1964: Life in DONEGAL | Tonight | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2022
  • Trevor Philpott reports from Donegal, the Republic of Ireland's most northerly county.
    With paid work in the county in short supply, the men of Donegal are forced to leave home for months of the year to earn a living, leaving the women to work the fields and raise the children alone. It's certainly tough going, but how do the women of Donegal feel about their lot in life?
    This clip is from Tonight, originally broadcast 20 March, 1964
    You have now entered the BBC Archive, a time machine that will transport you back to the golden age of tv to educate, entertain and enlighten you with classic tv clips from the BBC vaults.
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Комментарии • 165

  • @patrickbradley7360
    @patrickbradley7360 10 месяцев назад +28

    My father left Donegal in 1958 to work in Birmingham, UK and returned to Donegal in 1969. I left Donegal in 1986 to work and live in Birmingham and have been here since. Donegal to this day still, the young people are emigrating all over the world. A beautiful place but sadly not much there for the youth.

  • @thesatisfiedcustomer4869
    @thesatisfiedcustomer4869 Год назад +61

    My grandfather was a Donegal man who moved to England after the war.
    He was brought up working on a rain soaked wind swept small farm.
    This was a fascinating insight into that world. Bravo.

    • @adonaiyah2196
      @adonaiyah2196 Год назад +6

      I know a friend whose parents are from there

    • @user-bc5hq3ic5s
      @user-bc5hq3ic5s Год назад +8

      I remember O'Doherty family . I am so grateful to them for their hospitality in Donegal. The most picturesque place and the best moments of my life.

  • @user-td4do3op2d
    @user-td4do3op2d Год назад +72

    It’s important to note that for all of the adults, particularly the older lady, English will be their second language. Arranmore (Árainn Mhór) is still an Irish (“Gaelic”) speaking area.

  • @doitatit
    @doitatit 8 месяцев назад +23

    These are fantastic historical windows into Ireland. I went to the village of Errigal in 1974 and lived with a young family in the Gaeltacht . It was the best time of my life !! I came from Andersonstown West Belfast. My people were from Donegal originally. The mountain in the background of the last scene is Mount Errigal. They are the salt of the Earth.

    • @balor7
      @balor7 6 месяцев назад

      Where is that village? Never heard of it.

    • @gerardfriel5354
      @gerardfriel5354 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@balor7 Dunlewey, probably.

    • @seanrm
      @seanrm 3 месяца назад

      Some of my cousins made the same move from Andersonstown (Glen Crescent) to Donegal in the 70's and stayed there.

  • @DiRtYLaWs2007
    @DiRtYLaWs2007 Год назад +28

    My Grandad was from Donegal. William Byers 1926 - 1996

    • @carolinegodden4364
      @carolinegodden4364 Год назад +3

      Did your Grandad have some old sepia pictures that were interesting or funny stories to tell?
      Caroline x Melbourne Victoria Australia 🇦🇺 STRAYA SOUTHERN Cross ➕ Southern HEMISPHERE

  • @desmo9159
    @desmo9159 Месяц назад +3

    Hard working , God fearing , beautiful people that made Ireland great

  • @11UncleBooker22
    @11UncleBooker22 Год назад +37

    "We come from county Donegal where we eat our potatoes skin and all." ... said by my great grandfather in America.

    • @seanrm
      @seanrm 3 месяца назад +2

      Do they not choke ye?
      Na... Nat atall.

  • @edvinsandor9115
    @edvinsandor9115 7 месяцев назад +6

    Respect to those people ,living in hard conditions,never sworing ,only working👍🇱🇺

  • @cbrider726
    @cbrider726 Месяц назад +1

    Donegal is the most stunning part of the country .I worked in Donegal for two years and simlpy loved it. The people are hard working and very proud of where they come from. Kind and very much family focused . Love them all . 👍👍👍

  • @memofromessex
    @memofromessex 2 месяца назад +5

    Makes me proud of my Irish heritage.

  • @eileenmacdougall8945
    @eileenmacdougall8945 Год назад +14

    My Grandparents, Michael Doherty and Sabina O'Keefe were born there about 1890.. ish. It must be beautiful.

    • @carolinegodden4364
      @carolinegodden4364 Год назад +3

      I have been to Ireland 🇮🇪 only the south, though. The people I meet here, in Australia 🇦🇺 from the north of Ireland are lovely people with great stories of their heritage. Caroline x Melbourne Victoria Australia 🇦🇺 STRAYA SOUTHERN Cross ➕ Southern HEMISPHERE

  • @DannyBhoy88
    @DannyBhoy88 8 месяцев назад +9

    Went to our family farm in mountcharles every year as a kid, I adored it. Went back recently and was pretty sad at the changes. No pubs on the main street when there used to be at least 10, and few people about. Very expensive villas dotted around. Our farm was demolished to make way for the New motorway between donegal and leterkenny, bitterly disappointing.

    • @paddymurphy-oconnor8255
      @paddymurphy-oconnor8255 3 месяца назад

      Yeah and the country is ruined with foreigners mostly from the 3rd World.

    • @user-fh1rz1uq6c
      @user-fh1rz1uq6c Месяц назад

      Sadly, that is the nature of life, everything changes and "moves on".

  • @crappymeal
    @crappymeal Год назад +23

    ive worked with many a man from there in central london digging small tunnels (headings) funny old bunch, hard workers and hard drinkers, quiet but with good wit, decent blokes

    • @Greenwillow
      @Greenwillow Год назад

      Now these men would be White Collar workers and it is east europeans doing the job. I suppose.

    • @crappymeal
      @crappymeal Год назад +7

      @@Greenwillow the younger guys are in management or easier jobs, the older fellas are still in the tunnels or retired now, i remember watching 60+ year old men struggling in the mud whilst us 30 year olds watched due to assigned duties, tough old blokes they were

  • @Thunderpuddle
    @Thunderpuddle Год назад +43

    All the houses are warm, tidy and well kept. Love those tough hardy ladies.
    What's not shown is the fathers in the UK seeing signs in boarding houses and Pubs saying 'no Irish'.

    • @carolinegodden4364
      @carolinegodden4364 Год назад +3

      Wow, that's sad, was not aware of that. Thanks Caroline x Melbourne Victoria Australia 🇦🇺 STRAYA

    • @Thunderpuddle
      @Thunderpuddle Год назад +4

      @@carolinegodden4364 It wasn't everywhere in the UK or common as so many people have Irish ancestry, like myself. But my Nan ran a guest house in the 60s/70s/80s and she said many B and Bs, wouldn't allow 'Black's or Irish'.. in the 60s. She did and so did her mates who also owned B and Bs, because they weren't a racist or anti Irish.

    • @patrickbradley7360
      @patrickbradley7360 10 месяцев назад +1

      This is true, My father arrived in Birmingham in 1958 and most of the lodging houses/B&B had signs up 'No Irish, No Blacks , No Dogs allowed'

    • @Thunderpuddle
      @Thunderpuddle 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@patrickbradley7360 My English Nan and my Polish Grandad ran a B&B in Hampshire, and they were one of the few that welcomed Irish, Black's.. but she drew the line at pets. She said they were some of the best customers.

    • @danmcg4363
      @danmcg4363 9 месяцев назад

      Yes very true. No blacks or Irish need apply. Plenty of those signs up In the 1980s

  • @justlooking4771
    @justlooking4771 9 месяцев назад +14

    That is EXACTLY the spot where my DNA was traced to. Exactly. I did (2) DNA tests and they both said the same.
    My family emigrated to the United States with the last name “Rathbone”, now “Rathbun”. Wow. Absolutely incredible to see this. Thank you!

    • @kilcar
      @kilcar 8 месяцев назад +1

      Almost everyone is ultimately related in regions of Dinegal

  • @SeymourClevage
    @SeymourClevage Год назад +42

    Through fear of missing out I feel I should moan like hell about this video like everyone else is but to be honest I just sat and enjoyed it for what it was.

  • @maggiesamuels2937
    @maggiesamuels2937 Месяц назад +1

    My Dad came from Killybegs in Donegal nearly the end of the Ww11 and worked on the land in east sussex where he Met my mum who was in the land army they got married and moved to Brighton East Sussex where they stayed till the both died.♥️ Our surname was Dowds.

  • @muttlee9195
    @muttlee9195 Год назад +8

    Bless Ireland ❤️ any Quinn’s out there?

  • @RainbowSunshineRain
    @RainbowSunshineRain Год назад +7

    Wonderful people 💖

  • @seanogallchoir3237
    @seanogallchoir3237 Год назад +3

    Thank you,

  • @davedogge2280
    @davedogge2280 Год назад +12

    2:19 She should have been Rocky's trainer in the first movie.

  • @cayminlast
    @cayminlast Год назад +8

    There was a young man from Donegal, who went to a fancy dress ball, he thought he'd risk it and go as a biscuit, but a dog ate him up in the hall.

    • @themadplotter
      @themadplotter Месяц назад +1

      There was a man from Donegal, who only had one ball, he said it doesn’t matter, I’ve got strong batter and that’s why there’s 6 kids an all.

  • @McElhinney65
    @McElhinney65 8 месяцев назад

    Great video.

  • @EannaWithAFada
    @EannaWithAFada 4 месяца назад +4

    Things have changed so much since then not in Donegal, Donegal still looks like this, but the rest of the world has changed so much!

    • @mjw12345
      @mjw12345 2 месяца назад

      "still looks like this" - expect it should, no earthquakes, tsunamis...If you are referring to way of life - are you aware Arranmore is a 5G Digital Hub now? Featured in the NYT, Arranmore has had a large influx of Ukrainian refugees. National Parks now, an airport voted the most beautiful in the world, new Third-Level institutions...not to mention the Irish language beginning to thrive again...a tourist mecca for the well-healed, several high tech multinations, close to full employment. The usual stuff - atrocious public transport (Derry -Donegal railway shut down 1960s), hospital, GP wait times...

  • @jeepy8067
    @jeepy8067 Год назад +10

    So interesting and so different to life today.

  • @movinon1242
    @movinon1242 Год назад +9

    To learn more of life was like in Donegal of old, read the works of early 20th century Donegal writer Patrick MacGill.
    To get a heart-wrenching insight into what life was like at the very last days of Britain's rule over Ireland, pick up (free digital versions online if you search), his novels _Children of the Dead End_ and _The Rat Pit_
    The two are companion works that detail, from different perspectives, the fates of a young Donegal man and a woman driven from their homes by murderous poverty.
    You will come to understand why the Donegallers of that time were renowned for their roughness

    • @flipper2392
      @flipper2392 Год назад +2

      Footprints through the Rosses is another good read if you can get hold of it. Unfortunately I lent mine and never got it back. It isn't a story, more a diary of life at the time.

    • @LM-pm2ir
      @LM-pm2ir Год назад +4

      The Rat Pit is a magnificent book.

  • @williamgunderson7365
    @williamgunderson7365 8 месяцев назад +3

    My great-grandmother’s last name was Crossin. Her great grandfather was John Crossin, born in Churchill in Donegal in 1802. That dna 🧬 apparently trickled down to me as 23andMe listed Donegal as a region of Ireland 🇮🇪 that I share a close association with. I’d like to visit the land my ancestors lived in one day. During my early life I had no idea I had any links to Ireland at all.

    • @canesacahar
      @canesacahar 4 месяца назад +1

      There are still Crossan's ( spelt with an a) in that general area. Most likely you are related. If you are interested try a free site called "Ireland Reaching Out" who could research your ancestors.

  • @vercingetorixwulf9298
    @vercingetorixwulf9298 Год назад +11

    Fantastic

    • @Greenwillow
      @Greenwillow Год назад +1

      What’s fantastic about a patronising video by the BBC about rural Ireland?🤔

    • @vercingetorixwulf9298
      @vercingetorixwulf9298 Год назад +5

      @@Greenwillow ...... I hate the bbc. It's fantastic because I loved looking at the land. The pretty school girls, all older than me now. And their women. The building skills of the lads. A friend of mine in BM in Connaught her mother came from Donegal. She loved her mum and did her accent which sounded funny to her. She did respectfully of course. So linguistically it was a treasure to hear. That's why I though it fantastic ....... go ráibh máith ágát ........ Modiģ .......

  • @benhur1959
    @benhur1959 3 месяца назад

    My grandparents on my mother's side were similar to this up to the early 1970,s in Co. Longford. Have to admit my childhood days there fantastic, learned some necessary lifeskills that young people today sadly haven't got.

  • @Dan4CW
    @Dan4CW 4 месяца назад

    I googled County Donegal because my grandfather is from here (1902 - 1953). The women at 2:45 looks so much like my grandmother, but grandmother was from Tryone.

  • @Ephesians5-14
    @Ephesians5-14 Год назад +5

    I love they focused on the women. "Don't complain much..." I feel so convicted.

  • @MrResearcher122
    @MrResearcher122 Год назад +8

    That pretty n shy Mrs Gallagher looks like young Queen Elizabeth II

  • @dextercool
    @dextercool Год назад +19

    Nobody in Ireland has ever called it Eire (despite it being an official name). It’s the Republic of Ireland.

    • @vercingetorixwulf9298
      @vercingetorixwulf9298 Год назад +2

      People I type to type back Éire. And a little Gaelic also

    • @user-td4do3op2d
      @user-td4do3op2d Год назад +14

      …. People who speak Irish do.
      The people in the video most likely all spoke Irish as a first language. Arranmore (Árainn Mhór) is still an Irish (“Gaelic”) speaking area.

    • @TurfShifter
      @TurfShifter Год назад +9

      English government made it policy to never say Ireland when refering to the south. It changed policy at some point but can't remember when. Hence the guy using Eire as this was the BBC.

    • @dextercool
      @dextercool Год назад

      Of course barring Irish speakers but I meant when speaking English.

    • @brianboru7684
      @brianboru7684 Год назад +5

      @@dextercool Actually the nominative Éire was replaced by the dative Éirinn in native speech. That's why you have "Erin go Bragh", and Ireland referred to as Erin in songs.

  • @komodosp
    @komodosp Год назад +2

    "Outside the frontier"! 😅

  • @josephhenry4725
    @josephhenry4725 10 месяцев назад +3

    I have long lost genealogy with Donnegal but in this video i recognise my own. God bless.

  • @BrianOh-uc3gm
    @BrianOh-uc3gm 6 дней назад

    Tough life

  • @bombski5657
    @bombski5657 Год назад +31

    This video just goes to show how English centric media in the UK works. The twee music and some of the clueless questions. I'd love to say it's changed but I don't think it has.

    • @CianODonnell
      @CianODonnell Год назад

      Thanks to the Catholic Church, and consecutive government isolationist polices, Ireland was indeed a repressed and backward shithole for most of the 20th century.

    • @ip5799
      @ip5799 Год назад

      it’s absolutely changed lol

    • @bombski5657
      @bombski5657 Год назад +2

      @@ip5799id agree its changed in other ways but not in respect to its attitudes towards current and former parts of the U.K.

    • @Harry-fk5of
      @Harry-fk5of Год назад +6

      I think that was the style of the times, it's not just English-centric media that used twee music to depict the life of the times

    • @swaythegod5812
      @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад +1

      he purposely went to most undeveloped part of donegal in 1960s an island off the coast of donegal that’s how ridiculous this is
      He purposely did not want to show the developed parts what a disingenuous snob

  • @Shane-ln5zz
    @Shane-ln5zz Год назад +4

    Very little has changed when it comes to its exports

  • @themadplotter
    @themadplotter Месяц назад

    “To England” shows the forth bridges 😂

  • @johnq4951
    @johnq4951 Год назад +15

    He's bad at geography, Donegal is one of three Ulster counties in the Republic.

    • @TheLastAngryMan01
      @TheLastAngryMan01 3 месяца назад +2

      He also seems to be claiming that the Protestants have disappeared. Must not have seen East Donegal at all…

  • @garyproffitt5941
    @garyproffitt5941 Год назад +3

    The green is greener with intelligent Ireland ✔

  • @Thomas-yr9ln
    @Thomas-yr9ln Год назад +2

    Wish I lived were the grass was green year round.

    • @nickharvey7233
      @nickharvey7233 Год назад +1

      In Donegal, the grass is often straw coloured or a russet brown for much of the year. Very beautiful, but most of the County is nothing like the stereotypical image of lush, rich, green pastureland that many have of the "Emerald" Isle.

    • @elliotmcdonagh1776
      @elliotmcdonagh1776 6 месяцев назад +1

      also it’s not really grass,it’s a mix of bog cotton,heather and rushes

  • @DrPhil-pw2to
    @DrPhil-pw2to Год назад +6

    We survived 👊🏻

  • @jasonayres
    @jasonayres Год назад +5

    (9:15) "Going away has been a tradition here-for years, and years, and years.."
    (Spoiler alert: Many people went away.)

  • @pifflepockle
    @pifflepockle Год назад +9

    The greatest women in the world

    • @RainbowSunshineRain
      @RainbowSunshineRain Год назад +1

      Such wonderful women and men lived all around the world, in rural areas.
      The city has ruined our values.

  • @ExplainAndSummarize
    @ExplainAndSummarize 3 месяца назад +1

    "The men of Donegal don't come home to drink mountain dew until they begin to roar and beat their wife"....WHAT?! Wild generation of people?! Holy ****

  • @TheChromaKid
    @TheChromaKid Год назад +40

    Incredible how hard this presenter is trying to make it seem like a sad, upsetting uneducated life and every single person in this clip is just clashing with his bias entirely

    • @Greenwillow
      @Greenwillow Год назад +4

      @@Mickyway How is this 4:44 respectful🤔

    • @pifflepockle
      @pifflepockle Год назад +3

      @@Mickyway It defo is. This video has popped up on this channel a few times recently. Incredibly condescending

    • @pifflepockle
      @pifflepockle Год назад +2

      @@Greenwillow I’d make a complaint but time’s almost up for little England

    • @pifflepockle
      @pifflepockle Год назад

      @DnB and Psy Production Yes

    • @swaythegod5812
      @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад +4

      he purposely went to most undeveloped part of donegal in 1960s an island off the coast of donegal that’s how ridiculous this is
      He purposely did not want to show the developed parts what a disingenuous snob

  • @williamscott2703
    @williamscott2703 Год назад +2

    Many,thanks,for,these,archives
    But,please,don't,keep,them,buried
    Get,them,out,for,all,,too,see

  • @philthycat1408
    @philthycat1408 9 дней назад

    Donkey could do with a hoof trim.

  • @rosegreensummer
    @rosegreensummer 6 месяцев назад +4

    iz it me or are all the children really, really pretty?

    • @HuHWhat-yi8cp
      @HuHWhat-yi8cp 3 месяца назад

      @Rose. I noticed that too ! ❤

  • @balor7
    @balor7 6 месяцев назад +2

    They never mentioned the eviction of the people of Donegal by the English that scattered them across the globe.

  • @roslaighleis9296
    @roslaighleis9296 2 месяца назад

    Some of these 'irish chaps' did well, longer term. The Irishman can be tamed. He has a rambunctious character and a love of family .

  • @strummer6642
    @strummer6642 Год назад +4

    It's not pronounced Donnygall Trevor, it's Dhún na nGall, with a "u" not an "o"

  • @cambs0181
    @cambs0181 Месяц назад

    Simpler times.

  • @niallsheehan474
    @niallsheehan474 8 месяцев назад +1

    At least they were spared becoming second class citizens in NI.

  • @matthewbland8765
    @matthewbland8765 Год назад +3

    "Air-eh"

  • @adogcalledkat9858
    @adogcalledkat9858 Месяц назад

    Sad to see the government turn on its own people..how times have changed.

  • @johnmc3862
    @johnmc3862 Год назад +5

    Donnygawl.

  • @swaythegod5812
    @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад +2

    he purposely went to most undeveloped part of donegal in 1960s an island off the coast of donegal that’s how ridiculous this is
    He purposely did not want to show the developed parts what a disingenuous snob

  • @sirdudleynightshade8747
    @sirdudleynightshade8747 8 месяцев назад

    A safer place in those days. Sad.

  • @user-cs7nx6dm1q
    @user-cs7nx6dm1q 2 месяца назад

    interesting how peaceful and honourable these communities were without any diversity present. even with absent father's the sons don't start stabbing every innocent bystander they can get too.

    • @mjw12345
      @mjw12345 2 месяца назад

      'without any diversity' - plenty diversity now and very welcome. A small influx of Ukrainians, mainly women, children. Well heeled knackers from Dublin, others attracted now that Arranmore is a 5G Digital Hub. No stabbings - hoping the knackers don't bring their bad habits there.

  • @Saoirse1921
    @Saoirse1921 2 месяца назад +1

    This is brutish (british for those who cannot see) propaganda at its best - full of _____ (insert appropriate expletive to suit taste) . Trying to diminish the locals, who were hard working family people trying their best as a family to get ahead (and the numpty presenter is ignoring that Donegal was 1 of 3 counties that survived occupation in Ulster after the war of independence,, not the only one).
    Great to see that the women interviewed and the Headmaster all gave a great account of their area and that they held their grace not to remind that xyz so and so (numpty presenter) that the plight of the people in Donegal at that time was solely due to the brutish occupation for generations that had ruined the economic prospects of the whole Island for their own gain.
    The brutish government is now reaping their just deserts. And this numpty presenter would be long in his lead lined sarcophagus.

  • @phax71
    @phax71 28 дней назад

    Best people you’ll meet on this planet. Relatives in Donegal (I’m born n bred UK) but would move in a heartbeat to Ireland…

  • @declantiberiuskelly1263
    @declantiberiuskelly1263 7 месяцев назад +2

    If Ireland hadn't been invaded by england (I've never proper-cased this word) it would been amazing to see what we could have done, maybe we are seeing this now.

    • @voiceofreason2674
      @voiceofreason2674 6 месяцев назад +1

      Its too late all the kingly Irish left for America and the people who stayed are the peasants. it's why the modern Irish republic has no qualms being a servant to the worlds hyper wealthy. A discount switzerland if you will.

    • @Take_Me_Back_To_The_1980s
      @Take_Me_Back_To_The_1980s 3 месяца назад

      And if the Irish had been successful with their invasions of England in 937 & 1487 the Irish may have had an empire of their own but to the victor belong the spoils. In the 21st century Ireland is becoming a dumping ground for Africans & muslims like many European countries

  • @TheConorsmithusa
    @TheConorsmithusa Год назад +5

    he butchered the pronouncing of donegal

  • @billyalexander5645
    @billyalexander5645 Год назад +4

    Before this it's amazing that anyone had kids back then because life was so bad, why would you want to bring children into that suffering.

    • @00bcls
      @00bcls Год назад +1

      Well, for starters, there was no form of birth control allowed by the Catholic Church.

    • @billyalexander5645
      @billyalexander5645 Год назад +2

      @DnB and Psy Production it's not a modern idea it's actually a very old idea but the common person never thought that way but many philosophers did, people had children back when life was so hard because the Bible told them to be fruitful and multiply, and they also thought heaven was real, so any suffering they have in life would be dwarfed compared to the infinite pleasure of a heavenly afterlife.
      Most people back then where barely surviving, they didn't have time to sit around and consider abstract ideas.
      Most people have children because they're selfish and just want a cute baby, but don't consider the suffering that will happen to the child in its life.

    • @carolinegodden4364
      @carolinegodden4364 Год назад +5

      L O V E is why.
      The ANCIENTS had babies/ children in some very harsh living conditions.
      The Irish are ANCIENT GOD MEN & WOMEN and their music 🎶 SONGS TELL of their ORIGINS

    • @smhorse
      @smhorse 3 месяца назад

      You could look at the way the world seems to be going now, and ask much the same question.

  • @markanthonymcnally5272
    @markanthonymcnally5272 11 месяцев назад +1

    begorrah begosh- English imperialism and bigotry to the fore.....

  • @iceetmarne3571
    @iceetmarne3571 Год назад +6

    Very conflicted with this one. Xenophobic... sure, Old school... sure. Happy... 50/50

    • @kileyfitzgerald6792
      @kileyfitzgerald6792 Год назад +3

      It’s xenophobic not racist. They are the same race.

    • @swaythegod5812
      @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад +2

      he purposely went to most undeveloped part of donegal in 1960s an island off the coast of donegal that’s how ridiculous this is
      He purposely did not want to show the developed parts what a disingenuous snob

    • @iceetmarne3571
      @iceetmarne3571 4 месяца назад +1

      @@kileyfitzgerald6792 your right. It expressed what I wanted to say though.

    • @iceetmarne3571
      @iceetmarne3571 4 месяца назад +1

      @@kileyfitzgerald6792 I'll edit it.

  • @heretictom
    @heretictom Год назад +6

    His weird religious rant at the beginning is weird as

    • @chunksloth
      @chunksloth Год назад +1

      BBC anti-Catholic bias. He was clearly trying to paint a completely fake picture of Irish Catholics endlessly breeding and creating poverty.
      In reality, Ireland's population is the same as it was 150 years ago while England's has grown 6 fold.

    • @00bcls
      @00bcls Год назад +3

      He's just repeating what the Catholic Church was telling us back then. Every child was a blessing to it's mother etc etc

    • @swaythegod5812
      @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад

      he purposely went to most undeveloped part of donegal in 1960s an island off the coast of donegal that’s how ridiculous this is
      He purposely did not want to show the developed parts what a disingenuous snob

  • @JohnStanton-ws5co
    @JohnStanton-ws5co Год назад +10

    Wow, the English bias and racism is thick in this...

    • @swaythegod5812
      @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад +2

      he purposely went to most undeveloped part of donegal in 1960s an island off the coast of donegal that’s how ridiculous this is
      He purposely did not want to show the developed parts what a disingenuous snob

  • @JosephStealin
    @JosephStealin Год назад +15

    Women these day moaning that can’t work and raise their children 😂

    • @terriealabama7612
      @terriealabama7612 Год назад +3

      I bet Joseph does neither.

    • @kileyfitzgerald6792
      @kileyfitzgerald6792 Год назад +2

      Seems like just the women that know you…. Must be you that makes them so miserable.

    • @RainbowSunshineRain
      @RainbowSunshineRain Год назад +2

      Now there’s the fulltime job on top of taking care of the house.
      Plus the helping family and community is missing.

    • @JosephStealin
      @JosephStealin Год назад

      @@RainbowSunshineRain yes women have been sold a lie when they are told that they have been liberated…straight in to the workplace.
      Now wages have halved and both men and women have to work and subcontract child care.
      Yay feminism!

  • @JB-yw8ot
    @JB-yw8ot 6 месяцев назад +3

    Ghastly forced "BBC" accent, and "Eire"....yeugh. Glad that's all gone.

  • @danmcg4363
    @danmcg4363 9 месяцев назад +2

    A Donegal man once knocked at my door in Westmeath & said ah your not local judging by my Dublin accent I said no & ye don’t sound local yourself. ” No I’m from Donegal where the men are men & the sheep are afraid “ he said proudly 😂😂😂

    • @swaythegod5812
      @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад

      Dubs are more like inbred dogs and
      pale bootlickers pigeons and vermin are quite afraid they love having a go I heard the love pigs. The most tho since they can’t speak properly it’s a miracle they can string a word together 😂😂😂

  • @Ludydobry
    @Ludydobry Год назад +1

    it looks like a back end of the back end.... the Irish really must be happy their country changed so much, this looks so sad...

    • @RainbowSunshineRain
      @RainbowSunshineRain Год назад +7

      It’s nothing sad about their lives, only about the limited view of the city people.

    • @Ludydobry
      @Ludydobry Год назад

      ​@@RainbowSunshineRain limited view ? I was born in a village in Croatia, lived there for 6 years and the biggest struck of luck i had in my life was when my parents moved to a city . People in the village might be happy, but just because they dont know any better.

    • @swaythegod5812
      @swaythegod5812 4 месяца назад

      he purposely went to most undeveloped part of donegal in 1960s an island off the coast donegal that’s how ridiculous this is

    • @Daniel-OConnell
      @Daniel-OConnell 4 месяца назад +2

      Happiness index says otherwise. Life was more simple, safer and in many ways most people were content with their lot. Ireland 2023 is great for some, not so for many.

    • @TheLastAngryMan01
      @TheLastAngryMan01 3 месяца назад +1

      @@LudydobryDepends. My grandparents grew up in the Irish countryside, still grow their own food in their late 80s, are well integrated in their own community. Different strokes for different folks.