Originally posted by ahinton
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Happy Europe Day, Everyone!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostDifficult to shout in a forum 'in any case' - actually, upper-case is shouting.
Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostAnyway, being British is hard to put into words.
Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostBut one thing is certain, if you don't want to be British, you don't have to be.
Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostThe %ages and the 'through and through business' is oxymoronic, designed to emphasise the point that 'British' is a civic, cultural and voluntary concept.
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John Skelton
Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostThe %ages and the 'through and through business' is oxymoronic, designed to emphasise the point that 'British' is a civic, cultural and voluntary concept, not racial, ethnic or religious.
I think I feel a bit like that about London: not especially in a sentimental way, but because the sights and sounds of London were all around me in childhood. Even where they've changed over the years or become almost unrecognisable I recognise them. I can understand the emotion locally, not nationally.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by ahinton View Post"Technically" (!), it is, but then, as I wasn't using upper case, I wasn't shouting "in any event".
Well, you've demonstrated to near perfection that it is so for you!
How do you figure that out? If it's so hard to put into words in the first place, it must surely be equally hard not to be something that your passport claims you to be. Yhe only way that I am aware of whereby someone who is a British citizen can cease to be one is by taking up the citizenship of another country and renouncing British citizenship rather than assuming dual nationaltiy as som people do.
I'm not so sure about the "oxy" but, were one to accept in principle (ass you appear to do) that someone can be both "technically 25% British" and at the same time "British through and through", it would not only be very difficult if not impossible to assess the extent of his/her "civic" and "cultural" allegiance to Britain but also leave the observer with the assumption that the said person regards such a "civic, cultural and voluntary concept" as taking precedence over the citizenship declaration in his/her person's passport; it is unclear how much sense, if any, such a stance might make.
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Originally posted by John Skelton View PostBut people often say that they are 'British' because they feel 'British' within, so in a way they are saying it isn't voluntary and it isn't a concept. It's a kind of instinctive emotion; not racial or ethnic, but to do with where you are born and grown up.
I think I feel a bit like that about London: not especially in a sentimental way, but because the sights and sounds of London were all around me in childhood. Even where they've changed over the years or become almost unrecognisable I recognise them. I can understand the emotion locally, not nationally.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostI can see that you are struggling. I did say it wasn't easy!
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI can well understand and accept what you are saying here, even though my own experience is rather less than yours in this regard because I happen to have left Scotland just before reaching the age of 8 and have lived in England for most of the time since then. I think that part of the problem of expression and understanding here has something to do with the difference between whether and to what extent one might "feel" British and whether or to what extent one actually "is" British (or can be regarded as such by others), either by birth, by domicile, by citizenship status or indeed any combination of the three; in other words, there may sometimes (though not necessarily) be a difference between the emotions and the facts. As a Scot who'se lived outside his country for most of his life, I still regard myself as a Scot, just as I recognise that I am a British citizen according to my passport and a European because I was born in Europe, live in Europe and have a European passport. I do not regard myself as "British through and through" but I'm certainly not "anti-British". How anyone who does regard themselves as "British through and through" (which, of course, they have a perfect right to do if that reflects accurately their emotional allegiance to Britain) will feel following the dissolution of the union (should that occur) is, however, quite another matter and, I imagine, one of no small importance, especially to those who do feel like that at present.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostSo, you're Scottish. Ok. Are you Scottish through and through?
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by ahinton View PostGood question. The honest answer is that I really don't know, although as "through and through" might suggest (at least to some) that I do not regard myself as British or European, perhaps I am not. I'm not at all sure that it matters as much as some people seem to think that such things matter but, in so saying, I am not trying to avoid answering your question!
You have also made a very important point; such things do not matter. The trouble is too much gets read into such things. What does it matter if people like me, consider themselves utterly British even though only 25% of the blood coursing through their veins is British?
Belonging to a particular nationality, culture, whatever, is primarily a collection of subjective things. Objective things like passports and place of birth are very important, but not defining.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by John Skelton View PostBut people often say that they are 'British' because they feel 'British' within, so in a way they are saying it isn't voluntary and it isn't a concept. It's a kind of instinctive emotion; not racial or ethnic, but to do with where you are born and grown up.
I think I feel a bit like that about London: not especially in a sentimental way, but because the sights and sounds of London were all around me in childhood. Even where they've changed over the years or become almost unrecognisable I recognise them. I can understand the emotion locally, not nationally.
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3rd Viennese School
Do you live in London or Old Kent?
(or Old Essex/ Old Surrey etc etc and so on. or even Old London)
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?Winding everybody up, then when cornered dismissing what was posed as a serious point with a joke, then changing the subject.
It's a character trait. My dad, who could never afford to lose an argument, did this all the time.According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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