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Britishness in the periphery
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
^ how am i supposed to argue with that......
well done rhy.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
Right now I'm so dissillusioned I've become West Saxon, screw the English.
Seriously.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
I blame Mel Gibson's Braveheart for the rise in Scottish Nationalism.
Also, what is interesting, in 1960's or so, the only Welsh speaker was some random farmer in some out-back field, now, they are sticking Welsh language signs everywhere and actively teaching it in schools.
Though, there are a few things I don't get. Why don't we have a British football team? Why are all the football leagues different? In the Oylmpics, we are team GB, in the world cup, we are England, Scotland and Wales and N. Ireland.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Philipvs Vallindervs Calicvla
Right now I'm so dissillusioned I've become West Saxon, screw the English.
Seriously.
Good man. I'm all for English regionalism, within reason. Because no matter how bad everyone else is, they can't be worse than those bastards over the hill.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Beskar
Though, there are a few things I don't get. Why don't we have a British football team? Why are all the football leagues different? In the Oylmpics, we are team GB, in the world cup, we are England, Scotland and Wales and N. Ireland.
One word Tradition
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
Everyone knows that the south is full of air-heads (I mean, who votes for Boris Johnson?) and limp-wristed accented wussies. While the burly men live in the north.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Beskar
I blame Mel Gibson's Braveheart for the rise in Scottish Nationalism.
Personally I've never met a Scot who doesn't loath that film.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
I am well aware that there are English nationalists who decry the Union with what they see as the bloodsucking parasites on the periphery. I am not one of them.
I am British. I recognise that the Union has been immensely successful for its component nations. England brought industrial might, Wales some of our finest politicians, Scotland an empire expanding entrepeneurial class, and Ireland some of our finest literature.
But this is a family, and requires public commitment, not public spite to make it work.
I don't blame the SNP, I blame the Scottish Unionist parties (Cons & Lab & Lib-Dem) for a refusing a referendum on Scottish independence, where such a declaration of commitment to the family might be made, and as long as that is denied we are left with the acid drip-drip of spite which weakens the family commitment of all members.
And the junior partners need to remember what allowed Britain (as a whole) to make such a good fist of the sovereign nation state (when our continetal neighbours have made such a balls of it), is its inviolable island geography, which is partly the reason the Union exists in the first place; because England would not tolerate peripheral territories not under its sovereign control to be used as a spring-board for invasion by competing powers.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Justiciar
Good man. I'm all for English regionalism, within reason. Because no matter how bad everyone else is, they can't be worse than those bastards over the hill.
Indeed :laugh:
I'm all for regionalism, if there is such a problem as a lack of identity in the UK, a sense of belonging to something local would help in that. Plural identities needen't be a problem, IMO they add richness and depth to the Union -that goes for British Pakistanis, Bangladeshis and Carribeans too.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Justiciar
Good man. I'm all for English regionalism, within reason. Because no matter how bad everyone else is, they can't be worse than those bastards over the hill.
:stare: I know you live in Stockport sunny jim. :stare:
I lived in Scotland for a couple of years and I'm well aware how a lot of the Scots think about the English. I went up there a boy and came back to Manchester a hardened thug.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Furunculus
But this is a family, and requires public commitment, not public spite to make it work.
I don't blame the SNP, I blame the Scottish Unionist parties (Cons & Lab & Lib-Dem) for a refusing a referendum on Scottish independence, where such a declaration of commitment to the family might be made, and as long as that is denied we are left with the acid drip-drip of spite which weakens the family commitment of all members.
The problem with a referendum is over how it is phrased. If only two options are given (a simple yes/no), then the current majority opinion (more devolved power) may lean to the outright independence option. But if it is phrased with 3 options, then the more devolution option will probably win, and create more needless bureaucracy/politiicians.
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Originally Posted by
InsaneApache
:stare: I know you live in Stockport sunny jim. :stare:
I lived in Scotland for a couple of years and I'm well aware how a lot of the Scots think about the English. I went up there a boy and came back to Manchester a hardened thug.
I don't believe anti-Englishness can be that bad, simply because it is a middle-class phenomenon. Something like 12% of the Scottish population is either English born or has English parents, and the number of these that report discrimination is far less than that of other 'minority' groups. Source.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Rhyfelwyr
The problem with a referendum is over how it is phrased. If only two options are given (a simple yes/no), then the current majority opinion (more devolved power) may lean to the outright independence option. But if it is phrased with 3 options, then the more devolution option will probably win, and create more needless bureaucracy/politiicians.
i'm fine with in/out and damn the consequences. i'm only interested in the 'family' if the family is interested in me, and i say this as British Unionist.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Britishness is becoming increasingly associated with Orangeism and sectarianism.
Yes a likely side effect of the "Were out here defending the empire from the Indians on the Frontier" Since the values of these people became intrinsically associated with symbols there cultural and political identity was at threat by its dilution at the core ie in London.
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with these circumstances, I'm not sure what exactly the future of Britishness (or the union) is. Will it last, will it become purely a secondary identity, does it have the roots for a revival?
Britishness is both doomed and assured at the same time for two reasons the COE is no longer the force it was and newer people have come to UK see Britishness in a differant light to a Orangeman. Until Britishness delinks from Orangeism it will be indigestible for many ordinary people in the UK it smacks of religous intolerence and that is unacceptable to most people.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
gaelic cowboy
Britishness is both doomed and assured at the same time for two reasons the COE is no longer the force it was and newer people have come to UK see Britishness in a differant light to a Orangeman.
it might seem that way to a Mayo-man, but i'm not sure how much importance CoE is to the average 'mainlander'......
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Furunculus
it might seem that way to a Mayo-man, but i'm not sure how much importance CoE is to the average 'mainlander'......
Exactly thats what I meant it does not mean much any more at all so as a result Britishness needs and has evolved in the core while the regions which Rhyfelwyr was talking seen anachronistic in keeping that idea alive.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
British:
1) Stiff upper lip
2) Steely resolve in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds
3) When the chips are truly down, unity of effort among the diverse peoples - but in peacetime, loud and constant internal bickering
4) Seemingly DNA-level Inbred competition with the French
5) Quick wit
Stereotypes, I know. But I find at least 3 out of 5 applicable to every Brit I've met.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
gaelic cowboy
Yes a likely side effect of the "Were out here defending the empire from the Indians on the Frontier" Since the values of these people became intrinsically associated with symbols there cultural and political identity was at threat by its dilution at the core ie in London.
Very true, and I think the fact that traditional Britishness exists now more in the regions has had the effect of leaving many feeling of the regional British feeling betrayed and sold out by London.
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Originally Posted by
gaelic cowboy
Britishness is both doomed and assured at the same time for two reasons the COE is no longer the force it was and newer people have come to UK see Britishness in a differant light to a Orangeman. Until Britishness delinks from Orangeism it will be indigestible for many ordinary people in the UK it smacks of religous intolerence and that is unacceptable to most people.
Indeed, although remember there are different connotations that come with different understandings of Britishness, both historically and in the present. The sense of Britishness associated with the rise of the welfare state was one aspect that played a big role in helping Scottish Catholics integrate into the British state. Also, as I understand things, in England, Britishness is seen as the more tolerant form of patriotism, due to it's idea of including the various peoples of Britain (as opposed to English nationalism which has been quite heavily associated with far-right views and racism etc)
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
KukriKhan
British:
1) Stiff upper lip
2) Steely resolve in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds
3) When the chips are truly down, unity of effort among the diverse peoples - but in peacetime, loud and constant internal bickering
4) Seemingly DNA-level Inbred competition with the French
5) Quick wit
Stereotypes, I know. But I find at least 3 out of 5 applicable to every Brit I've met.
You forgot tea drinker's " Ah put kettle on" is a refrain imprinted not at a genetic but the atomic level :smiley:
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
Also forgot the gift of the understating. A precious which we are losing fast thanks to sensalism tabloid press.
Where are the days when a British Gentlemen gets stabbed by a sword through the heart and says "Oh my, it appears some one has just killed me."
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Rhyfelwyr
And with these circumstances, I'm not sure what exactly the future of Britishness (or the union) is. Will it last, will it become purely a secondary identity, does it have the roots for a revival?
The future of Celticism I do not know.
On a hunch, I think that Britishness will have a revival. Overt Scottish, Welsh, Norn Iron regionalism is a passing sentiment. Most Britons in the the end are British foremost, or at least British second but not at all willing to do away with that identity.
Slightly related, but timely, the Grauniad ran a good article on Englishness last week, that identity Britain had all but forgotten about
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...ionalism-fight
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Beskar
Also forgot the gift of the understating. A precious which we are losing fast thanks to sensalism tabloid press.
Where are the days when a British Gentlemen gets stabbed by a sword through the heart and says "Oh my, it appears some one has just killed me."
That's not proper British understatement... A better response would be " Oh my, it appears I have taken a slight nick to the chest."
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
Dear oh dear, today´s uncouth British youngsters. :no:
Small wonder the empire got lost. What of the British tradition of apologising when somebody else steps on your shoes?
´Oh my. My chest seems to have inexcusably sheathed your sword, ever so sorry about that my dear chap.´
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Louis VI the Fat
What of the British tradition of apologising when somebody else steps on your shoes?
You know, I actually did that on the subway the other day...
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Louis VI the Fat
Dear oh dear, today´s uncouth British youngsters. :no:
Small wonder the empire got lost. What of the British tradition of apologising when somebody else steps on your shoes?
´Oh my. My chest seems to have inexcusably sheathed your sword, ever so sorry about that my dear chap.´
I haven't been in the UK since 2005, and I still do that. :laugh4:
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
InsaneApache
:stare: I know you live in Stockport sunny jim. :stare:
You can't prove 'owt!
I'm Marpudlian. That's my excuse and I'm stickin' to it! :disguise:
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
As a bloody Continental, I wouldn't mind seeing the UK fall apart within my lifetime :smartass:
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Originally Posted by
Beskar
Everyone knows that the south is full of air-heads (I mean, who votes for Boris Johnson?) and limp-wristed accented wussies. While the burly men live in the north.
Now if only one could understand your incomprehensible little tongue
P.S. As a Dutchman I find Orangeism amusing as well.
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Beskar
Also forgot the gift of the understating. A precious which we are losing fast thanks to sensalism tabloid press.
Penny dreadfuls aren't unique to the 21st century.
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Originally Posted by
Beskar
Where are the days when a British Gentlemen gets stabbed by a sword through the heart and says "Oh my, it appears some one has just killed me."
"By God, I think I've lost my leg."
"By God, so you have."
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Re: Britishness in the periphery
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Originally Posted by
Beskar
Everyone knows that the south is full of air-heads (I mean, who votes for Boris Johnson?) and limp-wristed accented wussies. While the burly men live in the north.
I'd like to point out that the Danelaw is full of illiterate, thieving, barbarian Pikies.