cromwell wrote:That caveat being - would they want to take on the financial cost of NI? Osc would know more about this than me, I think.
No....well, I wouldn't want to anyway. Why should we? For example, agriculture - the latest figure I can find is that farm income in NI in 2017 received subsidies of £287 million, much of it European money - why should we have to take that hit, especially when a section of the NI population hates even the word Irish and shudders at the thought of ever being called Irish? NI has been dependent on subsidies for so long that I have no idea what they will do when Brexit happens. The (currently non-existant) NI Assembly has little respect for public money, look up Arlene Foster and the RHI inquiry.
Here in Ireland, as a country we have worked hard to pull ourselves through the last ten years and seem to be coming out the other end. We are a modern, diverse country and I don't want us to have to deal with the Unionists who are stopping NI from moving forward. I can understand why United Ireland idealists would love to see the country reunited, but I am of an age to remember the Troubles and the dreadful things done in the name of Republicanism and Unionism. One thing I do know, though, is that younger people do not remember those times. It is not as simple as having a referendum, it is a complicated situation.