
A bold stand unfolded in Drogheda on Friday night when locals torched an International Protection Accommodation Services centre on George’s Street, sending a clear message to Dublin’s open-border elite. The targeted strike, executed with fireworks around 8:15pm, emptied the building in minutes and left the facility gutted—exactly the outcome Irish patriots demanded after months of ignored protests.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin’s ritual condemnation rang hollow, branding the action “abhorrent” while sidestepping the real grievance: yet another historic town sacrificed to house unvetted migrants. Residents have watched services crumble—GP waiting lists balloon, schools overflow, and housing vanish—while the State prioritises foreign arrivals over its own citizens. Friday’s fire was not random vandalism; it was calculated resistance against a policy that treats Irish communities as disposable.
Firefighters, forced to rescue occupants, performed their duty, but the operation exposed the centre’s reckless placement in a cramped residential area. Gardaí, now scrambling for culprits, face a community that views the blaze as justified self-defence. Local patriots celebrate the symbolic victory: one less IPAS hub draining resources from Drogheda’s struggling families.
Ireland’s leaders can clutch pearls, but the message is delivered. Patriots will no longer beg for scraps in their own homeland. More centres await the same fate unless the government chooses Irish people first.
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