The History Understanders Have Officially Logged On.

by ArtieBucco420

47 comments
  1. I’d love to hear the crayon sniffers’ take on the Famine being misunderstood.

    “They were starved to help them become civilised. We destroyed their boats so they wouldnt drown and leave widows behind!”

  2. Reinterpreting = revising history to retroactively justify colonialism.

  3. An infantile misrepresentation of history. Don’t these bigoted arseholes realise that libraries are full of books by historians?

  4. What the actual fuck is that shit? Are unionists so desperate these days that they’re making lies in trying to justify murder, colonialism, invasion and attempted genocide?

    Genuinely vile and reminds me of Russia and Israel’s attempts as well.

  5. Hardly “reinterpreting”… more “unreconstructed.”

    …or, to use the technical term: “shite Wee Jamie hoked out of Moore Holmes’ arse.”

  6. Remember meeting a lad from East Belfast in England years ago. He said, “we found a bit of land and turned it into a country”

  7. Can’t be surprised when it’s from the “Let’s Talk Loyalism” echo-chamber of revisionism 😏

  8. Ye’s love your historical revisionism don’t ye’s?

  9. Ahh look at them learning how to use ai to talk crap.

    It would be impressive if it wasn’t so wrong.

  10. What exactly are they trying to prove with these? Just had a look on their page and they’ve another one up today. Plenty of bootlickers commenting about how great it is too. Such a strange and sad bunch of people.

  11. Brehon law was administered by Brehons (or *brithem*). They were the successors to Celtic druids and while similar to judges; their role was closer to that of an arbitrator. Their task was to preserve and interpret the law rather than to expand it.

    In many respects Brehon law was quite progressive. It recognised divorce and equal rights between the genders and also showed concern for the environment. In criminal law, offences and penalties were defined in great detail. Restitution rather than punishment was prescribed for wrongdoing. Cases of homicide or bodily injury were punishable by means of the eric fine, the exact amount determined by a scale. Capital punishment was not among the range of penalties available to the Brehons. The absence of either a court system or a police force suggests that people had strong respect for the law [https://www.courts.ie/history-law-ireland](https://www.courts.ie/history-law-ireland)

  12. Have you seen Lesser of the Holmes latest AI spaff?

    Also what is with with Loyalisms fascination with AI generated images? Do they have a family subscription to the same service. I’ve seen the same style AI generated Images from Moore Shitty Holmes, Bumhole of the Bailey and Jonny Buckley.

  13. The vicar is obviously thinking about noncing that boy later.

  14. This is the kinda thing that comes from the people who want us to believe that Dinosaur fossils were planted there by the Devil to fool us! ..

  15. Despite having lived here a decade (and having had an overwhelmingly good experience), I sometimes forget (except for around July) that the racism here in Northern Ireland isn’t just against foreigners.

    This is the kind of garbage I usually see directed at people from the Global South.

  16. I love how their idea of stability and rule of law is a priest and child labour

  17. As opposed to now when Ulster is no longer divided, under developed or full of conflict…

  18. You can tell it’s true because the AI cartoons say so

  19. Just needs a £100,000 grant now to put it on some end terrace wall as a mural and it’ll be cultural fact for eternity.

  20. Right up there with Nelson McCaulsand’s “talk” on St Patrick being Ulster’s Scottish Saint……

  21. I guess you could miss the floating sword and leg unattached to a body, but you’d think “Irlend” would jump out as cause for giving the AI art generator a second go at it, Jesus

  22. Eh, apart from this being utter bull-shit, how many loyalists would turn up for Sunday fellowship? Not many, I can tell you.

    It is an interpretation but not the truth.

  23. Brehon law predates common law and was far less brutal.

  24. Is Moore Holmes a teacher? Wtf kind of shit will he be “teaching?” Seriously. At least provide references or point us in the direction of a book to learn more about this 😂

  25. The soft soaping these goons get in the media ultimately doesn’t do them any favours, as they end up delivering guff like this with a straight face.

  26. ‘Gaelic “Irlend” was divided…”

    Oh I’m so glad the Brits came and sorted that out for us….

  27. ‘You might’ve thought the plantations were a calculated suppressive tool against rebellion in a British colony, but did you know they were actually a calculated suppressive tool against rebellion in a British colony?’

    Like they didn’t even defeat a strawman, they just said nothing. Rebellion against who and why were they there? Oh I see.

    Their most recent post is actually significantly worse than this, butchering basic history and linguistics to frame Gaels as violent invaders of what was a totally British adjacent ancient island.

  28. FWIW, this is indistinguible from propaganda about Indians during British rule, the universal lanaguge of Empire

  29. So bringing civilisation to the barbarians? Oh, they’re so kind and thoughtful.

  30. > Rational response by the English Cron to repeated rebellion, instability, and bloodshed in Ireland

    “People were rebelling against the oppression, so we were left with no choice but to oppress them even harder”.

    Abusers “you made me do it” logic.

  31. This is like something you’d see in America, just make up your own facts if nobody cares to check

  32. A rational response to rebellion and resistance… Why were they rebelling, I wonder? Resistance to what?

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