Well today I turned 20 years old. Well I know that from Friday to Sunday I will be out of state. What I will do is I will go to a fright festival so I will be visiting a castle in Oklahoma and then go to a place with brick oven pizza and then I will be going to an Irish pub. (Only for the food. I don't smoke or drink.) After that is all done I will return to Arkansas. In my family we celebrate birthdays for a few days. I will also end up with an e-book. I intend to use it to help me.
What are your thoughts on the Ulster-Scots? Well to me they were both good and bad. Good in the sense of resisting Cromwell and helping the English-British civilize a good portion of the world but bad in the sense on how they treated the Irish later on. Had Cromwell failed then the Irish and Ulster-Scots would probably be getting along better and the same can be said about the Irish and English and perhaps no potato famine if that was actually done on purpose yet it turns out Queen Victoria tried to help the Irish but parliament did not allow so as a result she was not allowed to donate more than 5 E yet in at the time it was an equivalent of 2.000 E in this era though it would be the modern amount of 61.000 E to help the Irish.
@@imperialrenaissance8091well you also may have the same result on if the William of Orange lost as that would also mean the Irish and English get along better as well. Well you could do some research into the potato famine and you would see the British government trying to blockade help to the starving Irish and when help came it was to make the British government tried to make as little help as possible.
@@imperialrenaissance8091 so that goes to show that it was done on purpose the more you think about it. So what I said about Queen Victoria not being allowed to send more help to the Irish than she did becomes more likely as she was helping The British Empire reach its peak and helped civilize many places yet Ireland was left out even though she wanted to help.
Well today I turned 20 years old.
Well I know that from Friday to Sunday I will be out of state. What I will do is I will go to a fright festival so I will be visiting a castle in Oklahoma and then go to a place with brick oven pizza and then I will be going to an Irish pub. (Only for the food. I don't smoke or drink.) After that is all done I will return to Arkansas. In my family we celebrate birthdays for a few days. I will also end up with an e-book. I intend to use it to help me.
What are your thoughts on the Ulster-Scots?
Well to me they were both good and bad.
Good in the sense of resisting Cromwell and helping the English-British civilize a good portion of the world but bad in the sense on how they treated the Irish later on.
Had Cromwell failed then the Irish and Ulster-Scots would probably be getting along better and the same can be said about the Irish and English and perhaps no potato famine if that was actually done on purpose yet it turns out Queen Victoria tried to help the Irish but parliament did not allow so as a result she was not allowed to donate more than 5 E yet in at the time it was an equivalent of 2.000 E in this era though it would be the modern amount of 61.000 E to help the Irish.
I don't know anything about that
@@imperialrenaissance8091well you also may have the same result on if the William of Orange lost as that would also mean the Irish and English get along better as well.
Well you could do some research into the potato famine and you would see the British government trying to blockade help to the starving Irish and when help came it was to make the British government tried to make as little help as possible.
@@sethfrisbie3957 I know the British tried to kill the Irish with the potato famine, I did know that one
@@imperialrenaissance8091 so that goes to show that it was done on purpose the more you think about it. So what I said about Queen Victoria not being allowed to send more help to the Irish than she did becomes more likely as she was helping The British Empire reach its peak and helped civilize many places yet Ireland was left out even though she wanted to help.