Martin Short

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Martin Short

Martin Short

@MartinShort64

Education Adviser. Previously Primary School Principal. Musician.

Belfast, Ireland Katılım Mayıs 2021
1.3K Takip Edilen195 Takipçiler
Chris Donnelly
Chris Donnelly@chrisadonnelly·
First Holy Communion Mass in St Michael the Archangel Church this morning. My seventh as principal. Always a day of expectation, joy and memories made for children & families that last forever. The job has its downsides, but days like this remind you what it’s all about.
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Beatlemania
Beatlemania@BeatlemaniaUK·
Which Beatle played the final guitar part on “The End”, after Paul sings “the love you make”? #Beatles #TheBeatles
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@AlexKane221b Isn’t it eternally depressing and childish!! The blocking of everything regarding progress is with the DUP but agree, it’s ridiculous that two parties that hate each other are in charge of an executive that has power over school, hospitals etc. Close Stormont.
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Alex.Kane
Alex.Kane@AlexKane221b·
The latest squabble between the DUP and SF doesn’t amount to a hill of beans. The parties despise each other. Full stop. That will not change. The exchanges will intensify between now and the 2027 elections and then resort to the usual levels of contempt. It is what it is.
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@SorchaEastwood I want a referendum so that roads, schools, hospitals may have more resources, standards of living higher, life expectancy higher, pride in a common flag, anthem and soccer team. Instead, we have a mediocre assembly where there is no progress.
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Sorcha Eastwood MP
Sorcha Eastwood MP@SorchaEastwood·
I do sometimes wonder what some of the political class in Northern Ireland would do if there weren't referendums, languages and flags to row over. Half of them might be on the bru and we might have roads that don't resemble the surface of the moon, a semi-functioning health service and some help for small businesses! Absolutely pathetic to be continuing on this punch and judy when people can't pay bills. Wise up and just do what the vast majority here do: live and let live and get on with it!!
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@SorchaEastwood The debate over the constitional position, culture and languages, flags, national identity and individual pride in who and what you are, are important aspects of everyone’s lives. Don’t diminish that!! It’s why there has been conflict over 100s of years.
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@SorchaEastwood Reform will want an independent England. SNP will want Scottish Independence and PC wanting Wales to go it alone. The Union is over. Reform of present set ups is over and today, the people in England, Scotland and Wales have said it loud and clear!!
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Sorcha Eastwood MP
Sorcha Eastwood MP@SorchaEastwood·
A hugely significant day in UK politics no matter where you are. The political landscape has been changing for quite some time and today map was redrawn. But people are united on one thing; change! Where does Northern Ireland fit into all of this? It's clearer than ever to me that while people are talking about Reform the party, we need Reform of Stormont. We don't know what the future holds, but one thing is certain, we need to guard against all eventualities and the last thing we want is to be without a devolved government. We need a robust system that can't collapse. We need to know that whoever is in Govt in Westminster, that we are in charge of our future. No one else can solve or care about our problems apart from us. Reform of Stormont has now just become an absolute essential. We must be able to govern ourselves no matter who is in No 10.
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@SorchaEastwood Sorcha. We need more than reform here. We need people who want to work for the people, make progress. The institutions and GFA have been mis-used and abusrd. Reforms won’t do it. They’ll find ways of being awkward. It needs closed down ans a look at reuniting the country.
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@MaryLouMcDonald Disgraceful to see the scenes tonight about 500 yards from his statue in Twinbrook on the eve of his 45th anniversary. Depressed that what happened was let happen and depressed that I’m writing this on the morning of the 5th May.
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Mary Lou McDonald
Mary Lou McDonald@MaryLouMcDonald·
🇮🇪 Remembering courageous Bobby Sands. 45 years ago today, he died after 66 days on hunger strike. His legacy lights the way forward. Inspires us to finish our national journey - to a United Ireland and 32 county Republic. "I am standing on the threshold of another trembling world. May God have mercy on my soul" Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam
Mary Lou McDonald tweet media
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@PolDeBuitleir @gildernewm It’s so sad Pol that the disgraceful scenes about 500 yards away from Bobby’s statue that brought such shame on our community on the eve if his 45th anniversary!! I’m very depressed this evening.
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Pól DeBuitléir
Pól DeBuitléir@PolDeBuitleir·
45 years ago 100,000 people attended the funeral of IRA volunteer Bobby Sands in West Belfast. He died in the prison hospital Long Kesh after 66 days on hunger strike. By the time of his death he was internationally famous having been elected as MP for Fermanagh South Tyrone.
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@thejournal_ie I watched it on RTE in Belfast. I have a Sky box but not Sky Sports!!!
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TheJournal.ie
TheJournal.ie@thejournal_ie·
Sinn Féin's Pearse Doherty has hit out at the inability of people in the North to watch tonight’s World Cup play-off game against Czechia on RTÉ. Tonight’s game will be streamed on Amazon Prime Video in the North. jrnl.ie/6995636
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@HonestFrank France won the Six Nations on complete merit!! Nothing to do with Ireland or England. I’m s big Ireland fan but France won it fair and square. The World Cup is the big thing!!
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Francis Keogh
Francis Keogh@HonestFrank·
I’m no rugger expert but the showboating in favour of running closer to the posts may have cost England the win and Ireland the title?? #FRAvENG #SixNations
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@SRAikenUUP @SageDespatches The vitriol coming from the UUP and the likes of Jon Burrows and Steve Aiten is appaling. Sniping about the past but yet nobody is allowed to talk about a better future in the shape of constituition change. Let’s talk bread and butter issues and stop being aggressive and nasty.
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Ron wright
Ron wright@ronsterd89·
Based on the entirety of this photograph, what is your best estimation of the year it was taken?
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@PhilipIngMBE @sinnfeinireland @patcullen9 Philip. You really need to think here that your view is not the only view!! What nobody seems to acknowledge is that Sinn Fein, Pat Cullen’s party, has been the majority party in Stormont for quite a while. You wouldn’t think it from the media and the likes of yourself!!
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Sinn Féin
Sinn Féin@sinnfeinireland·
“We don’t need Englishmen to rule us. We can do that for ourselves.” 👏🏻 Powerful words from Pat Cullen MP speaking in Westminster during a debate on the rising support for independence parties across Ireland, Scotland and Wales. @patcullen9
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Stuart Russell
Stuart Russell@Stu_poo·
@ballsdotie Bring back Paddy Jackson, he’d be head and shoulders above any other 10 we have
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Balls.ie
Balls.ie@ballsdotie·
“He wouldn’t normally do that” 🙏🏼 Andy Farrell launched a strong defence of Jack Crowley after his costly late error in Ireland’s win over Italy 🏉
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@DeiniolCarter @ITVSport @ITV Thank God, someone thinks the same as me. I hate the commercialisation of sport!! Have your ads at half-time, not in the middle of a scrum!!
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@adammoursy Who cares what Province the players are from. They’re wearing the green shirt and playing for Ireland. Andy Farrell couldn’t care less what province his players are from. He just picks his best team!! Gibson Park made the difference when he came on.
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Adam Moursy
Adam Moursy@adammoursy·
Ireland would’ve been absolutely screwed today if it wasn’t for the displays from the 3 Ulster lads in the team Comfortably the best players on the pitch for Ireland Who would’ve thought picking players that don’t play for Leinster might’ve worked out positively 🤔🤔🤔 #IREvITA
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Martin Short
Martin Short@MartinShort64·
@DannyDonnelly1 Well said Danny. Robin’s words are heartfelt, genuine and true! The conplete lack of compassion and human empathy, in this place, especially from some politicians, is appalling and, quite frankly, unchristian!! Robin speaks from his experience and the heart and with such dignity
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Danny Donnelly MLA
Danny Donnelly MLA@DannyDonnelly1·
These are incredibly powerful words that describe an unimaginable pain. Families who have lost loved ones should never be told to ‘move on’.
Madden & Finucane Solicitors@madden_finucane

An open letter to Gavin Robinson from Robin Livingstone Dear Gavin, Last Wednesday you advised the families of the Bloody Sunday dead to “move on”. You were speaking after the PPS decided not to prosecute members of the Parachute Regiment for perjury. The families should stop, you added, “the endless pursuit of others”. Although I’ve lost someone close to me in violent and unexpected circumstances, and although I write for a living, I will never if I live to write another billion words come anywhere near to bettering a description of the chest-emptying reality of grief and loss that I heard some years ago. Let me share it with you… “The only relief I get is when I wake up in the morning. There’s a few seconds when you’re still half-asleep, a few more seconds until you’re properly awake, and a few more seconds while you ease into the new day. “Then, you remember…” The woman who spoke those words that I’ve just quoted might like to “move on”, I don’t know. Speaking from my own family’s experience and that of the countless victims I’ve met as I potter towards the end of a long career in journalism, I’d say she would. I don’t know for sure, but why wouldn’t she? Who would choose to start every day with an electric jolt of newly-remembered grief in the heart? Who would choose to sob on hearing a bar of a half-remembered song? Who would choose to be suddenly racked with guilt during a moment of family joy? Who would choose not to open a biscuit tin of old family photos because sorrowful smiles are 99 per cent sorrow and one per cent smile. Your concept of what the Bloody Sunday families are in pursuit of, with its concomitant imperatives of punishment and incarceration, is not one that I recognise. I can’t and don’t as a bereaved relative speak for every name in Lost Lives, that hefty Book of the Dead that’s still as essential to my desk in work as the notebook, phone and keyboard. I can’t and don’t even speak for every member of my family. But I know that what I feel is common coin in the place where grief lives. Like the Bloody Sunday family, my family is in pursuit of justice, in our case for Julie. We probably won’t know what justice is until we get it – or until we get something that feels like it. At this point all I know about the British soldier who shot my sister dead at 14 is that he’s Welsh. I don’t know his name or where he lives. I have not the faintest idea of what he looks like. Heck, I don’t even know if he’s alive. Why don’t I know these things? Simply because the man was never made the subject of the kind of meaningful investigation that would necessitate these things being divulged. What’s more, I don’t particularly want to know his name or where he lives – I don’t know if I have sufficient storage in my emotional hard drive to let him into my life. But if these things are made known as we try to complete the picture of how Julie died and why, then so be it. What I do know, Gavin, is that I don’t want this anonymous Welshman – if indeed he is still alive – to spend a second in jail, never mind long years. What I do know is that the idea of punishing him has never entered my mind. But it goes deeper than that. The man who fired the plastic bullet is likely my age – probably just a little bit older. If, like me, he has children and grandchildren, I hope he loves and enjoys them as much as I do mine. The idea of pursuing him has not only never occurred to me, it is something that I don’t even understand. He is at this point merely a means to an end; as much a part of the drama of Julie’s death as the armoured vehicle and the plastic bullet gun; with more agency, granted, but not much. If he ends up being interviewed I hope it’s on his sofa in Wales and not in a barracks in Belfast. If he ends up being charged I can’t help that, but if he was convicted I’d step forward to ask the judge that he not be jailed, no doubt while your DUP colleagues queued up to get their pictures taken with him and claim him as one of their own. It’s no surprise to me that you fail to understand that people can no more move on from doing right by those they have lost than they can move on from breathing. Why would you? What does surprise me is that you think victims of the British state like the Bloody Sunday families are in “pursuit” of human beings – of “others”. That is a venal and catastrophic misunderstanding of the sacred and immutable nature of a commitment made while standing over a coffin. What they are in pursuit of, Gavin, is not Soldier X, or Y or Z. They are merely old and rusted signposts on the road to their journey’s end. What they are in pursuit of is a time when they can fall asleep at night in the knowledge that they have finally kept a promise they made – spoken or unspoken – to the innocent grey face among the mass cards; to the mother, father, husband, wife, brother, sister, son or daughter they lost. What they are in pursuit of is a time when they can wake up, and alongside the every-morning shock of that moment of re-remembering, feel for the first time a surge of pride in a promise delivered. I don’t know what’s happened to you in the last year or so – maybe a little longer. I specify that time scale because December 2024 was when you crossed the city to get a drive-by picture taken on the Falls Road beside some pro-Palestine graffiti. I don’t think I need to remind you about the extent and nature of the wall art that you passed without comment in your East Belfast constituency to get here, so I won’t mention that except to point out that I don’t remember you ever having your picture taken beside any of it. It struck me forcefully then that this didn’t seem like the kind of stunt that a generally mild-mannered bloke like you would pull. Then last March you again stuck your barrel chest out, thumbed your lapels and issued another stirring message to Loyal Ulster: you were going to instruct your MLAs to “put a marker down” in relation to the Irish language at Grand Central Station. That also didn’t strike me as a Gavin-style move. And in the autumn you got even more in touch with your inner-Jamie by welcoming the Soldier F acquittal on social media not just with the expected comment that it was a “common sense judgement” but with a big old Para flag. And now, in case anyone thought that the Para flag was a slip of your phone thumb, here you are telling the people still trying to get their heads round your Para play to “move on”. The most recent LucidTalk poll shows your party up 1% to 19%, and the Belfast Telegraph was reliably excited enough to suggest that this statistically negligible figure points suggests your party’s “shift to the right” has won back voters. But it’s going to take a hell of a lot more than a single point to suggest that the DUP is back, whatever the unionist papers say. I’ve no doubt that your Palestine picture, your Irish language way cry and now your “move on” exhortation will bring familiar fish to the top in the pool you’re currently fishing in. But you need to drop your line in deeper waters and you need a bigger catch if you’re to move out of your polling teens. And in that sense, it may be you who most needs to move on.

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