[Ulster’s Stand For Union by Ronald McNeill]@TWC D-Link bookUlster’s Stand For Union CHAPTER XII 4/11
They traditionally were the champions of "law and order" in Ireland; they prided themselves above all things on their "loyalty" to their King and to the British flag.
And they never entertained the idea that the movement which they started at Craigavon in 1911, and to which they solemnly pledged themselves by their Covenant in the following year, was in the slightest degree a departure from their cherished "loyalty"-- on the contrary, it was an emphatic assertion of it.
They held firmly, as Mr.Bonar Law and the whole Unionist party in Great Britain held also, that Mr.Asquith and his Government were forcing Home Rule upon them by unconstitutional methods.
They did not believe that loyalty in the best sense--loyalty to the Sovereign, to the Empire, to the majesty of the law--required of them passive obedience to an Act of Parliament placed by such means on the Statute-book, which they were convinced, moreover, was wholly repugnant to the great majority of the British people. This aspect of the matter was admirably and soberly presented by _The Times_ in one of the many weighty articles in which that great journal gave undeviating support to the Ulster cause. "A free community cannot justly, or even constitutionally, be deprived of its privileges or its position in the realm by any measure that is not stamped with the considered and unquestionable approval of the great body of electors of the United Kingdom.
Any attempt so to deprive them is a fraud upon their fundamental rights, which they are justified in resisting, as an act of violence, by any means in their power.
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