Last Friday Ruarai, a blogger on Slugger 
O'Toole, commented:
Therein lies one of the contradictions of 
nationalism in the British Isles and it is a contradiction between Irish 
nationalism, Scottish nationalism and Welsh nationalism.  Irish nationalists 
have generally taken the view that because there is an island called Ireland 
there is also a nation called Ireland.  For them, one island means one 
nation.
However Scottish and Welsh nationalists 
disagree with that position.  There is an island called Great Britain but on 
that one island, they argue, there are several nations, England, Scotland and 
Wales.  Some even argue for a separate Cornish nation but they all agree that 
one island does not automatically mean one nation.
Irish, Scottish and Welsh nationalists often 
describe themselves as the 'Celtic nations' so this is very much a family 
disagreement, although there is generally a polite silence about it.
Recently Declan Kearney of Sinn Fein has been 
talking about 'national reconciliation', which seems to be a euphemism for 
'national unification,' and of course for Sinn Fein the 'nation' is a 32-county 
nation.  Sinn Fein and other Irish nationalists are still founded and fixated on 
the principle of 'one island means one nation'. 
Moreover they believe that the nation should find expression in an independent state.
Kearney may attempt to dress it up in new language but there is nothing new in what he says. For him it is still, one island, one nation, one state.

 
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