Posted on 07/14/2015 11:11:08 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Always about the optics.
How can someone be deported from their native country?
Anti-Catholic communist propaganda. Right up Zero’s alley.
The Brits probably wanted him gone.
Jim Gralton
(18861945)
James Gralton was born in Effernagh, near Carrick-on-Shannon, Co. Leitrim, the son of a small farmer. He joined the British army as a young man but, refusing to serve in India, deserted. He worked on the Liverpool docks and in the Welsh coalfields, then took a job as a ships stoker and in 1909 settled in New York, where he worked at a variety of jobs. Following the 1916 Rising, and after reading the writings of James Connolly, he established the James Connolly Club in New York.
He returned to Ireland briefly in 1922. The parish hall in his home town was burnt down by the British army as a reprisal for the shooting of an officer, and Gralton organised the building of a new one, called the Pearse-Connolly Hall. It was later taken over by the Free State army.
During the Civil War he returned to New York, but in 1932 he again returned to Ireland, hoping that the advent of a Fianna Fáil government would allow for the development of progressive politics. He joined the Revolutionary Workers Group (forerunner of the CPI) and reopened the Pearse-Connolly Hall, which became the venue for meetings as well as dances; but a combined anti-communist and puritanical witch hunt, in which the parish priest called for the closing of the hall as a den of iniquity, resulted in shots being fired into the hall and an unsuccessful attempt at blowing it up (allegedly by local members of the IRA), and on Christmas Eve, 1932, it was again burnt to the ground.
Under pressure from the Catholic Church, in February 1933 the de Valera government ordered Gralton to be deported as an undesirable alien, but instead of complying he went on the run. The Revolutionary Workers Group organised a defence campaign, but its meetings were attacked by reactionaries, and Gralton was eventually deported in August 1933the only Irish person ever deported from their own country.
Back in New York, Gralton became a trade union organiser and member of the Irish Workers Club. He reprinted James Connollys pamphlets, raised funds for the International Brigades in Spain, and for the remainder of his life was an active member of the Communist Party of the USA.
The girls are getting trained to be the same.
Member of the Communist Party, eh?
obama’s kind of people.
So in the 1700s how did all those Irish folks end up here? They weren't all willing...
bump
Starvation.
Loach, a member of the Socialist Workers Party and the National Council of George Galloways Respect Party, also condemned the British and US governments for supporting Israel.
As British citizens we have to acknowledge our own responsibility. We must condemn the British and US governments for supporting and arming Israel. We must also oppose the terrorist activities of the British and US governments in pursuing their illegal wars and occupations.
-—from a site I just lost the link to...
I mean the wave that preceded the famine. Some of them shipped over from debtor’s prison as servants.
Prisoners of war, as well as common criminals were shipped from the islands to colonies all over the world. They weren’t all Irish but some were.
The kids would be better served by watching ‘I Was a Communist for the FBI’.
From wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penal_transportation
“The number of convicts transported to North America is not verified although it has been estimated to be 50,000 by John Dunmore Lang and 120,000 by Thomas Keneally. The majority of prisoners were taken in battle from Ireland and Scotland and went originally to New England. Some were sold as slaves to the Southern states” [before the Revolution]
Based on a true story. Dana Andrews did the radio version, and Frank Lovejoy did the movie version.
Way too late to save that pair.
Obama must REALLY love his kids to go to the trouble to rent this classic for them to watch!
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