Little John wrote:So, why it is beyond the wit of Ireland and the UK to issue special visas to Irish and UK citizen, who may request one, for unhindered personal and business travel between NI and SI?
There still has to be border infrastructure. There has to be a
fence.
On the issue of goods, then yes indeed, there will be customs requirements. But, that is because Ireland is a different country. Having said that, if Ireland chose to not be part of the Eu, those customs arrangement would not need to be as tight as they may end up being. But, that is a matter for Ireland to decide where its interests lie. It is not for the UK to mitigate and certainly not in terms of not implementing Brexit.
I think you are risking accusations of being disingenuous here. The reality is that this situation is politically almost impossible because of the conjunction of three factors. Firstly a major nation is leaving the EU for the first time, using a legal framework that was designed to be unusable, and with the EU negotiating in bad faith. Secondly the British side is hopelessly split, with a very weak minority government and a PM who has no credibility. Bad enough on its own, but this is made far, far worse by the fact that part of the nation that is leaving is a small corner of another nation and there's a long history of vicious sectarian conflict which was only really ended by both sides joining the EU at the same time so the border could be taken down. Simply saying "its not our problem" is bordering on disingenuous because you are failing to acknowledge just how serious the problem actually is. Technically you are right, but the reality is that we can't just "expect the Irish to sort it out, because it is their problem."
I think what is needed is a radical but necessary debate about the future status of northern ireland. If a united Ireland is inevitable and it is just a question of when rather than if, then now is the time start talking about the when. And if the DUP decide to kick off, they may just end up finding themselves politically isolated. This is NOT merely "an Irish problem". So long as NI remains part of the UK, it is also our problem.
Bottom line: we need to stand up and tell the Irish, on both sides of the border, that they have to choose between re-unification and a hard border. The status quo is not an option, because of Brexit. If we are willing to do that,
then it stops being our problem. And if the unionist extremists decide to get nasty, then we send in the SAS again, except this time to take out the other side.