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Happy St George’s Day to you all


Follyfoot

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2 hours ago, Mark Albrighton said:

Georgie is also the patron saint of Bulgaria among others. So that’s a National day for @AVFC_Hitz I think?

I’m part Bulgarian. As I was born in England, I just need to catch syphilis in order to complete the St George hat trick.

 

 

Celebrated on May 6th in Bulgaria. Georgiovden. We do indeed get a day off! 

Quite a few holidays coming up for me. 

Next Friday is good Friday and then I have the 3rd off for May Day, and then the 6th then Culture and Literacy day on the 23rd of may.

 

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6 hours ago, Follyfoot said:

We ain’t perfect, not by a long way but there ain’t no place I’d rather be

Sometimes I daydream about living in a quaint English country village in a thatched roof house with a wood stove and a little garden. It will never happen, but it's a lovely daydream.

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1 hour ago, maqroll said:

Sometimes I daydream about living in a quaint English country village in a thatched roof house with a wood stove and a little garden. It will never happen, but it's a lovely daydream.

Me too. Although the place we have is not too far off it. 

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Patriotism isn't something that occupies my mind at all really.  I generally find when I go somewhere abroad on holiday their patriotism quite charming when seeing their flags and different customs and culture though.

Edited by sharkyvilla
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Patriotism also feeds nationalism, which feeds wars. 

As a good socialist I believe a working class English person has more in common with a working class {insert any nationality} than with an English aristocrat or capitalist. 

Discuss. 

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There are some achingly beautiful parts of England. I've driven through some amazing hamlets and villages on my travels. For such a small country, a lot of counties seem to have different characteristics and styles about them. Norfolk is different to Herefordshire, which is different to Berkshire or North Yorkshire. 

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Was working today , but will be out tomorrow on a pub crawl with some mates to “celebrate” with Belgian , German,  Italian and any other country I can find that produces decent  beer ... If that makes me Tommy Robinson or Jim Davidson’s new best mate then so be it .

Can respect the various comments but can’t help but think VT needs to have a word with itself sometime 

 

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3 hours ago, maqroll said:

Sometimes I daydream about living in a quaint English country village in a thatched roof house with a wood stove and a little garden. It will never happen, but it's a lovely daydream.

Tory!

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37 minutes ago, Xela said:

There are some achingly beautiful parts of England. I've driven through some amazing hamlets and villages on my travels. For such a small country, a lot of counties seem to have different characteristics and styles about them. Norfolk is different to Herefordshire, which is different to Berkshire or North Yorkshire. 

Yes, for such a small place there is a lot of variation. Even between Cities. 

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1 hour ago, sidcow said:

Nowhere near as much as religion though. 

They're the evil twins. Just look at the USA's obsession with God and the flag. **** 'em both off. 

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 23/04/2021 at 13:16, mjmooney said:

Manners are a given. If you don't have them, learn them, and people will like you more. Nothing to be 'proud' of. 

Personal achievements? Yes, they are satisfying. Enjoyable. They make me feel happy. Not proud - too much like blowing your own trumpet for my liking (modesty is such a British thing, eh?) And it overshadows the contributions of others - as a Beach Boys song had it, "You need a mess of help to stand alone" (yes, Margaret, there is such a thing as society). 

Pride in our children? Same thing - it suggests that they owe it all to us - 'competitive dad' syndrome. As above, I'm delighted and happy for my kids when good things happen to them. I don't puff out my chest and say "That's MY girl". 

Maybe we're just arguing over words, but I've always been deeply suspicious of the concept of pride. 

As I said above, shame is the other side of the same coin. If you've done something bad, acknowledge it, apologise, learn from it, and move on. And we shouldn't be apologising for what our ancestors and forebears did. I didn't massacre anybody at Amritsar or Drogheda, nor did our current army or government, nor did anybody alive today. Write it up in the history books, make sure current generations learn about it, and make sure not to repeat it. Apologising now is ridiculous. 

It's all the same irrational bullshit. 

Update on ‘pride’ 

My lad who has really struggling in his team scored a screamer from outside the box to win them a cup game with virtually the last kick of the match and was mobbed by his team mates at the end. 

The team WhatsApp group is pinging every five minutes with messages of encouragement 

Sorry ‘being pleased for’ really does not cut it

Proud, you bet 

 

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Pride in the achievement in one’s kids is one thing. It’s probably semantics. The difference between being proud of someone and being pleased for them isn’t that different at it’s heart.

Being proud because a selected bit of countryside in the nation that you were born in looks nice is a bit odd.

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6 minutes ago, Mark Albrighton said:

Being proud because a selected bit of countryside in the nation that you were born in looks nice is a bit odd.

unless you were a glacier in a former life

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9 minutes ago, Mark Albrighton said:

Pride in the achievement in one’s kids is one thing. It’s probably semantics. The difference between being proud of someone and being pleased for them isn’t that different at it’s heart.

But in this instance it’s 1,000,000 miles away there is a 16 year backstory to my post which I won’t bore you with

Any other emotion than pride would not be right if that makes sense

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