


Pádraig Fhia Ó Mathúna
3K posts

@PatrickJMahone1
Staraí, scríbhneoir, oifigeach inniúlachta ag @fisanphobail: 'The Fenian Empire' out with @NYUpress in June 2026






Avec une cruauté inouïe, des soldats israéliens se relaient pour passer à tabac un jeune palestinien près du camp de « Qalandia », au nord de Jérusalem occupée. C'est ça la conception occidentale du "droit d'Israël à se défendre"










Education Minister @paulgivan visited Ofek School in the Jerusalem District today to learn more about Israel’s innovative approaches to gifted education and inclusive learning. The Minister engaged in discussions with Principal Racheli Yitzhak, along with representatives of the Israeli Ministry of Education, teachers and students. 🔗Find out more: education-ni.gov.uk/news/paul-giva…

Sula rachaidh tú amach ar oíche Shamhna, tar chuig seoladh ár suíomh gréasáin úr! Mol lárnach digiteach, áit a bhfuil achan eolas maidir le seirbhísí, imeachtaí agus nuacht na Gaeilge in Iarthar Bhéal Feirste! Dé hAoine, 31ú Deireadh Fómhair 4.00 - Aonach an Oireachtais ICC








1998: "The Agreement commits the British Government to take resolute action to promote the language, to facilitate and encourage the use of the language in speech and writing in public..." 2025: 👇👇👇 cc: @NIOgov @hilarybennmp @SimonHarrisTD @MichealMartinTD

There is no equivalence between Irish and English. The former is a hobby & a language spoken by a tiny minority of people, all of whom also speak English as their first language. If the logic is that a secondary language requires equivalence with the main spoken language, then Polish, Romanian, Chinese etc (all of which have a far higher proportion of speakers in NI than Irish) must also be given equal prominence with the main language. Obviously, this would be dismissed as ridiculous, so why then is Irish language to be elevated to equal status with the main language of the entire British Isles (inc the Republic of Ireland) as a matter of “equality”? Surely to elevate Irish, but not the other minority languages spoken in NI (much more than Irish) would be to deny equality to those other languages? You see, it doesn’t make sense. It’s a fallacy cloaked in nationalist supremacist buzzwords.