Lughaidh wrote:
What is true in the USA aren't true in Ireland, because the Irish dialects are in danger, I guess the American dialects of English are not. In Ireland, if they don't support the dialects and the Gaeltachtaí, the dialects might die because not all parents speak Irish to their children, and not all children want to speak Irish. And what they learn at school is not their dialect.
I don't think the standard itself is the problem. The real problem is dialect awareness, or the lack thereof. While I am all for Connacht Irish being the standard

, it would kill the other dialects just as surely as the present CO if the other dialects are not also taught to students in general.
Likewise, I agree that students in a particular dialect region should be taught predominantly in their own dialect, but unless they are also given plenty of exposure to the dialect of the standard and to other dialects, and children/learners from other regions exposure to theirs, they'll end up finding their own dialect only "works" locally and probably drop it anyway, as happens in English.
One very real problem with the present CO seems to be that you can't use your own dialect in an examination situation. That problem would be just as bad if the present CO were replaced by a specific dialect. (That is not to say that replacing the present CO with a natural dialect wouldn't solve other problems such as unnatural word formation and anglicised idioms.)
But in the meantime, as I have said several times, that's a hypothetical. The reality for the present is that we have to deal with an artificial CO, and we have to work with the materials we have, but at least if we work to keep the CO pronunciation in line with the natural dialects, it won't diverge into a separate language and Saoirse's goal of priming the next generation to make the language their own won't be at odds with the goal of preserving the natural dialects.
Which brings me back to the point I have been making - that within the scope of the ever-so-unpopular CO - at least Buntús Cainte pronunciation retains the natural sounds of Irish (including the r's) and is preferable over Urban pronunciation.