Happy Europe Day, Everyone!
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Beef Oven
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View Postand impossible not to be European, as Britain is part of the European continental land mass.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostI'm not sure who says things like "British through and through", apart from you & possibly Daily Mail readers. It sounds rather archaic.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI don't, either, although I don't doubt that some people do; that said, it's rather hard to understand why anyone with the background that Beef Oven declares might say such a thing, since he states that he is "25% British" in terms of background but presumably holds a passport (albeit a European Community one!) declaring him to be a British citizen (or at least a British subject). I am technically British, too, according to my passport, but I would never think to say that I'm "British through and through".
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Sorry to be a bit behind, but I offer the following question as part of a test for UK citizenship applicants:
Originally posted by ahinton View Post...If, however, he genuinely feels that "Happy" and "Europe" are "two words that rarely go together", one might wonder why it is that he lives in Europe...
Compare and contrast the two statements above.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostAnd on that basis, the Falkland Islanders are all Argentinian.
Britain still has charge of a few territories that lie outside Europe, so your argument here, whilst valid in itself, is not relevant to any discussion about British citizens and subjects being Europeans.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostCouldn't agree more.
They can hardly be British, as most of them weren't born in Britain
Most of my life I've concurred with Marx's view that nations belong to the rich, and that therefore it is absurd for the majority to claim identification with nation states until the rich are swept from power and replaced by societies based on common ownership. Whatever feelings I have about being English I put down to the sheer luck of having been born in a country that is privileged in terms relative to many due to a complex history and has an extraordinary variety of landscapes and associated architectural types within small distances, and has produced art, including music, reflective of both.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostThey are more British than many people over here (Britain - that country that inludes Scotland etc)
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Originally posted by JimD View PostSorry to be a bit behind, but I offer the following question as part of a test for UK citizenship applicants:
"If these Asians don't like our culture why don't they live somewhere else?"
Compare and contrast the two statements above.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostI adore Europe, but Mr Pee's right, it is an unhappy place because of this stupid political union fiasco.
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