition to it. It is because, in practical terms, they have endorsed the legitimacy of the Northern Ireland State that they denounce symbolic representations of it all the more loudly. The campaign to obliterate Northern Ireland having halted, they turn to battle on who'll rule the roost within it. Communal hostility replaces the struggle for an all-Ireland. This is a pattern of play which corresponds ever more closely with the political mind-set of the Mad Mullahs of Orangeism. It's in this context that militant Nationalism comes to be expressed in a desire to see blue noses ground into the dirt, even by Brits. In fact, especially by Brits. It is now the main perspective of a growing tendency within Nationalism that a united Ireland can best and maybe only be brought about by England hammering the Prods until they see that there's no point persisting with, as Robin Livingstone would put it, Our Wee Pravince, and reconcile themselves instead to an all-Ireland arrangement. I think McCann is right to call Livingstone on his comments, and also to pint to the dangers for nationalism of the north's communal sectarian mode of politics.

TomGriffin

London Irish journalist

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