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Reference:
Wonder how many days it'll be before he manages to open and read it?
Depends if his options are set to get email notifications when he receives a PM

And GJ, if you don't get an email notification, just move your pointer over the Livecloud logo at the top of the page and click on Your Dialogs to get to where your PMs are.
El Loro
Reference:
Took me ages to find your post El Loro, you shouldnt have deleted it. I have noticed a few Irish this week not wearing a poppy. It is a personal choice, and you are entitled to your opinion as well as others

Thanks Skylark.  I wish I had seen the post you are referring to.  The Poppy is not worn in Ireland for reasons I have pointed out in The Poppy Thread and I am saddened by the bias that has appeared in this Forum in the last few months.  
Sorry Joe for bringing this up in your thread but I needed to answer this post.
Tayto.
Tayto, my deleted post went on to refer to an article on Wiki. I took a small extract from it in my post, but the article itself reads:

In the Republic of Ireland, Armistice or Remembrance Day is not a public holiday. In July there is a National Day of Commemoration for Irish men and women who died in past wars and on service with the United Nations Peacekeeping Forces. Remembrance Day is observed by the Republic’s citizens who are serving or who have served in the British Armed Forces and the very small Irish Unionist community as part of their cultural heritage. The wearing of the poppy is generally frowned upon due to the British Army action's during the Irish War of Independence and to a lesser extent their role during the Troubles. The Republic is a neutral state. It's standing army is involved in UN peacekeeping missions. A very small number of citizens from the Republic of Ireland still enlist in the British Army. However the British Army is explicitly prohibited from actively recruiting under the Defence Act, 1954.  The Irish National War Memorial Gardens is an Irish war memorial in Dublin dedicated to the memory of the 49,400 Irish soldiers who were killed in action in World War I Remembrance Sunday is marked in the Republic by a ceremony in St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin, which the President of Ireland attends.
El Loro

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