Showing posts with label Sinn Fein delivery failure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sinn Fein delivery failure. Show all posts
Finnian O DomhnaillWhen republican Phoneyism comes to government in Ireland, it will be wrapped in a hunger striker’s blanket.

Sinn Fein look well fed and warm now after a long time coming in from the cold. After supporting the non-jury courts, even Fianna Fail are cracking jokes at their selling out before an election instead of waiting until they are in government. Ah but isn’t that what mates do? A wee piss take at each other? Once they skip into Leinster House hand in hand like best friends at baby infants, leaving Fine Gael behind at the school gates crying, all will be forgiven, and they will get down to carrying out the same old Capitalist neo liberal system. While Fianna Fail won’t have too much problem with their voter base siding with Sinn Fein, even the robotic of Shinner bots will have a cognitive dissonance major malfunction.

This of course, will require a strategic, modernised and highly intelligent strategy to win back those angry at Sinn Fein for siding with Fianna Fail. Roll out the ‘’what’s the alternative’’ line. From dropping abstentionism in 86 to today’s support of non-jury courts, Sinn Fein have a long history of this famous slogan. They seem to dismiss the fact the alternative would be the extremely obvious decision to vote no on non-jury courts.

Perhaps it was so obvious that they missed the point altogether and will fix all that once they bring in the socialist republic? Even when they literally signed in welfare reform themselves and had the choice to say no and reject it, their answer was "what’s the alternative?" When they agreed to be junior partners to Fianna Fail or Fine Gael, and had the choice to say no, their response was, well, I think we are getting the pattern here.

When this lie fails. When a politically aware socialist questions the policies of Sinn Fein, you attack and instantly accuse them of wanting to blow up fish and chips shops and go back to the 70s and 80s. Throw in words like equality and integrity. That always goes down well. Begin speaking of the Good Friday Agreement and how amazing it is, even if it has absolutely nothing to do with what the topic on point is. Talk about Sinn Fein as if they wrote, composed, and done everything about the GFA and no one else. If they mention Sunningdale, quickly change the subject or immediately leave the area.

The truth is, that the IRA brought the British Army to a stalemate and there was always going to be a continuous war that would lead to nowhere. So naturally you would cause a truce, sit down, and have some: we won’t shoot you if you don’t shoot us peace talks. What Sinn Fein thought it meant was you don’t shoot us; we won’t shoot you, we will play by your rules, we will abandon our principles, we will administer British rule. You can end a military armed campaign, but you don’t have to end your political campaign along with it. In fact, you ramp up and put all your efforts into that. But alas it was less a case of Brits go home, more Brits go home, we got you covered.

And finally, if all else fails, if you are in a corner slowly having a mental breakdown and close to going into a full-blown epileptic fit due to the realisation that Sinn Fein might not be the party you think it is, reach deep into your denial and pluck out the good old "you have to compromise" line. Yes, compromise. Or what I like to call, "the slow and subtle erosion of your principles". 

What Sinn Fein have taught us about compromising is that it absolutely and ultimately does not work. Just look at the 100 years of Irish political history. When the Sinn Fein of 1921 decided to compromise on the treaty, leaving behind their principles and abandoning the republic, accepting partition, and resulted in civil war, it didn’t work. When Fianna Fail compromised in 1927 and entered Leinster House, came to power, abandoned their principles, executed republicans by hanging, and handed any power over to the church, it didn’t work. The Sinn Fein of 1998 compromised and entered Stormont, administer British rule, joined the policing board, shook hands with royals, agreed to be junior partners with Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, and now supports the non-jury courts, their compromise didn’t work.

History and Specifically Sinn Fein themselves, have shown us that compromise does not work. You may think it’s a fine idea to only chip the pillars that hold up the party. However, the next group that hold the reigns will do the same. And so and so, until the whole thing falls down around you and all you are left with is Mary Lou Mc Donald, standing in the rubble, smiling, with a hunger striker’s blanket wrapped around her.

When all of the above fails, Blame the Brits and shout up the Ra.

Finnian O Domhnaill is a Donegal
political and community activist. 

What's The Alternative? You Have To Compromise. Why?

Dixie ElliotIn the 2006 Saint Andrew’s Agreement talks the British government promised to pass an Irish Language Act at Westminster.

Sinn Féin wanted it to be devolved to Stormont.

The following year in 2007, Edwin Poots told the Sinn Féiners up in Stormont that it wasn't getting past him.
 
Ten years pass and there's barely a mention of the Irish Language Act from Sinn Féin.

January 2017 and Sinn Féin demands that Arlene Foster steps aside as First Minister until after the RHI Inquiry.

Arlene Foster refuses to step aside so Martin McGuinness is forced to resign as Deputy First Minister.

Sinn Féin announced that there would be no return to the status quo without an Irish Language Act.

A three year stand off ensued before Sinn Féin were forced to crawl back into the status quo empty-handed.

June 2021: Sinn Féin calls the Tories... "Er Boris, could you legislate for that Irish Language Act at Westminster?"


"We said we'd legislate for an Irish Language Act in Westminster back in 2006... where have you been since then?"

"Tied up in Stormont but that doesn't include the three years we weren't in Stormont because of the Irish Language Act."

"OK then, you did help us out with Welfare Reform."

"Could you consider a border poll sometime soon as well?"

"You Want More!"



Thomas Dixie Elliot is a Derry artist and a former H Block Blanketman.
Follow Dixie Elliot on Twitter @IsMise_Dixie

Sinn Féin Are Hailing This As A Victory

Irish Times ✒‘Adams and McGuinness betrayed everyone’: A former IRA prisoner reflects on Troubles. Dixie Elliot was interviewed recently by Kitty Holland for the Irish Times. He was joined by Don Browne, a former INLA activist.

A former IRA prisoner, who shared cells in the late 1970s and early ‘80s with H-Block hunger strikers Bobby Sands and Thomas McElwee, says the killings and mayhem inflicted by paramilitaries during the Troubles were “for nothing”.

Thomas ‘Dixie’ Elliott (63) from Derry, reflecting on the 30-year ‘armed struggle’ as Northern Ireland marks its centenary, says the IRA leadership should have been ended the violence 1987. Instead, he says, they allowed it continue for more than a decade longer while planning to “sell-out” the socialist republican ideals for which he and hundreds of working class Catholics got involved.

While welcoming peace, he says the 23 year-old peace process is a “scam” that made some former IRA members “very wealthy”, while failing to deliver a fairer, less sectarian society.

Sitting in ExPop (Ex prisoners’ outreach programme), a drop-in support centre for “former combatants” in Derry city-centre, Elliott tells he was 19 in 1977 when sentenced to twelve years for hijacking, attempted murder and membership of a prescribed organisation.

Late into the conversation he is joined briefly by Don Browne, former member of the INLA and now yoga-teacher, who echoes many of Elliott’s observations.

Like a surprising number who joined the IRA in the early 1970s Elliot had links to the Protestant community. “My father was Presbyterian. My grandfather was wounded in WW1 in France. My mother was Catholic so I was brought up Catholic.” He grew up initially in Rosemount, a mixed area in the 1960s, before moving to the predominantly Catholic Shantallow in the early 1970s .

In Rosemount we were running around with Protestants, playing football together. There was never no problems. The Protestant and Catholic working classes lived in the same conditions. OK some Protestants might have better conditions but there were Catholics who were well off too.
The problem was the businessmen, the politicians kept us divided. They kept the Catholics down and treated us like second class citizens, while telling the Protestants they were better off, better people. My father always says, ’Everything was alright until Paisley came along’.

Asked how he got involved with the IRA he says: “Same thing as happened a lot of young people”. From about 13 he used to “sneak up to the Creggan to fire stones” and “to riots…It was the excitement.”

He wasn’t allowed to attend the anti-internment march on January 31st 1972, during which 13 civilians were shot dead by the British army on Bloody Sunday, but remembers the "stunned silence” across the Bogside the following day. And though he felt no sectarian animosity to his working-class Protestant neighbours, he remembers the horror at the British army “pointing their guns at us [Catholics]”.

He felt “great” when asked by the IRA to join the Fianna - the youth wing of the IRA – convinced by the leadership of the justice of the ‘war’.

We were running around, scouting, watching, carrying out small operations. Then you moved on to the IRA at age 16. We were taken over the border [to Donegal] and trained - shown how to fire armalites, how to make bombs. It was sleeping in tents, making your own food. It was like the scouts with real guns.

He recalls friends ‘killed in action’. In June 1974, David Russell (18), a Protestant, and Gerard Craig (17), also from Shantallow, died while carrying a bomb in a supermarket carpark. In October that year Michael Meenan (16), from Shantallow, was killed when a bomb he was carrying on his lap exploded. “They’re examples of how young some of the people involved were.” Asked what he thought of their dying at the time, he says: “We thought it was all part of the war. Oh aye we believed in the war and the struggle.”

His parents didn’t know until his father caught him painting over the windows of army Saracen jeep, to prevent soldiers seeing out. 

He brought me in home and gave me a lecture, said: ‘You are going to either end up in jail or dead and Martin McGuinness will end up in a big house.’ When I was sentenced my father wept.

So many young working-class Catholics were being sentenced to prison:

it was like a conveyor belt…You were in jail with your mates. They wiped out Shantallow. One day you were running about, living normal lives. We watched music, we watched glam rock, supporting English football teams. Next day you were in the Crum [Crumlin Road prison, Belfast, on remand]. That’s where I met Michael Devine [member of the INLA and the tenth man to die in the 1981 hunger-strike], from Derry as well. He introduced me to socialism. I never saw Micky again even though we were on the blanket together.

He went “immediately on the blanket [protest]” at the Maze prison – also known as the H Blocks - against the removal of political status from IRA and INLA prisoners and at the authorities’ insistence they wear prison uniforms. 

I went on it because I was a republican. I wasn’t going to be criminalised with the prison uniform. I was on it from June 1977 until the protest ended in October 1981.
How was it? It was bad. At the start we were in clean cells, a bed and a table. Nothing was happening, we were getting beatings. So we wrecked the cells, smashed the windows, smashed the furniture and put our excrement on the walls. The worst of all was the winter of ’78. The snow was coming in the window.
Coming up to Christmas ’78 there was forced washing, with scrubbing brushes…The screws would storm into the cells and dragged us down the wings. There were unmerciful beatings...You have to remember we were naked.

He recalls the “punishment block” with concrete beds, no heating and “the number one diet” of dry bread, black tea and “watery soup.”

In H-Block 6 fellow prisoners included senior members of the IRA including Sands, Brendan Hughes, Larry Marley and Seanna Walsh. In 1979, moved to H-3, he shared a cell with Sands.

Bobby kept morale very high. He was an amazing man, a fantastic singer – I actually thought he sang a bit like Bono though I don’t like Bono much. He was an amazing song-writer, poet, Gaeilgor. One of his favourite books was Trinity by Leon Uris. He’d tell it to us in instalments, through the cell-door at night. 

He says Sands wrote poetry and songs for anyone he shared a cell with, composing I Wish I Was Back Home in Derry – sung famously by Christy Moore – for him.

Recalling the ill-fated first hunger strikes between October and December 1980, which marked the escalation of the blanket and dirty protest, and the subsequent strikes between February and October 1981 in which ten men died, he disputes Sinn Fein’s account as to how the former ended, and remains “angry” that the deaths of “brave men” like Sands, were capitalised on for ends they had not died for. “They were on hunger strike for political status, not to win elections.”

Had he considered joining the strike? 

I couldn’t, I wouldn’t put my family through it, and thank God because it would have been for nothing.
Those years were really hard. It was all hell but we believed we had to keep going on. We couldn’t break or let anyone down. It was for the war, for a 32-county socialist republic. We believed that.

Released in 1985 he got involved in Sinn Féin in Derry and “probably” would have remained in the IRA but could see, “it wasn’t getting anywhere”.

We know now the war was being wound down. We know now [Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness] were meeting the Irish Government, the British government. But instead of sitting the boys down and saying, ‘Look we can’t win this, we need to take a different direction and put the guns down, they went behind these men’s backs.
“While they were seeking peace, they were still encouraging war. Their peace process was a bloody peace process, and we haven’t seen a victory yet.

By “victory” he means a fairer, less sectarian society he says;

Our children have less opportunities now than even we had during the conflict…We could just go down to the signing centre and say we wanted to learn a trade. Now they have to go through hoops, the jobs are temporary, low paid. It’s shocking.

An anguished sense regret and betrayal runs deep in many former IRA members. “I never killed anybody but I know people who have and who have been broken, become alcoholics trying to drink it away,” he says.

Nodding, Browne says his brother Tony, a former IRA member, died in 2018 of cancer. Though never charged he was suspected of involvement in a number of murders. “I remember when he was dying,” says Browne, “when he was lying in his bed talking, he said: ‘I left behind widows and orphans’ and he says, ‘For what?’”.

Asked whether they regret the things they did, Browne says:

My true answer, none of it was worth it. But if you are asking the 15 year-old me who got his first gun, he would disagree totally with the 62 year-old here.
Was it the right thing to do? At this time yes, of course. You have to believe it was right or you wouldn’t do it.

Both welcome the peace. “My son and daughter have never been involved in republicanism,” says Elliott. “That is a good. But the peace process is going on almost as long as the conflict and it’s a scam. You have to be serious and stand up and ask, who is benefiting?”

The power-sharing system of Government in Northern Ireland, according to which unionists and nationalists must be represented in the Stormont executive, institutionalises sectarianism he says.

“You see both sides whipping it up to get the vote. The unionists is scared a republican, and on the republican side they’re scared a unionist, will get the seat.” This distracts public scrutiny not only from issues like housing, employment and education, but also from nepotism and cronyism within the main political parties, he says.

Sinn Féin provides a lot of people with political careers, jobs in the community sector, so they’re loyal to Sinn Féin. If you criticise Sinn Fein in Derry you’re cut out of those jobs. I know people who say, ‘Dixie, you’re right but I have a mortgage to pay. I just keep the head down and keep going.’

"The only place in the North the nationalists haven’t the worry about a unionist taking a seat is Derry, and you can see how they hammered Sinn Féin,” he says referring to the massive 17,000-vote victory by the SDLP’s Colum Eastwood over the Sinn Féin’s Elisha McCallion in the 2019 Westminster election.

This happened “first because of what [Sinn Féin] were doing with welfare-reform and then all the other stuff that was going on in the party.”

Republicans like him, he says, find Sinn Féin today:

hard to stomach… They have no more in common with the ideals of Bobby Sands than the modern Labour Party has with the ideals of James Connolly.
When we were on the blanket, if you had have even suggested Sinn Féin would be shaking hands with the Queen, sending sympathies for [Prince] Philip’s death, especially the year of the 40th anniversary of the hunger strikes, it’s unimaginable.

He says:

You have got people who are broken by it, who can’t accept this, think ‘There must be a plan for something more’. I am angry and am entitled to be angry. I saw brave men like Bobby Sands and Thomas McElwee walking from my wing for the last time; young guys like Michael Meenan getting blown to pieces … From 1987 [Gerry] Adams and [Martin] McGuinness, they should have told us, told the IRA it wasn’t working and stopped the killing. They betrayed everyone.

He hopes sectarianism is fraying in Northern Ireland as both Sinn Féin and the DUP appear to be in crisis, especially among younger voters.

“In the end,” he says, “Brexit might achieve what the IRA never could.”

Thomas Dixie Elliot is a Derry artist and a former H Block Blanketman.
Follow Dixie Elliot on Twitter @IsMise_Dixie

Brexit Might Achieve What The IRA Never Could

Thomas Dixie Elliot
believes Sinn Fein inhabit a weird kaleidoscopic world.

In a tweet, which she later deleted, regarding victims' pensions, Martina Anderson referred to those who fought Britain's dirty war in Ireland, those involved in collusion and British troops like the Paras who murdered people on Bloody Sunday and Ballymurphy. 

 

Did she forget that her party colleague, Declan Kearney apologised to those to whom she referred; the British military forces and the RUC, for the hurt and pain they experienced during the war?

 

Has it totally slipped her mind that the Colonel-in-Chief of the Paras can't set foot in Ireland these days but members of Sinn Féin are there to meet and greet him? 

 

Lest we also forget, Raymond McCartney was deputy chair & Jennifer McCann sat on the committee which gave screws with 40 years 'service' a payout of £120,000 or more. (Let that sink in ). In doing so he used words like 'rehabilitation' in saying that he thought, "It's accepted that over many, many years customs and practices have led to the 'prison service' not being run in the most efficient way."
  
 
McCartney effectively criminalised those Republicans still enduring incarceration in the British penal system.

It's as if, from time to time, that someone in Sinn Féin leaves a gate open and one of their members gets out to run wild before being pulled back in and the gate is closed again.

How can Republicans, or anyone for that matter, trust a party which changes like the Irish weather?


Thomas Dixie Elliot is a Derry artist and a former H Block Blanketman.

Follow Dixie Elliot on Twitter @IsMise_Dixie    

Sinn Fein's Weird Kaleidoscopic World

Padraic Mac Coitir thinks Sinn Fein has a lot to answer for when it comes to the creeping impoverization in the North.

Sinn Fein Delivery Failure

Pauline Mellon with a piece on a Sinn Fein failure to deliver.  Pauline Mellon is a blogger, rights campaigner and community activist in her native Derry. This piece initially featured on her blog Diary of a Derry Mother on 22 February 2014.

Belfast Comedian Jake O'Kane Speaketh the truth!
 
Today began just like any other Saturday morning with the exception of my latest attempt at a diet which normally occurs on a Monday morning. There I was laid out in mismatched pyjamas struggling to eat a poached egg and at the same time trying to forget my usual Saturday morning iced turnover (cake) when I heard the letter box rattle. What I found lying in the hall was the distraction I needed ... political propaganda entitled Glor Dhoire (Derry Voice) courtesy of Sinn Fein. If ever there was literature to distract you!

However in all fairness to Sinn Fein when it comes to propaganda they are the masters, as they claim credit for everything but the virgin birth.

Dun do bheal (Shut your Mouth)