Evidence of Irish Catholic mass murder of Protestants is overwhelming too, if you want to play that game.
Looks like the Irish resisted the empire until the 17th (or even 18th) Century, and the potato famine was created to destroy the remains of the old decentralized system of the tuath under British rule.
I propose the way the old world worked was like this:
- Single, united civilization on earth that was governed locally but connected globally. This united civilization later split apart after a cataclysmic event or war (maybe around 1300 AD)
- Afterwards, the local governance did not change, but the connection between the different countries wasn't as good as before, we see development of individual languages, etc.
- no central authority, kings had spiritual functions
- caste system, but fluid
- people were judged by accomplishment and ability
- no money, no banks, no parasitism
- this system, decentralized but united in spirit, could have been called the commonwealth of earth
- The parasitic PTB stole the name commonwealth but perverted everything in order to create a central authority that controls people and enslaves.
- It took a long time to overthrow the old kingdoms because due to their decentralized governance and focus on autonomy and freedom they couldn't simply kill their leaders, they had to slowly destroy the spirit of the entire people
What remains known about the Irish system implies that life in the pre-colonial times was glorious, and doing good things and working hard mattered, for people reaped the fruits of their own labor, and people knew how to resolve conflicts without resorting to a central authority. This implies a completely different approach towards life, and means that people were in touch with themselves, and the people around them. When there is no central arbitrary authority, relationships and life as a whole become meaningful.
The connections between people living together within a small community were like a very dense web, their lifes interwoven in a single destiny, and everyone dependent on everyone else, the biggest fear was being ostracised from the community, for that usually meant total loss of one's reputation and eventually suffering or death.
https://mises.org/library/property-rights-celtic-irish-law-0
https://mises.org/library/what-caused-irish-potato-famine-0
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Túath
Why has Ireland so few trees?![]()
Would Brehons have anything to do with Brahmins perchance?
Meaning the white slaves could no longer meet the demand. All ports and infrastructure gone.
It's interesting that the term 'Tuath' is the very same term as the Tuatha de Dannan (People of Dana) who ruled Ireland in the distant past.
Imo, no. Brahmins were akin to the Druidic Bards.
I wonder if that ties in with the Potato Famine malarkey you mentioned previously? Do you have a source for the enforced indentured servitude business?
In Scotland the similar absence of trees is put down to shipbuilding. However, I favour Felix Noille's theory of the Arctic Circle cataclysm to explain both Ireland and Scotland's lack of trees... Iceland's as well.
As someone else has also mentioned the Great Frost, was no doubt a contributing factor. (Records of this event seem to have survived only in Ireland. If you google 'Great Frost' you will get different ones.):
The "Great Frost" struck Ireland and the rest of Europe between December 1739 and September 1741, indoor temperature values during January 1740 were as low as 10 °F (−12 °C).[1] The one outdoor reading that has survived was stated as "thirty-two degrees of frost", not including the wind chill factor, which was severe. During the ramp up to the crisis in January 1740, the winds and terrible cold intensified, yet barely any snow fell. Ireland was locked into a stable and vast high-pressure system which affected most of Europe, from Scandinavia and Russia to northern Italy, in a broadly similar way. Rivers, lakes, and waterfalls froze and fish died in these first weeks of the Great Frost.
Professor John Sweeney of the Irish Climate Analysis Research Unit (ICARUS) at Maynooth University said the exact cause of the sever winter of 1740-41 remains a mystery.
“A change in solar or volcanic activity is one possible theory,” he said.
Somewhere in the range of 310,000 and 480,000 people, out of the 2.4 million population, are believed to have perished during the extreme weather conditions which swept across the country, between 1739 and 1741, according to the book “Arctic Ireland.”
The frost “remains to this day, the longest period of extreme cold in modern European history.” The Irish population endured "21 months of bizarre weather" that was "without known precedent and defied conventional explanation".
It was shortly after Christmas on December 29, 1739 that the Great Frost began and "introduced a cold so penetrating that liquids froze indoors and ice floes appeared at the river mouths".
The devastation included three ships sinking in Dublin Bay, drowning all on board.
Temperatures plummeted to levels where the rivers Lifffety, Slaney, Boyne and parts of the Shannon froze over, as well as several lakes throughout the country. Large volumes of fish also perished and were found along the shores of Strangford Lough and Lough Neagh.
Disruption to coal imports being brought from across the Irish Sea caused coal prices to soar, resulting in "hedges, fine trees, and nurseries around Dublin were stripped bare as desperate people searched for substitute fuel".
"The frost also plunged the streets of Dublin into darkness at night, for not only were there problems in milling the rape-seed to make the customary lamp oil, but even fully serviced lamps were being snuffed out by the intense cold," according to the book.
The situation worsened when the frost virtually wiped out the potato crop the following spring and widespread drought killed off sheep and cattle.
Blizzards swept along the east coast in late October 1740 depositing snow and returned several times in November. Then a massive rain downpour occurred on 9 December 1740, causing widespread flooding. A day after the floods, the temperature plummeted, snow fell, and rivers and other bodies of water froze. Warm temperatures followed the cold snap, which lasted about ten days. Great chunks of ice careened down the Liffey River through the heart of Dublin, overturning light vessels and causing larger vessels to break anchor.
Fifty to a hundred years passed before Ireland became healthy again, only to experience the 1840s famine. Dickson notes that an upsurge in migration out of Ireland in the years after the 1740–1741 crisis, similar to the mass emigration in the 1840s, did not occur. One additional item: Irish Dendrochronologist Mike Baillie confirmed tree ring patterns in 1740 that were consistent with severe cold.
The year 1741, during which the famine was at its worst and mortality was greatest, was known in folk memory as the "year of the slaughter" (or "bliain an áir" in Irish).
(I've had this in my notes for a few years and don't remember the source, apart from those mentioned in the text.)
It's interesting that the term 'Tuath' is the very same term as the Tuatha de Dannan (People of Dana) who ruled Ireland in the distant past.
Imo, no. Brahmins were akin to the Druidic Bards.
I wonder if that ties in with the Potato Famine malarkey you mentioned previously? Do you have a source for the enforced indentured servitude business?
In Scotland the similar absence of trees is put down to shipbuilding. However, I favour Felix Noille's theory of the Arctic Circle cataclysm to explain both Ireland and Scotland's lack of trees... Iceland's as well.
As someone else has also mentioned the Great Frost, was no doubt a contributing factor. (Records of this event seem to have survived only in Ireland. If you google 'Great Frost' you will get different ones.):
The "Great Frost" struck Ireland and the rest of Europe between December 1739 and September 1741, indoor temperature values during January 1740 were as low as 10 °F (−12 °C).[1] The one outdoor reading that has survived was stated as "thirty-two degrees of frost", not including the wind chill factor, which was severe. During the ramp up to the crisis in January 1740, the winds and terrible cold intensified, yet barely any snow fell. Ireland was locked into a stable and vast high-pressure system which affected most of Europe, from Scandinavia and Russia to northern Italy, in a broadly similar way. Rivers, lakes, and waterfalls froze and fish died in these first weeks of the Great Frost.
Professor John Sweeney of the Irish Climate Analysis Research Unit (ICARUS) at Maynooth University said the exact cause of the sever winter of 1740-41 remains a mystery.
“A change in solar or volcanic activity is one possible theory,” he said.
Somewhere in the range of 310,000 and 480,000 people, out of the 2.4 million population, are believed to have perished during the extreme weather conditions which swept across the country, between 1739 and 1741, according to the book “Arctic Ireland.”
The frost “remains to this day, the longest period of extreme cold in modern European history.” The Irish population endured "21 months of bizarre weather" that was "without known precedent and defied conventional explanation".
It was shortly after Christmas on December 29, 1739 that the Great Frost began and "introduced a cold so penetrating that liquids froze indoors and ice floes appeared at the river mouths".
The devastation included three ships sinking in Dublin Bay, drowning all on board.
Temperatures plummeted to levels where the rivers Lifffety, Slaney, Boyne and parts of the Shannon froze over, as well as several lakes throughout the country. Large volumes of fish also perished and were found along the shores of Strangford Lough and Lough Neagh.
Disruption to coal imports being brought from across the Irish Sea caused coal prices to soar, resulting in "hedges, fine trees, and nurseries around Dublin were stripped bare as desperate people searched for substitute fuel".
"The frost also plunged the streets of Dublin into darkness at night, for not only were there problems in milling the rape-seed to make the customary lamp oil, but even fully serviced lamps were being snuffed out by the intense cold," according to the book.
The situation worsened when the frost virtually wiped out the potato crop the following spring and widespread drought killed off sheep and cattle.
Blizzards swept along the east coast in late October 1740 depositing snow and returned several times in November. Then a massive rain downpour occurred on 9 December 1740, causing widespread flooding. A day after the floods, the temperature plummeted, snow fell, and rivers and other bodies of water froze. Warm temperatures followed the cold snap, which lasted about ten days. Great chunks of ice careened down the Liffey River through the heart of Dublin, overturning light vessels and causing larger vessels to break anchor.
Fifty to a hundred years passed before Ireland became healthy again, only to experience the 1840s famine. Dickson notes that an upsurge in migration out of Ireland in the years after the 1740–1741 crisis, similar to the mass emigration in the 1840s, did not occur. One additional item: Irish Dendrochronologist Mike Baillie confirmed tree ring patterns in 1740 that were consistent with severe cold.
The year 1741, during which the famine was at its worst and mortality was greatest, was known in folk memory as the "year of the slaughter" (or "bliain an áir" in Irish).
(I've had this in my notes for a few years and don't remember the source, apart from those mentioned in the text.)
That is interesting. I'm sure many of us would like to know more.The following may help. If not let me know.
The " Tuatha de Dannan " were called " The Gentry " they arrived about 1,450 B.C. and immediately started teaching the locals farming, tool making, language skills , arts and sciences. Created schools at major towns, taught law and responsibility They interbred with the locals and a few were chosen for education at the universities where after twenty years they became Druids and started teaching themselves. Need more ask and I will spend some time in my library, always enjoy that.
... where is a small brick church; and where has been a wall'd park, and a hall, now dismantled and destroy'd. Not only gentility have fled the country, but the race of yeomanry is extinguish'd.
The ground about, and views from Ingestre, are beautiful; and this country seems to have been, formerly, studded with spacious parks, and noble mansions; at the time when the nobility resided with magnificence; and hospitality, in their several counties; before operas were known; or that it became necessary to huddle all together, in miserable, mean lodging-houses in London; there to pay extravagantly for what is brought, or stolen, from their own lands!

I'd like to see if the Tuatha de Dannan could possibly be any of these historical entities from English history/mythology:
The Irish Potato Famine 1845-1850 did not kill but about thirty percent of the potato crop, also the potato crop accounted for about fifteen percent of the Irish food production yearly. The so called famine was a cover the British used to claim the Irish could not live on the land and would die unless they were sent overseas, against their will, as indentured servants. The British needed vast food supplies for their Colonial Army, so they took about ninety percent of the food produced by the Irish and shipped it overseas. Yes leaving the Irish to starve.
The roads for many miles , every day, heading west to their seaports were guarded by Bristh troops to ensure no interruptions in their theft.
The British stole all of their food then sold the Irish into slavery to save them. My recall is about five million slaves were sent to every British colony.
What du you mean "excuse" ? Also, do you say that the britts did not force the irish out?Why did "the British" need to depopulate and "plunder" Ireland for food? Why were their colonies not capable of meeting their food requirements? Were India, Canada, New Zealand, Burma, South Africa, etc, not capable of producing large amounts of food? Why was depopulating Ireland specifically so vital in your opinion?
For balance, what are your thoughts on the Holodomor in Ukraine or the famines in Kazakhstan in the early 1900s? What about the forced deportations of nationalities in the Soviet Union to do hard labour in Siberia? Was that the work of "the Russians" plundering and enslaving others, or do you have some excuse for that, like Jews, Communists, "the cabal", etc?
What du you mean "excuse" ? Also, do you say that the britts did not force the irish out?
No. Most likely a group using abrahamitish religion is. But the brits of yesteryear did ship the irish to the new found lands. Probably blaming the germans xDI don't know, according to the official "Wikipedia" narrative that's the case but I thought Stolen History forum members were supposed to be above just automatically believing the official narrative of anything?
Why do people keep saying "the British", "the Brits" as if every British person is individually responsible for every bad thing that has ever happened in the world?
Are "the Russians" responsible for the Holodomor, for the Kazakh famines, for forced deportations of non-Russian nationalities to Siberia in order to "Russify" these areas? Are "the Chinese" responsible for mass murder and internment of Tibetans and Uyghurs in order to "Sinofy" these areas? Are "the Japanese" responsible for the genocide of the Ainus in Hokkaido? Are "the Spanish" responsible for the almost total wiping out of the indigenous population of Argentina? Are "the Turks" responsible for the Armenian genocide? Are "the Arabs" responsible for the enslavement and mass murder of black people, for the kidnapping and enslavement of white people by Arab corsairs of which Ireland was a frequent target? Are "the Jews" responsible for the mass murder and deportation of Arabs from their land? Are "the Swedes" responsible for the mass sterilisation and deportation of the Sami people from their lands?
The fact is things are often, usually even, not what they seem. We live under a cabal that has manipulated and rewritten human history to an almost unfathomable extent. It seems to me a lot of people are very keen on throwing around accusations about "the Brits" and scapegoating them for all the world's ills, but not so bold in accusing other peoples.
Why did "the British" need to depopulate and "plunder" Ireland for food? Why were their colonies not capable of meeting their food requirements? Were India, Canada, New Zealand, Burma, South Africa, etc, not capable of producing large amounts of food? Why was depopulating Ireland specifically so vital in your opinion?
For balance, what are your thoughts on the Holodomor in Ukraine or the famines in Kazakhstan in the early 1900s? What about the forced deportations of nationalities in the Soviet Union to do hard labour in Siberia? Was that the work of "the Russians" plundering and enslaving others, or do you have some excuse for that, like Jews, Communists, "the cabal", etc?
It seems to me a lot of people are very keen on throwing around accusations about "the Brits" and scapegoating them for all the world's ills, but not so bold in accusing other peoples.
Between the years of 1812-1880, the Savannah Irish created and maintained an identity based on the Irish ideologies of separatism, independence, and egalitarianism. Through an analysis of Hibernian Society archival toasts and semi-structured interviews, the social, economic, and political institutions which influenced the Savannah-Irish culture emerged. While many aspects of Irish life in Savannah are left to be explored, this research serves to illuminate the creation of identity in the public space between Savannah and the Irish through social, economic, and political means.
but I thought Stolen History forum members were supposed to be above just automatically believing the official narrative of anything?