If we're being entirely honest, as much as I love the IRA now is not the time for a return to armed conflict in the North. Nobody has the appetite for it, not the republicans, not the unionists, not the South, not the UK, nobody. Any return to armed conflict by either side would alienate them and their cause from the overwhelming majority of Irish on both sides of the border. The end of partition is close: there's now a Catholic plurality in the North, the UK is actively falling to pieces, the North voted to remain in the EU and was dragged away against its will, the EU is standing fast in relation to the Good Friday Agreement, and Sinn Féin may soon be the largest party in both the North and South come the Irish election (at the latest in 2025). There's plenty of mass protest and organization to be done to finally end partition and finish the first stage of decolonisation in Ireland, and armed conflict will only prevent that.
If we're being entirely honest, as much as I love the IRA now is not the time for a return to armed conflict in the North. Nobody has the appetite for it, not the republicans, not the unionists, not the South, not the UK, nobody. Any return to armed conflict by either side would alienate them and their cause from the overwhelming majority of Irish on both sides of the border. The end of partition is close: there's now a Catholic plurality in the North, the UK is actively falling to pieces, the North voted to remain in the EU and was dragged away against its will, the EU is standing fast in relation to the Good Friday Agreement, and Sinn Féin may soon be the largest party in both the North and South come the Irish election (at the latest in 2025). There's plenty of mass protest and organization to be done to finally end partition and finish the first stage of decolonisation in Ireland, and armed conflict will only prevent that.
I didn't know this! Excellent!