Irish Patriot - Linked by history & connection of hearts - I’m not Left just right - Concerned citizen of illegal immigration - Freedom of speech is my mantra
This actually bought a tear to my eye even though I feel like crying most days I don’t what’s the point.. I feel a sense of loss for my beautiful country which is being eroded by this government policies.
It’s always someone else’s fault except for the migrant who tried to decapitate the poor man’s head off and governments open border policies. Let’s blame the mythical ‘far right’ ie concerned citizens. This degenerate is the cause of tension amongst many of us us.
@TRobinsonNewEra@JosephineM24158 That’s rare because most illegal migrants in Ireland come from the UK via NI then into the ROI We should never have had an open border between Ireland and NI but even if we did both governments would facilitate the invasion
@neilcorcoran3@Irelandsfight That’s rare because most illegal migrants in Ireland come from the UK via NI then into the ROI We should never have had an open border between Ireland and NI but even if we did both governments would facilitate the invasion
The sad reality...
When those men were trying to hit/kick the migrant off to stop him decapitating the victim, they stopped as the police approached because they were worried about getting into trouble.
Why? He's literally torturing someone to death!!!
This is the power the state has, you see something horrific happening and you have to be worried about defending someone.
The Migration Pact based on GDP will decide how many migrants Ireland takes. Ireland’s GDP is over inflated wealth because of huge foreign Tech corporations. 3 million males in Greece ready to invade Ireland after the 12th but millions more from around the World will flood in
Following is an article I have written on the EU migration pact and why Ireland should not go ahead with it. We have three days left to stop it so rather than submit to a newspaper to see if they might publish it, I'm posting it right here. There is no time to lose and the attempted beheading in Belfast last night must be a wake up alarm:
'We Were Right About the Lisbon Treaty Opt-Outs, The EU Migration Pact Proves It':
As the EU’s Migration and Asylum Pact comes into force in just three days’ time, Ireland finds itself locked into a system we never needed to join. We had a cast-iron opt-out under Protocol 21 of the Lisbon Treaty, the very safeguard the “Yes” side swore would protect our sovereignty over justice and home affairs. Yet our government chose to opt in. The result? A predictable erosion of control at the worst possible time.
Back in 2008 and 2009, when Libertas led the No campaign, we warned that the Lisbon Treaty was a power grab dressed up as reform. We were told the opt-outs on immigration, asylum and borders were unbreakable. “Ireland decides,” they said. “Nothing changes without our consent.” The guarantees secured after the first referendum were sold to the Irish people as ironclad in order to get a 'Yes' in the re-run. History has now delivered the verdict: the guarantees were a mirage. Protocol 21 exists precisely because Ireland is not in Schengen, maintains the Common Travel Area with the UK, and has every right to manage our own borders as an island nation. It gave us the flexibility to opt into measures that suited us and stay out of those that did not. That à la carte approach served Ireland well for decades. Then, in June 2024, the Dáil voted, by the narrowest of margins, to surrender it. We're now bound by Brussels’ rules on asylum processing, biometric tracking, returns and mandatory “solidarity” contributions, protection money by another name.
This was never necessary. Denmark has used its parallel opt-out far more robustly. We could have done the same. Instead, we have handed decision making on who enters Ireland, how claims are processed and what burdens we must carry to unelected officials in Brussels, officials who designed this Pact for Mediterranean frontline states, not for Ireland's unique geography or our acute housing and services crisis. The Pact itself is, to put it plainly, a mass of fraud. Asylum laws across Europe do not work. Grant rates remain high for many nationalities, appeals drag on, returns are pitifully low. The “mandatory but flexible” solidarity mechanism is neither mandatory enough to deter abuse nor flexible enough to protect smaller states like ours. It will not fix the pull factors that drive irregular migration; it will entrench them. And the most vulnerable of all, those genuine refugees with a real and present risk to life, will be the ones pushed to the back of the queue behind the long line of economic migrants and system-gamers.
As if to slice the point home, last night in north Belfast a Sudanese national in his 30s, who reportedly entered the Common Travel Area from Paris via Dublin in 2023, claimed asylum and was granted leave to remain, apparently straddled a local man on a public street and tried to saw his head off with a knife. The victim, now fighting for his life with horrific wounds to his face, neck and back, was saved only by the bravery of passers-by. This is not abstract policy failure. This is the human cost of a migration regime that has lost control.
Ireland is already struggling with record international protection applications, a homelessness emergency and stretched public services. Opting in adds annual costs, whether in relocations or cash payments and procedural straitjackets that undemocratically tie the hands of future governments.
We have ceded the ability to design a faster, stricter, fairer national system tailored to our needs. This is exactly what we warned would happen when we opposed Lisbon. Sovereignty is not something you lend to Brussels on the promise it will be returned when inconvenient. Once surrendered, it is gone. The politicians who assured us the opt-outs were secure have been proved wrong. The Irish people, who twice expressed deep unease at the direction and form of European integration, have been proved right. It is not too late but the clock is now at three days. Ireland should demand the immediate restoration of our full national control over migration policy before the Pact locks us in on the 12th of June. We owe it to our citizens, to our most vulnerable, and to the genuine refugees the system is failing. The Lisbon opt-outs were meant to protect us. It is time our leaders remembered why we fought so hard to keep them and why we must now use them.
So if we don’t have open borders they admit just like the Irish government that they are letting in these degenerates who commit crime on purpose! Also why are MSM astonished that he was in Dublin first? Most migrants come from the UK via NI into Ireland
70% of St Vincent De Paul social housing being given to people exiting the IPAS system.. Usual wait 18 months but if you’re Irish you can be waiting 10 to 20 YEARS.. It is racist and discrimination against the Irish in their own country. I’m livid what can we do to solve this.
70% of St Vincent De Paul social housing being given to people exiting the IPAS system.. Usual wait 18 months but if you’re Irish you can be waiting 10 to 20 YEARS.. It is racist and discrimination against the Irish in their own country. I’m livid what can we do to solve this.
70% of St Vincent De Paul social housing being given to people exiting the IPAS system.. Usual wait 18 months but if you’re Irish you can be waiting 10 to 20 YEARS.. It is racist and discrimination against the Irish in their own country. I’m livid what can we do to solve this.