/éire/

Eagrán tastaíonn eagrán uainn

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>naoi
cén fáth?

Tá na buachaillí ag an trá

lá fliuch atá ann

Should i become a teacher?

Tá sé grianmhar anseo in iarthar na tíre

If you have autism no

What's /éire/'s stance on the lockdown; necessary caution or irrational fearmongering?

I am very autistic but i can mask it quite well.

Unnecessary desu, we need to open up the pubs again

This

tHIS IS MY ITALAIN GF. sHOW ME YOUR GF.

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My attitude is it's the government's job to decide and given the economic incentive not to shut down I am okay to trust them when they say it's time to shut down.
But when it comes to protecting myself it's mostly the masks I trust in. Magical thinking around two metres distance and enforced shutdowns aren't going to do as much as covering your own face and keeping your hands clean. And when it's the weak links who keep the disease going I don't think it's going to fully stop it.
I suppose if I hadn't been a neet before the thing I'd be more pissed off or pleased

irrational clinging to life on the part of boomers, and in the end the death toll it reaped and the economic damage it inflicted the world wide are completely disproportional and will ironically lead to far more deaths in the long run through the infinite little ripples of the effect of deprivation

>why yes, I do support the lockdown, but only because it kills more people and causes more economic damage than the virus would have

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I fear the future.

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In general or specific aspects of it? Personally I'm afraid for the country's future more than my own, I don't like where I think things are headed

I embrace the chaos of uncertainty

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Tá an grian ag scoilteadh na gcloch sa dheisceart. Cá bhfuil sé ag cur báistí?

I don't fear the future per se, I'm just not sure what I like the prospect of less: being unprepared and/or powerless in a scenario where the trajectory at the minute is thrown out and we get on a better one or have the opportunity to work for a better one, or being powerless but to look on as the current trajectory continues on as the unironic "end of history" (or certainly, Ireland). There's also the possibility the denouement of the political order and narrative of the current world that our cohort implicitly is waiting for does not arrive within our lifetimes, or it does but our generation aren't the ones to solve it.

And that's leaving out the questions of the bigger picture, not just the fate of this part of the world or our nation, or even the fate of the supposedly generic "international order" which is really a specific organism of its own. The long-term trajectory of the world nowadays seems less dependent on the distribution of resources and political control than on technology changing the limits on the human condition, in a way that seems even less likely to have any way of "being fixed". And it's like a tech victory in civ - whichever civilisation gets control over the technological mechanisms to control society which will probably come about this century, is basically guaranteed to win. It'd just be extremely tragic if it were the current for want of a better term - Epstein cohort still in power when governments basically get the perfected way to control everything forever (assuming they don't already have that).

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Irish parties get backpocket money for supporting large corporations, cheap labour(immigration), and a population that cares about international politics before its own. Simple as.

Theres no 'globalist EU agenda!!1!', it's just big companies. Conspiracies are fun and all but sorry.

I just want an indian cutie to have a bounce around on my dick FUCK

This pretty much. Big business is who is behind mass migration. Cheap labour and weak unions is what they want

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What are you taught about irish history in school?

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Fair play to the Brits for voting against it

That's no different than what I've been saying, I'm not talking about the EU either. The EU and governments in general are just tools to implement what the powers that be want to implement. At the end of the day so are corporations too.

Not enough, and just a wishy washy version of what was taught.

In primary school it was Irish stories and folklore, really comfy. At the start of secondary we learned about the gruesome history of British occupation, the great hunger and all that. Middle of secondary school was all 1916-1925, independence and beginning of the Republic(and 'the emergency'). After that for the leaving cert it's all gurthy political history of Ireland, don't know the specifics I didn't do it for my subject choices.

Since then the curriculum has changed though, with the Holocaust and other international shit being pushed.

That sounds about right, I vaguely remember being taught about Martin Luther and the Renaissance too.

I went to an Educate Together primary school and I actually learnt more Irish history and folklore there than in the two secondary schools I attended combined, one Catholic and one secular. We did a little on Easter Rising for the centenary but otherwise it was WWI, WWII, Holocaust and American Civil Rights Movements. That's it really

You didn't learn anything about pre-british ireland? Nothing about the norse? Nothing about pre-roman civlization? Nothing about the pre-christian culture, the conversion of the irish, the small irish colonies on the main island (also what do you call the bigger island?), nothing about insular christianity (which accepted polygamy from what I understand), nothing about how dublin was founded by norwegian vikings?

Seems a little odd.

Same lol

Actually yeah we did learn about how the celtic pagan tradition mixed with Christianity, and what that formed. I remember going on a school trip to an archaeological site with Dolmans and those huge stones with slits cut in the side as writing.