
big al wrote:By The way i know there are a few Irish living In Liverpool. Mostly students who could'nt get the grades to get on to uni course back in Ireland so they Flock to John Moores or Liverpool Hope. I know this because I've met the when walking through Liverpool on a Saturday night. They're usually drunk, chewing on a kebab telling everyone how great Ireland is they always know the first few lines of danny boy. I suspect the term jingo-istic is probably on a common term for a fat socialist lecturer of social policy who uses anecdotes from the television show Bread and see's Liverpool as a city caught up in utter dysporia and melancholoy as dipicted in boys from the black stuff, no doubt he enthuses the Irish students to spend hours in the video library mulling over the socio-psychotic tendancies of Yosser Hughes encourging them to relate it back to James Joyce and his snapshots of 'The Dubliners' Its therefore wonderful to see that Irish literary genus is still being so well utilised on the this Liverpool discussion site words like are really not at all offensive in the proper context which to a new generation of drunken Irish men is anybody that you disagree with. Such a shame that Joyce, Yeats, Wilde or that old drunkard Beckett are'nt around to enjoy such an articulate demonstration of how much better Irishmen are at using the English language than anyone else. Keep up the good work there BHOYS
Pedro Maradona wrote:big al wrote:By The way i know there are a few Irish living In Liverpool. Mostly students who could'nt get the grades to get on to uni course back in Ireland so they Flock to John Moores or Liverpool Hope. I know this because I've met the when walking through Liverpool on a Saturday night. They're usually drunk, chewing on a kebab telling everyone how great Ireland is they always know the first few lines of danny boy. I suspect the term jingo-istic is probably on a common term for a fat socialist lecturer of social policy who uses anecdotes from the television show Bread and see's Liverpool as a city caught up in utter dysporia and melancholoy as dipicted in boys from the black stuff, no doubt he enthuses the Irish students to spend hours in the video library mulling over the socio-psychotic tendancies of Yosser Hughes encourging them to relate it back to James Joyce and his snapshots of 'The Dubliners' Its therefore wonderful to see that Irish literary genus is still being so well utilised on the this Liverpool discussion site words like are really not at all offensive in the proper context which to a new generation of drunken Irish men is anybody that you disagree with. Such a shame that Joyce, Yeats, Wilde or that old drunkard Beckett are'nt around to enjoy such an articulate demonstration of how much better Irishmen are at using the English language than anyone else. Keep up the good work there BHOYS
my god.....you are surely mentally ill!
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