Quoting flarewearer from 01:28, 15th Jan 2006
I like Alex's Texas analogy, it's perfectly possible to be Texan, live Texan, be proud of Texan history and want Texas ruled in a Texan way according to Texan value, but not to want Texas to be an independent nation state, and to be every bit as proud and supportive of the greater union.
Quoting Odysseus from 01:37, 15th Jan 2006
Its the preserve of the ignorant unionist to dismiss a desire for independance as 'William Wallace/Tartan/Shortbread' mentality. Take a look at most of Scotland, does it LOOK like a healthy country to you? Its not. I'm not British, I'm Scottish, and your rather patronising stance is pretty pathetic Flarewearer. Ethnically, Scots folk (Celtic) ARE different from English (anglo saxon) to deny this is denying history.
We'd be MUCH better off being allowed to fashion our own identity, rather than have utterly false 'British' ethnicity (Don't the English WANT their own identity?) No doubt some mongo will have stopped reading by this point and will be replying how I'm a racist for saying we are different. I don't have a problem with Englishness, its the threat of Britishness (which attempt to envelop my own identity) which disgusts me.
Quoting flarewearer from 23:45, 14th Jan 2006And this is surprising considering England is the largest, most populous and closest of the home nations to most European countries?
Quoting Parisintheautumn from 23:39, 14th Jan 2006
The term 'English' and 'British' are interchangable by most foreigners and i have to say some English people as well. If I say to foreigners 'I am British' the question to follow is usually 'where in England are you from?'
[b]Quoting flarewearer from 00:33, Secondly, I'm sick of this country constantly trying to sell itself under a banner of tartan, shortbread, whisky and "breathtaking scenery". It's patronising, condescending and makes us look like we are some sort of MacDisneyland playpark for tourists to come here and get spoonfed an incorrect hollywood-friendly version of our history.
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Quoting Odysseus from 01:37, 15th Jan 2006
Its the preserve of the ignorant unionist to dismiss a desire for independance as 'William Wallace/Tartan/Shortbread' mentality. Take a look at most of Scotland, does it LOOK like a healthy country to you? Its not. I'm not British, I'm Scottish, and your rather patronising stance is pretty pathetic Flarewearer. Ethnically, Scots folk (Celtic) ARE different from English (anglo saxon) to deny this is denying history.
We'd be MUCH better off being allowed to fashion our own identity, rather than have utterly false 'British' ethnicity (Don't the English WANT their own identity?) No doubt some mongo will have stopped reading by this point and will be replying how I'm a racist for saying we are different. I don't have a problem with Englishness, its the threat of Britishness (which attempt to envelop my own identity) which disgusts me.
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Walk into the bright lights of sorrow, oh drink a bit of wine and we both might go tommorow, my love...
Quoting The Cellar Bar from 04:12, 15th Jan 2006And in that respect, in more than a few years of travelling across Europe, I've found that the effect of discovering you're "Scottish" rather than "British" opens a helluva lot more doors and puts a helluva lot more smiles on "foreigners'" faces than the prospect that I was "English" or "British".
Ethnicity has little to do with the notion of "Scotish" these days. And has more to do with social mores, views and attitudes that have pervaded our relationship with each other and with the rest of the world for years now. That is all too evident in our educational system, legal system and a host of other areas where our approach is different, less deferential and class-ridden and more inclined to the development of a society that benefits all rather than a chosen or fortunate minority. All of the which has dominated "English" culture for centuries.
I still don't understand the notion of "British". I can attach no value to it, I don't recognise my views in it and in any case it's a false, artificial construct that has no cultural or social basis to it. The term originally emerged to distinguish the two parts of William the Conqueror's "Bretagnes" and has taken on some mystic meaning that no-one can define in the first place. It's as genuine as seeing the unification of Spain and Portugal, for instance, and some numpt in Madrid suddenly embarking on a campaign to convince the two populations that "we are all Iberian now".
I know I am Scottish. I'm told I'm British. Happily I can make the distinction.
Quoting Al from 09:50, 15th Jan 2006
One could just as easily posit that the peace that would have arisen if England had stopped attempting to conquer Scotland would have led to such an outbreak of discovery.
Third, lowland Scots do have more in common with the Northern English than with Highland Scots. That is not an argument against Scottish independence.
Ethnically, Scots folk (Celtic) ARE different from English (anglo saxon) to deny this is denying history.
Quoting Iain from 13:31, 15th Jan 2006
And I too ask about "pointless fights with the southern neighbour" because I think you'll find we had to fight to stop ourselves being dissolved.
Quoting from 12:44, 15th Jan 2006Quoting Iain from 00:23, 15th Jan 2006
Point about the SNP not actually winning elections is the moment we take positive steps all the Unionists step up to rubbish us
Oh you poor things, are all the children in the play ground nasty to you as well?
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