- Joined
- Jan 8, 2025
In a nutshell: Northern Ireland is the north-eastern part of Ireland that is currently held by the U.K. It came into existence in the 1600s during the plantation of Ulster, where Brits and Scots were "planted" there by the British government in an attempt to civilize the Irish. The new arrivals made extremely creative improvements such as adding the word "London" to the village of Derry, making it Londonderry.
The Irish were, at the time, illiterates who spoke gibberish and lived in sod huts. But now they live in houses and speak something between gibberish and English, and their IQs were raised high enough for them to invent Guinness. These improvements (and Guinness) are a tremendous credit to their race.
There was also some nonsense over religion which was really just cover for ethnicity since the religion split and ethnic split had little overlap.
Eventually the Ulster settlers got bored with civilizing the Irish and went on to do even more awesome things like founding America (they wuz presidents n shit). The Irish got jealous and copied the Ulster-Scots by following them over (after America was built) and becoming presidents n shit.
There was also a little thing where the Irish ran out of potatoes and, in an incredible showcase of their intelligence, somehow starved on an island surrounded by fish.
But the Irish won in the end because all the Americans who don't know history think they're Irish because they see "Scots-Irish" (Ulster) ancestry and assume it means Irish. This lead to the extremely widespread "plastic paddy" phenomenon where Americans are raging Irish nationalists despite not being/barely being Irish, and actual Irish finding them annoying (but occasionally useful).
But back to Ulster, it became its own thing during WW1 when the Irish got tired of listening to the inbred royalty in London and declared independence (reasonable).
There was also some stuff involving explosions and gay LARPers on both sides that led to a peace deal but that's not really important. But today Ulster is split roughly 50-50 between Irish and Ulstermen. And it has a decades-long reputation for being economically depressed, making any reunification more challenging for Ireland.
Taking the above into account, Should Ulster remain in the U.K., join the Republic of Ireland, or secede and be independent?
Discuss.
The Irish were, at the time, illiterates who spoke gibberish and lived in sod huts. But now they live in houses and speak something between gibberish and English, and their IQs were raised high enough for them to invent Guinness. These improvements (and Guinness) are a tremendous credit to their race.
There was also some nonsense over religion which was really just cover for ethnicity since the religion split and ethnic split had little overlap.
Eventually the Ulster settlers got bored with civilizing the Irish and went on to do even more awesome things like founding America (they wuz presidents n shit). The Irish got jealous and copied the Ulster-Scots by following them over (after America was built) and becoming presidents n shit.
There was also a little thing where the Irish ran out of potatoes and, in an incredible showcase of their intelligence, somehow starved on an island surrounded by fish.
But the Irish won in the end because all the Americans who don't know history think they're Irish because they see "Scots-Irish" (Ulster) ancestry and assume it means Irish. This lead to the extremely widespread "plastic paddy" phenomenon where Americans are raging Irish nationalists despite not being/barely being Irish, and actual Irish finding them annoying (but occasionally useful).
But back to Ulster, it became its own thing during WW1 when the Irish got tired of listening to the inbred royalty in London and declared independence (reasonable).
There was also some stuff involving explosions and gay LARPers on both sides that led to a peace deal but that's not really important. But today Ulster is split roughly 50-50 between Irish and Ulstermen. And it has a decades-long reputation for being economically depressed, making any reunification more challenging for Ireland.
Taking the above into account, Should Ulster remain in the U.K., join the Republic of Ireland, or secede and be independent?
Discuss.