tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1062377461026943825.post9007930540778598186..comments2023-10-19T22:49:15.517+01:00Comments on Ulster's Doomed!: Fair Employment Monitoring Report No. 17Horsemanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16655806346968204169noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1062377461026943825.post-319211428908720082008-07-16T13:30:00.000+01:002008-07-16T13:30:00.000+01:00Unionism is growing within the Catholic Community....Unionism is growing within the Catholic Community. Already, 1 in 4 Catholics are Unionists. How many Protestants are Seperatist (traitors!)? Barely 1 in 20 if that. National reunification is an unfinished business I agree. But that reunification will occur with the 26 republican occupied counties rejoining the United Kingdom. It is only a matter of time! Then, both Ireland and the United Kingdom will be united. The British nation consists of 4 nations: England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales. And there is simply no good reason of most of the Irish nation to remain outside of the Union any longer. Northern Ireland has never been a part of the Republic, so it could hardly reunify with it by leaving the UK, not that it would ever want to! And that would leave the people of the British Isles even more divided than before. Southern Ireland should never have been allowed to have separate from the rest of our country, the fact it was allowed to is why Ireland, and the British Isles are no longer united today. And only the South rejoining the rest of the British Isles in political unity can end the division of both the Irish and British nation. The sooner they wake up to themselves and realise this the better for us all!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1062377461026943825.post-8441138607701219602008-07-15T14:49:00.000+01:002008-07-15T14:49:00.000+01:00Of course, when Catholics become the large bulk of...Of course, when Catholics become the large bulk of the workforce, it will still not necessarily equate to majoritarian green rule. <BR/><BR/>There will be Protestants over 65, more disproportionate to Catholics; however, you need also to consider that with the current work sitting inside the public sector realm, are those in employment going to give it up for something amounting to nothing? And it is likely that will hold down very rewarding jobs, financially; if qualifications dictate speed of progression inside the public sector and Catholics who remain in NI do hold proportionately higher HE qualfications than Protestants then they should be in those 'good' jobs.<BR/><BR/>The key is private investment, private sector proportion of overall employment sector.<BR/><BR/>Your blog is interesting and have enjoyed reading it in as much as Ulster is doomed if the political basis remains as is.<BR/><BR/>Another thing worthy of consideration too working off the EC Workforce report is that, in terms of economic downturn, Protestant counts may deplete quicker than Catholics as it they who on average hold better qualifications so this may help employability in a reduced market.Democratic-Centrehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09848866195325003502noreply@blogger.com