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Showing posts from May, 2025

The Ireland They Sold, Irish Ballad about State of Ireland

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  The Ireland They Sold – A Powerful Irish Ballad of Truth, Betrayal & Resistance This song tells the story the media won’t: how Ireland is being transformed by silent policy, hidden agendas, and political betrayal. From shattered families to voiceless victims, this ballad gives voice to the anger rising across the country. 🗣️ Sung in the spirit of Irish rebellion, “The Ireland They Sold” challenges the government’s silence, the rise in violent crime, the unchecked influence of NGOs, and the destruction of Irish sovereignty. 🎙️ Lyrics speak of: Innocent lives lost to avoidable violence The Gardaí silenced by fear of labels Politicians who sell out the nation behind closed doors A people ready to rise again in truth, dignity, and courage If you still believe in Ireland — in the Ireland our ancestors fought for — share this. Let the truth echo. 🔔 Subscribe for more truth-telling songs that challenge the official narrative. #IrishBallad #IrelandTheySold #PoliticalSo...

Rain on Kilmainham – A Ballad for the Fallen of 1916

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In the grey stillness of dawn, as rain taps gently on old stone, the echoes of gunfire still seem to linger in Kilmainham Gaol. Over a century has passed, but the memory remains sharp — a wound etched into the soul of Ireland. “Rain on Kilmainham” is a ballad of sorrow and remembrance, written for those who stood before a British firing squad in May 1916, condemned not by crime but by conscience. This song is not a call to arms — it is a lament. It mourns the loss of brave souls who gave everything for the dream of a free Ireland. It recalls the final steps of men like Pádraig Pearse , James Connolly , Thomas Clarke , and others — led from their cells by the boots of Empire, blindfolded in a cold yard as dawn broke through the mist. The ballad draws its power not from rage, but from grief — from the quiet dignity of sacrifice, from the soft weeping of a nation watching its future die behind prison walls. Kilmainham was never just a prison. It became a place of martyrdom, of transfor...