Irish General Election – A MGTOW prat’s view (mine)

Topic by cardenio27

Cardenio27

Home Forums Political Corner Irish General Election – A MGTOW prat’s view (mine)

This topic contains 2 replies, has 2 voices, and was last updated by Cardenio27  cardenio27 3 years, 11 months ago.

Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #197542
    Cardenio27
    cardenio27
    Participant
    144

    Hello everybody, I hope that you are well (in deep unrecognisable voice too lazy to write my own intro). The Irish General Election was today. I normally spend little to no time researching or analyzing who I should vote for, I’ll go on my Dad’s opinion as he has been taking it up the kyber pass as a 40 year taxpayer, or my mother, or if I think a local candidate is ok. This is the first time I’ve looked at it through a MGTOW lens. The current leading party, Fine Gael, is a centrist right party and most in line with my views. However, their blatant campaigning for the votes of working slaves and the Prime Minister’s (their leader) determination to have a 50/50 male female cabinet (f~~~ meritocracy, get the women’s vote) made me pause. I read their party manifesto – guess what they pledge to address? The f~~~ing ‘wage gap’! So I said no to them. The Labour Party is tainted by egalitarianism and selling out on promises big time, as well as having a detestable elderly woman as party leader. So no to them. Sinn Fein with its aggressive nationalism and lack of economic planning leaves them out. Next, Fianna Fail, long time biggest party but destroyed in the last election for helping to f~~~ the economy up, have 2 candidates in our area. One is an old man, one is a young enough woman, who I have (on hearsay, I am a rigorous journalist!) has been playing the ‘elect me I is wimmin’ card. Neither of them are from our area and their party is seriously tainted by what they’ve done to the country, so no. That leaves the austerity parties, who seem too radical and confrontational to do business with our Economic Masters, even if like Sinn Fein they raise some good points. Independents, one in my area was a year ahead of me in school and his brother died in a freak skateboard accident,seems ok but he resigned from Fine Gael earlier in the year over water charges. He may be a man of principle but he could get more done in the biggest fracking party! Another new party, Renua, led by a woman, ex- of Fine Gael. No thanks. So, a la fin, I went to the ballot box, pretended to vote for my family, but left it blank. Because none of them really care about me as a man, in my possible wrong and idiotic opinion. But that’s how I see it.

    #197560
    +1
    K
    Hitman
    Participant

    damn, it’s like that in ireland ?
    too bad the people don’t just get a candidate who wants the british out.
    seems like all “the troubles” never end on the emerald isle.
    EIRE GO BRACH !
    would that even stand anymore ?
    us “yanks” are like mushrooms with the world news…
    they keep us in the dark and dump s~~~ on our heads …

    #197754
    Cardenio27
    cardenio27
    Participant
    144

    Sinn Fein are the ‘get the British out’ party, but I have problems with them overall. They don’t seem to have a firm grasp of economics for one. They haven’t done a good job in Northern Ireland where they govern in a coalition. Also, their leader has iron clad links to their violent past and a lot of people want to get away from that, especially now that the north is relatively peaceful, not accounting for the sectarian hatred and bigotry on the Catholic and Protestant sides. The Conservative government in Britain is a close ally of our government here, and I don’t like the Conservatives. At least Sinn Fein don’t either! The British still run six counties in Northern Ireland but in my opinion they are welcome to them many people don’t want them back, they basically are Britain by this stage. We couldn’t afford to financially support 32 counties. Britain leaving the Euro potentially could be a big deal for us as we have strong links with them. But the ‘f~~~ the British’ attitude is by and large gone. Our economic masters in Germany, the IMF and the big parties are the ones in the firing line nowadays.

Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.