That is very remiss of me, and I do appreciate you bringing it to my attention.
Btw, as a 'new' member, you seem to be very well informed about my posting habits.
Which previously banned member are you..................actually, it doesn't matter. I don't really care.
But thanks for the heads up on the Emma omission. She would have killed me.
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alcatel (04-05-16)
Joseph Mary Plunkett: Born 1887 in Dublin, son of a papal count, Plunkett was initially educated in England, though he returned to Ireland and graduated from U. C. D. in 1909. After his graduation Plunkett spent two years travelling due to ill health, returning to Dublin in 1911. Plunkett shared MacDonagh’s enthusiasm for literature and was an editor of the Irish Review. Along with MacDonagh and Edward Martyn, he helped to establish an Irish national theatre. He joined the Irish Volunteers in 1913, subsequently gaining membership of the I. R. B. in 1914. Plunkett travelled to Germany to meet Roger Casement in 1915. During the planning of the Rising, Plunkett was appointed Director of Military Operations, with overall responsibility for military strategy. Plunkett was one of those who were stationed in the G. P. O. during the Rising. He married Grace Gifford while in Kilmainham Gaol following the surrender and was executed on 4 May 1916.
Edward Daly: Born in Limerick in 1891, Daly’s family had a history of republican activity; his uncle John Daly had taken part in the rebellion of 1867. Edward Daly led the First Battalion during the Rising, which raided the Bridewell and Linenhall Barracks, eventually seizing control of the Four Courts. A close friend of Tom Clarke, their ties were made even stronger by the marriage of Clarke to Daly’s sister. Daly was executed on 4 May 1916.
Michael O’Hanrahan: Born in Wexford in 1877. As a young man, O’Hanrahan showed great promise as a writer, becoming heavily involved in the promotion of the Irish language. He founded the first Carlow branch of the Gaelic League, and published two novels, A Swordsman of the Brigade and When the Norman Came. Like many of the other executed leaders, he joined the Irish Volunteers from their inception, and was second in command to Thomas MacDonagh at Jacob’s biscuit factory during the Rising, although this position was largely usurped by the arrival of John MacBride. His execution took place on 4 May 1916.
William Pearse: Born in 1881 in Dublin. The younger brother of Patrick, William shared his brother’s passion for an independent Ireland. He assisted Patrick in running St. Enda’s. The two brothers were extremely close, and fought alongside each other in the G. P. O. William was executed on 4 May 1916. Pearse railway station on Westland Row in Dublin was re-named in honour of the two brothers in 1966.
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emmasweet (12-08-16), Mister Anderson (09-05-16)
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Shalom/salaam.
10,000 years of Middle Eastern civilisation and the place is not at peace but rather in pieces.
Mister Anderson (09-05-16)
What I said is that since Vietnam they do not show graphic pictures of their own American wounded and they keep a tighter rein on what they allow their own official media access to.
That in a way attempted to justify their recent campaigns or at least attempts to keep the American public on side.
Anyway they have probably retreated from large scale American boots on the ground for another generation or more, just as they did after Vietnam, when much of the American public were turned off war.
And after Vietnam they have never reintroduced the draft even though they were short of military numbers and regularly used reserve troops in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Shalom/salaam.
10,000 years of Middle Eastern civilisation and the place is not at peace but rather in pieces.
Mister Anderson (09-05-16)
I know that, but it wasn't by choice, and after hundreds of years of oppression why not get some help wherever they could get it.
Ah, but he's not really that much of a MrNiceGuy.
I have no interest in who you are, or any of your pathetic trolling, which seems to be becoming rather obsessive, with all your different usernames.
I must give Emma a nudge in a while and get her to login and thank a few posts. She is getting very lazy.
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emmasweet (12-08-16)