Bernadette Devlin

Devlin is a socialist republican political activist. She served as a Member of Parliament at Westminster from 1969 to 1974 for the Mid Ulster constituency. Currently she is inciting illegal immigrants or, maybe just immigrants. It is all part of the Culture War being fought against England, civilization and Christendom. She is unlikely to be a Useful Idiot; she is too near the heart of the enemy for that. It is rather like selling your soul to the Devil. There is no way back. She started off by dropping a bastard, one Róisin McAliskey who went to prison for a mortar attack in Europe. It did not get better. Her Majesty's Government chose not to put her in prison for inciting murder, albeit there was a perfectly good case against her. Once she had started an attack it was off out of the way until it was over. Not prosecuting was a political decision and a bad one.

She was never going to make it as a beauty queen. Perhaps that is why she went into politics. Today she is older, fatter and uglier.

Bernardette Devlin ex Wikipedia
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In 1971, while still unmarried, she gave birth to a daughter Róisin. This cost her some support in conservative Roman Catholic areas. She married Michael McAliskey on 23 April 1973, which was her 26th birthday. In the February 1974 general election she was opposed by other Nationalist candidates and lost her seat.

McAliskey remains an active commentator and activist on the margins of Northern Irish politics, where she has expressed strong opposition to the Good Friday Agreement and to Sinn Féin's entry into government in Northern Ireland stating that IRA volunteers had not died to create "a common teaching qualification".] She has occasionally spoken at public meetings organised by Fourthwrite, a journal supported by dissident republicans, socialists, and ex-prisoners and on 12 May 2007 she was guest speaker at éirígí's first Annual James Connolly commemoration in Arbour Hill, Dublin.She is currently involved in the South Tyrone Empowerment Programme, and works with migrant workers to improve their treatment in Northern Ireland.
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