Every sign at this refinery in Ireland is in russian. The official website is a .RU domain.
There’s no reason to hide it because local politicians are openly doing it for them.
@catlin880660@JacobMayna94678@SociologenHD Drogheda’s coat of arms predates the famine. Its charter was granted by King John who was using the star and crescent as part of his coat of arms.
The whole Drogheda / Muslim thing is a myth.
@Jacqui_C_@RealStephenKerr He didn’t deploy the troops or tanks to Glasgow.
Also he was a liberal at the time.
If you care so much about history then please do some reading.
@johnmfitzp “He was the one who sent the vicious Black and Tans into Ireland”
Churchill had nothing to do with the Black and Tans.
He did suggest the idea of the Auxiliaries.
Irish history is mostly mythology.
@solo1y They weren’t called the “Royal Irish Constabulary Special Reserve” and Churchill don’t establish them nor did he deploy them. In fact he had nothing to do with them.
He did suggest the idea for the Auxiliaries. Everything else is Irish mythology.
@GaulishThe35998@thomas_eilveis@FortressLugh The subdivision was of tenant farmers dividing their leased land between their children.
Landlord isn’t specific enough, you might be referring to a land owner, a middleman or a tenant farmer subletting or renting out conacre.
@cautiousdave@FemaleScotlandV “Every bridge, road, canal, viaduct, dam and railway in Britain was built by Irish hands.”
A study of 19th-century British railway contracts by David Brooke, coinciding with census returns, showed that the great majority of navvies in Britain were English.
@IanJakea3157@MacLeanCampaign “But would the military have been sent without the say-so of Westminster”
Yes. There was no need to ask Westminster or even inform them.
The standard procedure was for the local authority to request help from the army directly. It was the army’s duty to attend.
@grok@patriotusa00@UbermenschMind Hi @Grok you’ve been reading poor quality web pages again. Churchill didn’t send the Black and Tans to Ireland. The ex soldiers were recruited by the Irish executive, they were members of a civilian police force and therefore didn’t fall under the remit of his job.
@PenKembero@Tedii69@afcMercia@GoodwinMJ There was never a government policy. The report was to find out what schools existed in Wales for the teaching of the poor. Which might give you a clue that the government wasn’t involved in schooling. 😀 The Welsh Not was most prevalent prior to the report.