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In reply to the discussion: Pic Of The Moment: Paul Ryan Holds Congressional Hearing On Poverty, Excludes Poor People [View all]Ken Burch
(50,254 posts)As an Irish-American, Paul Ryan dishonors his ancestors' memories by bashing the poor. He uses the same rhetoric about "not creating a 'culture of dependency'" that the British government used to justify denying Ireland relief during the Black 47...and to justify not even using enough of the non-potato crops grown in Ireland for export to feed the Irish populace until the potato crop could recover.
There is nothing lower than a person who disrespects the pain of his own people in their time of need by calling for nothing to be done to help those in need today.
There is no difference between Paul Ryan and those in the British imperial regime of the 1840's who left his ancestors with the choice of starvation or exile.
These words of a song of the 19th Century say it well:
O, Father dear, I oft times here, you speak of Erin's Isle,
Her lofty scenes, her valleys green, her mountains rude and wild
They say it tis a lovely place, wherin in a saint might dwell,
So why did you abandon it, the reason to me tell?
Oh son I loved my native land, with energy and pride
'Til a blight came over on my prats, my sheep and cattle died,
The rent and taxes were so high, I could not them redeem,
And that's the cruel reason why, I left old Skibbereen.
Oh, It's well I do remember, that bleak December day,
The landlord and the sheriff came, to drive us all away
They set my roof on fire, with their cursed english spleen
And that's another reason why, I left old Skibbereen.
Your mother too, God rest her soul, fell on the snowy ground,
She fainted in her anguish, seeing the desolation all round.
She never rose, but passed away, from life to imortal dream,
She found a quiet grave, my boy, in dear old Skibbereen.
And you were only two years old, and feeble was your frame,
I could not leave you with your friends, you bore your father's name,
I wrapped you in my cota mior, in the dead of night unseen
I heaved a sigh, and said goodbye, to dear old Skibbereen
O' father dear, the day will come, when answer to the call
All Irish men of Freedom Stern, will rally one and all
Ill be the man to lead the band, beneath the flag of green
Loud and clear, well raise a cheer , remember Skibbereen