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PostPosted: Tue Jan 21, 2014 4:40 pm 
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Blackpool you are dong an excellent job here in stating the facts heres 2 more that might be helpfull

Ireland at the time was occupied by a foreign power.

All the Farms were in the hands of the invaders or their acolytes.

Clearly Grandad is either winding you up or displaying utter contempt for human life.....................either action is a clear indication of his personna :evil: c..nut :badgrin:

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 21, 2014 5:21 pm 
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trotskys twin wrote:
Blackpool you are dong an excellent job here in stating the facts heres 2 more that might be helpfull

Ireland at the time was occupied by a foreign power.

All the Farms were in the hands of the invaders or their acolytes.

Clearly Grandad is either winding you up or displaying utter contempt for human life.....................either action is a clear indication of his personna :evil: c..nut :badgrin:

Obviously "trying" to wind up,even he couldn't be that dense.There again.............


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 11:46 pm 
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grandad wrote:
Clearly in the countries where children are starving, they can't produce enough food. So if they had less children then there would be less of them to starve.


if they werent shagging day and night maybe they could grow more

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 11:47 pm 
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blackpool wrote:
trotskys twin wrote:
Blackpool you are dong an excellent job here in stating the facts heres 2 more that might be helpfull

Ireland at the time was occupied by a foreign power.

All the Farms were in the hands of the invaders or their acolytes.

Clearly Grandad is either winding you up or displaying utter contempt for human life.....................either action is a clear indication of his personna :evil: c..nut :badgrin:

Obviously "trying" to wind up,even he couldn't be that dense.There again.............


do the maths

food for 5 wont feed 500.....

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 11:49 pm 
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blackpool wrote:
Your ignorance of what it was really about doesn't surprise me.Have a read up on it when you've more than a minute to consult wiki or the mail.Read about the "poor law amendment" and the conservative c unts of tha time.Don't make a bigger tit of yourself than you allready have.
In 1846 to 1851 almost a million people died and even more emigrated because of the famine. Out of a population of eight million before the famine, almost one and a half million people emigrated. Many of those who emigrated, climbed abroad ships that were so unsafe they were commonly referred to as 'coffin ships.' Many more died en route to America and Canada. The poor had to fit in the spaces they could find and many ships were overcrowded and rampant with disease. It is estimated that some 100,000 people died en route to North America. The famine left a legacy of emigration that continued until recently. As many as seventy million people worldwide can claim Irish decent (Irish Diaspora). This means that not only did the famine effect Ireland, it also shaped the face of many nations.


well copied! =D> =D> =D> =D> =D> what was the source?

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 30, 2014 11:55 pm 
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wannabeeahack wrote:

well copied! =D> =D> =D> =D> =D> what was the source?


not sure, but it could have been my great grandfather - the only reason we came to the mainland was to avoid starvation - incidentally, Ireland was exporting food whilst the population were starving ](*,)

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PostPosted: Fri Jan 31, 2014 10:35 am 
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wannabeeahack wrote:
blackpool wrote:
Your ignorance of what it was really about doesn't surprise me.Have a read up on it when you've more than a minute to consult wiki or the mail.Read about the "poor law amendment" and the conservative c unts of tha time.Don't make a bigger tit of yourself than you allready have.
In 1846 to 1851 almost a million people died and even more emigrated because of the famine. Out of a population of eight million before the famine, almost one and a half million people emigrated. Many of those who emigrated, climbed abroad ships that were so unsafe they were commonly referred to as 'coffin ships.' Many more died en route to America and Canada. The poor had to fit in the spaces they could find and many ships were overcrowded and rampant with disease. It is estimated that some 100,000 people died en route to North America. The famine left a legacy of emigration that continued until recently. As many as seventy million people worldwide can claim Irish decent (Irish Diaspora). This means that not only did the famine effect Ireland, it also shaped the face of many nations.


well copied! =D> =D> =D> =D> =D> what was the source?

Stick to something you know,is there anything ?


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PostPosted: Sat Feb 01, 2014 1:55 pm 
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blackpool wrote:
wannabeeahack wrote:
blackpool wrote:
Your ignorance of what it was really about doesn't surprise me.Have a read up on it when you've more than a minute to consult wiki or the mail.Read about the "poor law amendment" and the conservative c unts of tha time.Don't make a bigger tit of yourself than you allready have.
In 1846 to 1851 almost a million people died and even more emigrated because of the famine. Out of a population of eight million before the famine, almost one and a half million people emigrated. Many of those who emigrated, climbed abroad ships that were so unsafe they were commonly referred to as 'coffin ships.' Many more died en route to America and Canada. The poor had to fit in the spaces they could find and many ships were overcrowded and rampant with disease. It is estimated that some 100,000 people died en route to North America. The famine left a legacy of emigration that continued until recently. As many as seventy million people worldwide can claim Irish decent (Irish Diaspora). This means that not only did the famine effect Ireland, it also shaped the face of many nations.


well copied! =D> =D> =D> =D> =D> what was the source?

Stick to something you know,is there anything ?


like plagiarism ?

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