This bit specifically got my attention:
While Catholics were discriminated against by the Stormont civil service they were admitted into the then imperial civil service, run from London. This included the Post Office telephone system, which recruited and trained many Catholics, who became the most sophisticated electricians in Northern Ireland; some of them were in the IRA, whose bomb-makers became the finest of any terrorists in the world, while the loyalists, supposed inheritors of Ulster's great engineering traditions, continued to make what were in essence big fireworks.You want historical irony? You want the sociology of technology? Right there. In a sense, nothing could be more appropriate for a bunch of reactionaries like the UDA than that precisely their aims - making damn sure no taigs got above semi-skilled in the shipyard - were actually sabotaging their military effectiveness. As for so many places up north, the second industrial revolution - electricity, chemicals and all that German stuff - was never particularly welcome.
Which is why, perhaps, this guy may have been more of a threat than I'd otherwise have thought. I mean, who hasn't called John Reid a tyrant? But it's this bit that's more interesting; he's a BT electrician. ISTR the Operation Crevice team were trying to recruit BT linesmen at one point; not just to chop the wires, perhaps.
3 comments:
Myers has built his journalistic reputation on being a useless contrarian arsehole. The sort of fellow who, if you were both standing outside and he told you it was daytime, you'd glance into the sky on the assumption he was shitting you.
For all that, this looks like it might be a fascinating book. I can well believe that it requires exactly his set of, uh, attributes to make a coherent story of the unrelenting fuckedness-upedness of the past few decades in the North.
Myers thinks 1916 was a "war crime/genocide/futile" etc, he's the Mark Steyn of Irish journalism.
War crime - pointlessly provocative.
Genocide - idiot.
Futile - well, yes. Wasn't the Dail of 1918 much more effective than the gungasm at the Dublin GPO?
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