The Principles of the United Irish
Brian Boru
The Big Three:
1. To uphold the sovereignty, independence, and democracy of eIreland by any means necessary.
2. To uphold the republican and socialist values instilled in the state by political and military struggles over many years.
3. To uphold the dignity of the eIrish Republic in the eyes of the rest of the world by military and diplomatic means.
General policies:
Politics and Government:
- The President, in direct consultation with the people by convention and referendum, should direct the policy of the government and country.
- Due to the factionalism present within it, the role of Congress in government should be limited to its in-game functions, other functions implied by ingame mechanics, and as an advisory body to the Government.
- Competence and activity are to be valued over absolute non-partisanship, but all politics should be conducted in a civil manner as much as possible.
Economics and the Military:
- The full economic strength of the country must be employed towards military capacity rather than individual gain, this being necessary for the survival of the country.
- All private MUs should be in full coordination with the Irish Army, which is to be regarded as the central institution of the state beside the Government.
- All MUs, private and public, should be politically neutral.
- Programmes for the increase of the size of the national war-chest should be continued and expanded as much as possible.
Diplomacy:
- The State should operate proactively in the international diplomatic arena, rather than being reactive to events outside of our control.
- The Government should endevour to include eIreland in the alliance politics of the day, with due regard to our own sovereignty and goals.
Simple stuff folks.
Comments
First denied.
What's the official stance on original regions, Brian?
Thx.
When the English go out and battle with the Serbs in a few weeks, We will take bake N-Ireland. Then we will rent that province to the eUSA as well 😉
If you're referring to ceding territory for peace, we're against it.
If you're talking about the rental agreement, we're in favour of it as the military requires the funding due to basically a year+ of underinvestment and overcapacity. That said, there are number of military reforms that would eliminate the need for such funding as a matter of urgency, at which point we'd again be against the rental of regions to any state.
Fair enough, thanks for the reply.
Irelandball !! Voted
I knew there was a reason this was the first party I joined when I came to eIreland 😛
Your treason has been noted 😛
[removed]
Voted
Votato bro