/éire/

>I'm going to sue.
>Poi and his state provided lawyer against my humble self together with OJ Simpson's dream team

>This sort of thing, gangs from the likes of Dublin and Limerick travelling to more rural areas seems to be increasingly common these days.
You need to provide them with boats so that they can raid the Welsh
>Supposedly many of them are beginning to migrate into some town near me, buying up loads of property.
Why?
Why move into the greater Rathkeale area,i?m sure that they'll have more than enough rivals there
> It feels like almost 90% of crimes around the country are caused by Dublin scumbags using motorways for easy access to steal things.
The Corkian Furry made a video about city-youths trashing the parks in his area at night,but in groups of more than 100 people where the local Garda can't do anything
Have you ever seen any of them?

>so that they can raid the Welsh
Ah to live in pre-12th century Ireland.

To be fair there aren't many good ones coming out at the moment. I'd feel the same way if not for the fact that I've just started getting into the Kingdom Hearts series.

>Not tens of thousands
Casual

I'd say it's around 3000 euro over my 10 year career, including consoles but not including my computer.

>Have you ever seen any of them?
No, but it's not really surprising. Gardai are mostly useless at controlling youths.

It's just a job and there's so much red tape.
Why bother getting in a fight and getting yourself injured or worse, or if you win get punished yourself for being violent?
It's more of the former attitude in my opinion, the really pathetic attitudes come from the higher ups and on a deeper level from the persistence of stupid 19th century liberal anthropology regarding crime and punishment.

If the games you were buying were any good they'd still retain a lot of their value for resale. Japanese games especially.

What are you talking about?

>That would never have happened though - it was numerically impossible
>only way by which I could see a legitimate declaration of war being made is if SF had received explicit support from the government in Dublin
Well this definition of what is an official internationally recognised war and what is terrorism seems a bit shit then.
They can beat the shit out of you on the street, throw rocks and stones at you, march past your house singing songs glorifying wars of religion and the famine, gerrymander your electoral constituency so that those of a similar mind to you will never achieve power or representation, refuse to employ you based on your religion, divert investment and money away from your area and openly insult you in the street and on the airwaves.
But hey who gives a shit, it doesn't meet the definition of what some slave owning Yank and some inbred noble in Switzerland thinks is what defines a "legitimate" war?

I'm over-exaggerating a bit and I don't necessarily disagree with trying to define these things but modern day independence and civil unrest movements tend to be a lot different to traditional wars, and they have to be as it is no longer two lads with guns trying to shoot each other. Those opposing the established state will almost always be less well equipped due to the lack of modern innovations such as aircraft, armour and so on.

>don't think anybody would deny that
Was just making the point in case you thought I was trying to justify everything the PIRA did and terrorism in general. The PIRA emerged out of some really shitty conditions and really shitty governance. That doesn't justify a lot of what they did, but when you create those conditions and don't provide a diplomatic or political avenue to better rights, living standards, equality and so on then what can you expect?