Last night at the gates of Stormont loyalists and Brexiteers celebrated an event that has led to the biggest move towards Irish unity since the creation of Northern Ireland in 1921.
Finally Great Britain and Northern Ireland have achieved their freedom, from what I consider to be the most corrupt political organisation I have experienced in my lifetime on this earth.
With equity release featuring more and more in the media over recent years, you may not really be sure what it is, if itâs right for you and where to turn for advice?
Lisa McGeeâs Derry Girls, scripted for Channel 4 and set to a rocking soundtrack that included everything from The Cranberries to The Undertones and Whigfield, was a cheeky, anarchic, affectionate, superbly funny rendition of the lives of four mouthy, hormone-crazed local schoolgirls and one âwee English fellaâ. They misbehaved as much as possible in the 1990s Maiden City, British troops policing the streets and the peace process still in embryonic form, decked out in dodgy double denim (it was cool at the time) with hoop earrings, attitude, scrunchies, chokers (again, once very de rigueur), espousing sweary language as they vie for snogs and sambuca, flutter their eyelashes at designated âridesâ, crash house parties, and pursue all manner of teenage kicks.
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