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-   -   post comething completely irrelevant! (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=6857)

Rob Instigator 06.30.2008 04:56 PM

irish stayed catrholic when the english started the anglican church, and were persecuted and killed for it, then, then engladn became catholic again,. they persecuted the protestants and killed them and raped their women, then, when england became protestant again, they started back in on killing and torturing the "Papists" as they called them.

screamingskull 06.30.2008 04:56 PM

I don't know?, i have no personal grievances with the Irish (which i do with the scottish and the french). I have just grown up generally disliking them.

I think Ireland has its own problems without England getting involved with any of it. England hasn't been involved with it for a long time.

terriblecanyons 06.30.2008 04:57 PM

Kinda like the way Americans think the Canadians are snobs and the Mexicans are dirty bean-eating slobs I guess.

Cantankerous 06.30.2008 04:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
irish stayed catrholic when the english started the anglican church, and were persecuted and killed for it, then, then engladn became catholic again,. they persecuted the protestants and killed them and raped their women, then, when england became protestant again, they started back in on killing and torturing the "Papists" as they called them.

yeah that's right.


what a bunch of assholes.

acousticrock87 06.30.2008 05:00 PM

I don't think Americans actually dislike Canadians. We just make fun of them because they're irrelevant.

_slavo_ 06.30.2008 05:01 PM

Emmah, where are you now?

screamingskull 06.30.2008 05:01 PM

Bullshit.

to americans there seems to be this huge attractiveness of calling yourself Irish, or being proud to be 1/16th Irish. Where as here, being Irish is incredibly unattractive, at least amongst the people i have mixed with my entire life. A friend of mine is half Irish and half English, and she completely denies being at all Irish.

EMMAh 06.30.2008 05:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _slavo_
Emmah, where are you now?


In a chair haha.

So my mom should also be bring me back that Nikon SLR I talked about ages ago. I'm keeping my fingers crossed.

Cantankerous 06.30.2008 05:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by screamingskull
Bullshit.

to americans there seems to be this huge attractiveness of calling yourself Irish, or being proud to be 1/16th Irish. Where as here, being Irish is incredibly unattractive, at least amongst the people i have mixed with my entire life. A friend of mine is half Irish and half English, and she completely denies being at all Irish.


my great grandmother has still got her accent. i have a teensy bit of norwegian (previously i thought german but i broke out the books) heritage on one side of my family and little else.

and i mean, come on. you don't need record books to figure it out. just look at me.

terriblecanyons 06.30.2008 05:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acousticrock87
I don't think Americans actually dislike Canadians. We just make fun of them because they're irrelevant.


Yeah, that's true. Unless you're Denis Leary.

acousticrock87 06.30.2008 05:06 PM

I'm 1/4 Irish, and it's definitely something that people admire (well not admire, but "like" I guess) in America. Not sure why, though. Ireland is romanticized here, I think. Pubs and accents and greenery and Ulysses and whatnot.

Alcohol tolerance...

screamingskull 06.30.2008 05:08 PM

I am all for being proud of where you come from, its not something i have ever been able to express as it is quite widely seen as racist for a white english person to say that they are proud to be english.

But i don't embrace it, i am 1/4 Maltese and 1/4 Canadian, but i don't ever talk about it as it doesn't seem to matter or relate to anything i do in my life.

Cantankerous 06.30.2008 05:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acousticrock87
I'm 1/4 Irish, and it's definitely something that people admire (well not admire, but "like" I guess) in America. Not sure why, though. Ireland is romanticized here, I think. Pubs and accents and greenery and Ulysses and whatnot.

Alcohol tolerance...

i've been there twice and it's a really, really lovely place. i want to go back actually.

people of any heritage in america are usually proud of it, irish or not. though it isn't seen as racist there.

EMMAh 06.30.2008 05:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by _slavo_
Emmah, where are you now?


Okay, I get this now.

Yeah I dunno, I don't make fun of anyone for being from a specific place in the world. That's a tad ridiculous if you ask me.

We should all be proud of our heritage, and we should all judge people for who they are as a person and not where they're from.

acousticrock87 06.30.2008 05:10 PM

Maybe it's just because of America's cultural climate. Interesting cultures are simply admired for being interesting. No one is considered "American" by decent, unless you're a Native American, so everyone discusses their heritage. It's a bigger deal, I suppose.

_slavo_ 06.30.2008 05:10 PM

Hahaha Emmah, I thought you were like giving me shit in your first response about the chair and Nikon and stuff. like, a completely irrelevant dadaist respose. I laughed hard at it.

Cantankerous 06.30.2008 05:11 PM

america is not the mother country. no one's heritage is "american"


edit acousticrock already said it

acousticrock87 06.30.2008 05:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EMMAh
Okay, I get this now.

Yeah I dunno, I don't make fun of anyone for being from a specific place in the world. That's a tad ridiculous if you ask me.

We should all be proud of our heritage, and we should all judge people for who they are as a person and not where they're from.

Unless you're Canadian. :)

screamingskull 06.30.2008 05:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acousticrock87
I'm 1/4 Irish, and it's definitely something that people admire (well not admire, but "like" I guess) in America. Not sure why, though. Ireland is romanticized here, I think. Pubs and accents and greenery and Ulysses and whatnot.

Alcohol tolerance...


Wow, strange. I have had people (Americans) tell me that they are Irish before, and then expect me to be all like "oh wow, how exotic" or something, ha ha ha ha. Maybe it is exotic for Americans, it certainly gives you more history than just being plain old American. But i always just think "You are an american, you were born in America, you were raised in America and educated in America, you are an American, deal with it"

_slavo_ 06.30.2008 05:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acousticrock87
Maybe it's just because of America's cultural climate. Interesting cultures are simply admired for being interesting. No one is considered "American" by decent, unless you're a Native American, so everyone discusses their heritage. It's a bigger deal, I suppose.


that's actually true. where you're lacking your own culture, you're trying to stick to someone else's one.


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