this post was submitted on 23 Apr 2024
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History

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The Easter Rising was an insurrection, mostly in Dublin city, that lasted from April 24th until April 30th 1916.

The insurgents in Dublin amounted to 1,200 men and women from the nationalist militia the Irish Volunteers, the socialist trade union group Irish Citizen Army and the women’s group, Cumman na mBan.

The Irish Volunteers had been founded in 1913 in response to the blocking of Home Rule, or self government for Ireland by the Ulster Volunteers. The Citizen Army (with around 300 members) was formed during the Dublin Lockout of 1913 to protect strikers from the police. James Connolly afterwards directed it towards pursuit of an Irish socialist republic.

The Volunteers split after the outbreak of the First World War into the National Volunteers and the Irish Volunteers.

The National Volunteers, over 120,000 strong, led by Irish Parliamentary Party leader John Redmond, were pledged to support the British war effort and over 30,000 of them joined the British Army. The remaining 13,000 Irish Volunteers, led by Eoin MacNeill, were committed to keep their organisation intact and in Ireland until Home Rule was passed.

The Rising was planned in secret by seven men, mostly of the Irish Republican Brotherhood or IRB, who had formed a “Military Council” to this end just after the outbreak of the First World War. They were, Tom Clarke, Sean McDermott, Patrick Pearse, Thomas MacDonagh, Joseph Plunkett, James Connolly and Eamon Ceannt.

Their plans were not known to the membership of the Volunteers at large or to the leaders of the IRB and Volunteers, Dennis McCullough, Bulmer Hobson and Eoin MacNeill.

They had arranged with the Germans for a large importation of arms to be delivered on Good Friday, April 21st, but this shipment was discovered by the British off Kerry and its cargo lost.

At the last minute, the plans for the Rising were revealed to Eoin MacNeill who tried to call off the rebellion by issuing a “countermanding order”, but actually just postponed the outbreak from Easter Sunday to the next day, Monday.

The insurgents proclaimed an Irish Republic with Pearse as President and Connolly as commander in chief. They occupied positions around Dublin at the General Post Office (GPO), the Four Courts, the South Dublin Union, Boland’s Mill, Stephen’s Green and Jacobs’ biscuit factory.

Over the following week, the British deployed over 16,000 troops, artillery and naval gunboat into the city to suppress the rising. In the week’s fighting, about 450 people were killed and over 2,000 wounded.

The rebels’ headquarters at the GPO was bombarded into surrender, which Patrick Pearse ordered on Saturday, 29th April. However the fiercest fighting took place elsewhere, at Mount Street Bridge, South Dublin Union and North King Street.

There were also risings in county Galway, Enniscorthy in Wexford and Ashbourne in county Meath, but apart from an action at Ashbourne that killed 11 police, these caused little bloodshed.

Sixteen of the rebel leaders were executed, 15 in a two week period after they had surrendered and one, Roger Casement, in August.

Over 3,000 people were arrested after the rebellion and over 1,400 imprisoned. The Rising was not widely supported among the Dublin public and was condemned by the Irish Parliamentary Party and much of nationalist as well as unionist opinion. However, combined with other factors, such as the continued postponement of Home Rule, the growing casualties of the First World War and the threat of conscription, the Rising and its repression helped to increase the strength of the radical nationalists in Sinn Fein.

This party, which had not participated in the rebellion, was adopted as a vehicle by the veterans of the Rising and pledged to withdraw from the Westminster Parliament and set up an Irish one.

Sinn Fein went on to win three by-elections in 1917 and a general election in 1918, leading to their proclamation of an Irish Republic in January 1919 and the start of the Irish War of Independence.

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[–] [email protected] 14 points 6 months ago (3 children)

Wondering if I should keep trying to save money or if I should just buy the stuff I want and say fuck it, not like I'm going to own my own home anyway.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 6 months ago

Yeah idk what I'm saving for. Feel like every year I'll game out what mortgage I can get with my current income and savings and every year is a smaller and smaller proportion of a cheap condo that is uncomfortably far from work.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

it depends on what you want to buy - most physical stuff provides merely fleeting pleasure and then sits around forever gathering dust, and shopping keeps you on capital's world-destroying wheel of desire and consumption. is it stuff you're really going to use?

savings give you options, some ability to say 'no' to stuff or make a change in your circumstances when necessary

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I guess that's what I mean, why not just go for the fleeting pleasures since I don't feel like I have much of a future anyway.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 months ago

surrounding yourself with stuff you barely look at isn't going to make you feel better is my point, try to make it count

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago

Do your best to convert currency into Use values asap. Inflation makes your currency depreciate but the use value of many things will stay the same even if you don't plan on using them right away. Saving currency without a future purchase in mind is waste of value. Keeping an emergency fund is probably a good idea though.