, later, sir john junor, writes, and i quote, wouldn't you rather admit to being a pig than to being irish? i am irish, i am not a pig, thanks for asking, so there certainly was anti-irish prejudice, and whether that's..." exists, i mean, certainly something i saw at for first hand, but didn't photograph, was a park near me after the birmingham pub bombings, just had large graffiti a wall that said, "irish kill rubber bullets, don't." now, that happens to be untrue. i think we're looking at 16 or 17 people who were killed by plastic or rubber bullets during the conflict, half of whom were children. my sense is the person responsible for the graffiti wasn't over interested in historical nuance. whether or not the no blacks, no irish, no... specifically existed, it is expressive of a broader truth that there was anti-irish prejudice evident in on the british mainland, and that certainly was accentuated and we certainly experienced it in birmingham. now in all the difficulties between academic rating and creative rating, and it's something that's quite difficult to navigate. how have yo