Pog mo thoin
Day 2
Volunteers are expected to wage a military war of liberation against a numerically
superior force. This involves the use of arms and explosives. Firstly the use of arms.
When volunteers are trained in the use of arms they must fully understand that guns are
dangerous, and their main purpose is to take human life, in other words to kill people, and
volunteers are trained to kill people. It is not an easy thing to take up a gun and go out to
kill some person without strong convictions or justification. The Army, its motivating
force, is based upon strong convictions which bonds the Army into one force and before
any potential volunteer decides to join the Army he must have these strong convictions.
Convictions which are strong enough to give him confidence to kill someone without
hesitation and without regret. Again all people wishing to join the Army must fully
realise that when life is being taken, that very well could mean their own. If you go out to
shoot soldiers or police you must fully realise that they too can shoot you. Life in an
underground army is extremely harsh and hard, cruel and disillusioning at times. So
before any person decides to join the Army he should think seriously about the whole
thing.
The nationhood of all Ireland has been an accepted fact for more than 1,000 years and has
been recognised internationally as a fact. Professor Edmund Curtis, writing of Ireland in
800 AD says that 'she was the first nation North of the Alps to produce a whole body of
literature in her own speech', and he is told how the Danes were driven out or assimilated
by a people 'whose civilisation was a shining light throughout Europe', prior to the
Norman invasion of 1169 with which there 'commenced more than 8 centuries of
RELENTLESS AND UNREMITTING WARFARE that has lasted down to this very
day'.
The objective of the 800 years of oppression 'is economic exploitation with the unjustly
partitioned 6 counties remaining Britain's directly controlled old-style colony' and the
South under the 'continuing social, cultural, and economic domination of London'. This
last led to Irish savings being invested in England 'for a higher interest rate' and many
hundreds of thousands of boys and girls from this country had to emigrate to England to
seek the employment which those exported savings created.
Another aspect of economic imperialism at work is the export of raw, unprocessed
materials: live cattle on the hoof, mineral wealth, fish caught by foreign trawlers etc.
Further, from 1958 on, the Free State abandoned all attempts to secure an independent
economy, and brought in foreign multi-national companies to create jobs instead of
buying their skills and then sending them home gradually.
'Africanisation' is the word for this process elsewhere. Control of our affairs in all of
Ireland lies more than ever since 1921 outside the hands of the Irish people.
The logical outcome of all this was the full immersion in the E.E.C. in the 1970's. The
Republican Movement opposed this North and South in 1972 and 1975 and continues to
do so. It is against such political economic power blocks East and West and military
alliances such as NATO and the Warsaw Pact. It stands with our Celtic brothers and the other subject nations of Europe, and with the neutral and non-aligned peoples of the
Third World; it seeks a third, socialist alternative which transcends both Western
individualistic capitalism and Eastern state capitalism, which is in accordance with our
best revolutionary traditions as a peopl