half kidding...
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A life long republican that says his nationality is British, something seriously f**ked up there Gather round. Gather round and listen to this there are no Irish born true republicans that would call themselves British :rolleyes::confused:Quote:
Apologies, oversight not deliberate. My nationality (including for border crossing purposes) is British. If the card says UK I delete it, being a lifelong
republican.
.
I reckon he means he'd like to see a Republic of Britain as opposed to a monrachy
Indeed.
Quite how Scotland and Wales would view this I don't know
Well, if they split then it's no longer my business, I suppose. Although I'd prefer that Salmond (SNP leader) wasn't so pally with Liz Windsor
given that it's the kingdom that unites britain at present
I don't think loyalty to Liz and family is the main reason for clear majorities of voters in Abertawe and Aberdeen opposing independence.
Gather round and listen to this there are no Irish born true republicans that would call themselves British
You'll have to take my word for it, Einstein ;)
In all fairness you cant be 100% Irish and 100% British. Maybe 50:50 or 60:40. Same as players cant put in 200% on the pitch. Although Roy Keane came close!
In all fairness you cant be 100% Irish and 100% British
You can and I am. It's perfectly simple.
Maybe 50:50 or 60:40
No. As I've explained, one doesn't contradict the other.
Same as players cant put in 200% on the pitch
I'm not claiming to be 200% of anything.
Can you be 100% from Europe and 100% Irish?
I know its a bit different but the point is being Irish and British dont necessarily have to contradict each other(unless your being pedantic and saying NI isnt actually in Britain-we'l say UKish).
He is 100% Irish as he lives and was born on the island of Ireland, similarly I am 100% Irish as I was born and raised here. Also I am 100% European as my country is part of Europe....
im 100% an Irishman and 100% a Kerryman, well maybe 90% cause i was born in Cork (the shame). Ones my county and ones my country. Come to think of it im 100% European too. Its a continent.
Point here is you cant be 100% related to one country (Ireland) and 100% related to another country (Britain).
I still don't see that the inclusion of that additional word makes any difference, nor whether she is using political or cultural criteria (even if those two can be completely disentangled, which I'm not sure that they necessarily can). Janeymac is still using political/cultural criteria to work out where to place someone on a scale of Irishness. I object to that. And I don't see how it is "cheap and nasty" for me to object to it - on the contrary, surely using criteria to place someone on a scale of Irishness is "cheap and nasty".
I wasn't lying because I believed that someone else used the phrase first: I was apparently mistaken, but certainly not lying. And I wasn't lying again because I have not lied previously therefore it would not be possible for me to have lied again.
I have no intention of insulting you, and I have no identity crisis, therefore the above makes no sense.
Unfortunate use of percentages there, which is where the confusion has arisen, but the point being made was that the person in question - as I understood - considered himself Irish to the exclusion of other identities, even though he had 3 British grandparents and only 1 Irish grandparent. Hence, to claim he was 100% Irish but not at all British would seem very strange, and possibly indicate an identity crisis manifesting itself in a denial of his British heritage.
Good. I wouldn't expect or want you to. Each person has the right to determine his own identity - neither you nor me has the right to tell someone what he or she is or isn't. Unfortunately on this thread, though, you have been posing as such an authority.
Then you will have to change your views as I believe that each individual may determine his own identity.
No I didn't. Just because I found it strange that someone with 3 British grandparents and 1 Irish grandparent would declare Irishness to the exclusion of Britishness in no way insinuates that I don't think the person should be entitled to an ROI passport! If he's entitled to one, then he's entitled to one - simple as.
There's no way there have been as many foreign-born English footballers than ROI.
I know - you already said that. And it still doesn't alter the fact that, in my view, NI shouldn't pick players with no connection to NI, and, therefore, it is not inconsistent for me to have the same opinion about ROI. Therefore your claim that I was being inconsistent was false.
I don't have the power to stop anyone playing for any team. But I do have the right to express an opinion on eligibility criteria and I will continue to do so, regardless of the fact that others like yourself might disagree.
I wasn't aware that I had said otherwise.
Such as?
How is that ironic? It is a British passport! And Northern Ireland, part of the UK, is British, and part of Ireland, is Irish. So Ealing's British passport is also an Irish passport, in the sense that it relates to part of Ireland. Just as an ROI passport is an Irish passport. There are two passports for Ireland: a British one for NI and an ROI one (known as an “Irish passport”) for ROI.
What case?
I know what it says, but in reality it is a ROI passport. The passport is issued by the ROI.
And?
I don't know anything about you, so I'm afraid I don't know.
NI is part of the UK, so in terms of legal citizenship, our citizenship is that of the UK, i.e. British citizenship. We are, however, in a political or social sense, citizens of NI, just as someone in Scotland is a citizen of Scotland, etc.
That's obviously a misunderstanding so, it was me who brought up people I know who are 2nd and 3rd generation Irish and don't consider themselves British, I never said that they only had a single grandparent, that was your assumption. The people in question would have Irish parents or second generation Irish parents born and raised in England within the Irish communities in London, Birmingham etc . I also have a very good firend born in England to 2 Irish parents who moved back over here nearly 20 years ago at 14 but still identifies with an Irish but also an English identity having been born there. That's his perogative.
most of my mates over here are plastics, even if some of them only have 1 parent or even grandparent. Funny things is though, I dont htink they actually fully know what it means to be Irish. Anyhow, it reminds me of an ex when she was asked where she was from and she used to reply "Irish Sea". Summed it up for me really. Also reminds me of when my uncle met her in Ireland and he says " we spent 800 years getting them out, and in 2 years you start bringing them back". Most people in Ireland wouldn't understand the idea that someone born in England could see themselves as Irish.
Speak for yourself Blanch, i am a legal citzen of Ireland, work it up your bangle, i have a passport to prove it, 1 passport 1 nationality, none of this crap, half british half Irish a bit UK also a British republican like the Scottish, Jesus christ you have covered all bases haven't you.
If the UK became a republic, it would simply become the UR. Such a decision could only be made by the Parliament of the UK and would affect the whole of the UK/UR.
If Scotland and Wales felt differently, they would need to declare independence and proclaim the Queen as their head of state.