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I've been trying to stay out of this debate, because it's largely pointless. It's a lot like arguing about politics or religion. Minds are rarely changed, nor is what is eventually going to happen altered much. However, I just have to put my two-cents' worth in.
The people(s) of Ireland spoke one or more non-Celtic languages for about 6,000 years (ever since people returned after the last ice age) before the first Gaels came. Then they learned Goidelic (in some early form, and leaving aside the argument as to whether they spoke a Brythonic Celtic for a while before that). Some of our pre-Celtic ancestors (and Irish people are mostly of pre-Celtic stock, as genetic studies have shown) were probably irritated to have to learn this barbarous foreign tongue, and thus began the early stages of whining about the language (whinging, for those of Anglo culture).
The Goidelic they spoke for the next 1000-1500 years probably sounded (in its various stages) very different from any form of Irish spoken now, and what they spoke was in any case not the "pure" Goidelic brought in (presumably from Spain) by the Gaels (whoever they actually were). Linguists have determined that more than a dozen key characteristics of Irish grammar and syntax (such as its verb-first structure) are remnants of a pre-Goidelic "substrate" which the people were speaking when Goidelic arrived (it may even have been related distantly to Berber, Arabic, and other Afro-Asiatic languages, which were also verb-first, and had many of the same characteristics).
So, from the very beginning, and for the whole time since then, there have probably been Irish people whining/whinging about how poorly some people spoke the language, and how odd their pronunciation was. And with the borrowing of Latin, Norse, Welsh, Norman French, and ultimately English words, and the effects on pronunciation caused by those many "visitors", there were probably people all along complaining about how adulterated Gaelic was becoming in vocabulary, in pronunciation, and even grammar (think of the Norse and their Germanic compound words, which probably upset some Gaelic purists). One can lament Béarlachas all day and night, but that sort of language change is inevitable, and happens in all languages, even the most widely-spoken. Even the French people have stopped fighting things like le weekend, even if the government hasn't noticed.
When Gaelic culture started to break down in the 17th Century, there was still a continuum of Gaelic "dialects" from Munster all the way up Ireland, across the Isle of Man, and through much of Scotland (even still in many Lowland areas) and the current Munster, Connacht and Ulster Irish "dialects" (each of which has its own subdivisions even today), as well as the remaining Gàidhealtachd in Scotland, are only a remnant of what once was, and a fringe remnant at that. While I envy the current Gaeltacht speakers their native fluency, and I enjoy learning the dialectical differences and their etymology, and I hope that the Gaeltachts do survive and thrive, Gaeltacht Irish speakers have no claim to be the arbiters of "correct" Irish. In fact, a classical Gaelic speaker of 1601, particularly a high-born, arrogant, and educated one, might have considered the dialects of such isolated areas to be well outside the "norm" and almost barbarous (no offense to Bríd and others -- I'm just trying to make a point about language change). They only get to claim comparative "purity" today because they were so isolated that they survived he longest.
Rather than the endless debate as to who speaks correctly, we should celebrate the fact that the language has survived, and is now even thriving in a small (but hopefully sustained) way outside the Gaetachts. Among those urban kids may be someone who, inspired by the beauty of the language, may be the next great Irish-language poet. If he/she doesn't pronounce things just the way they do in Gaoth Dobhair, Conamara, or Corca Dhuibhne, so what? Even the people in those places probably don't pronounce things just the way their grandparents did, because that happens in all languages. Just be happy Irish is alive enough that there is change to whine/whinge about. The Irish are a lot better off than those poor Native American tribes with three elderly speakers who would love to have some kids to speak their language with, no matter how bad their pronunciation.
_________________ I'm not a native (or entirely fluent) speaker, so be sure to wait for confirmations/corrections, especially for tattoos.
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