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Do you have to be ethnically Irish to be considered Irish?

1235

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    You think Irish are a different species? Really?
    I assume you are messin pal, good one :pac::pac::pac::pac:

    "Irish are all ass"???? Are you a pervert? Really?

    You can dream anything up by picking and choosing :p


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,382 ✭✭✭Duffy the Vampire Slayer


    Ireland was once the only European nation to have birthright citizenship.

    Colombia is the only American nation not to have it, which has come into play with the recent Venezuelan influx.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    Ireland was once the only European nation to have birthright citizenship.

    Colombia is the only American nation not to have it, which has come into play with the recent Venezuelan influx.

    It's almost like it has some sort of....meaning!

    It's all well and good to say anyone can be Irish, but all it does is devalue the idea itself.

    If everyone on earth is given a nobel peace prize, does it automatically increase the prestige of every individual on earth, or does it devalue the prize itself?

    Like many things, people won't miss one of the cornerstones of their identity until it has been full given away and rendered meaningless.


  • Registered Users Posts: 118 ✭✭Duke of Schomberg


    Apparently he is partial to a glass of Um Bongo. Word has it, it is considered a nectar of the gods in his native land.

    sjf0K0el.jpg

    I taught a refugee from the Congo a few years ago - he told me that Um Bongo is a Coca Cola franchise, and that because of the political situtation in the Congo they don't operate there, so, to paraphrase the advertisement . . . "Um Bongo, Um Bongo, can't drink it in the Congo".


  • Registered Users Posts: 524 ✭✭✭DelaneyIn


    joe40 wrote: »
    English is not an ethnicity, it's a nationality. Of course he can be English.

    False.

    The English people are an ethnic group and a nation native to England, who speak the English language of the Germanic language family and share a common history and culture. The English identity is of early medieval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Angelcynn.

    “He is English" can plausibly mean at least three different things:

    1)He is a British citizen.

    2)He is ethnically English.

    3)He is culturally English.

    They are all orthogonal concepts, you can be any of those without being the other.

    However, people, such as yourself, would like to abolish the latter two, and insist that only the first exists.


  • Registered Users Posts: 524 ✭✭✭DelaneyIn


    David Norris is Congolese well that's the shock of the day for me anyway.

    He was born in Kinshasa. I wonder why he’s not referred to as “new Irish” seeing as he was born in Africa or as to why the media didn’t claim he would be our first African born president when he ran for office? It wouldn’t have been down to his skin colour, would it?;)

    Norris isn’t a real African to the MSM but anyone born or whom lives here is “New Irish.” Such double standards are as glaring as they are hilarious.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,811 ✭✭✭joe40


    DelaneyIn wrote: »
    False.

    The English people are an ethnic group and a nation native to England, who speak the English language of the Germanic language family and share a common history and culture. The English identity is of early medieval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Angelcynn.

    “He is English" can plausibly mean at least three different things:

    1)He is a British citizen.

    2)He is ethnically English.

    3)He is culturally English.

    They are all orthogonal concepts, you can be any of those without being the other.

    However, people, such as yourself, would like to abolish the latter two, and insist that only the first exists.

    Well there must be millions of people who think they're English but aren't. Maybe third or fourth generation Irish but don't know it.
    Plenty can't trace their ancestors back more than 2 or 3 generations.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    DelaneyIn wrote: »
    He was born in Kinshasa. I wonder why he’s not referred to as “new Irish” seeing as he was born in Africa or as to why the media didn’t claim he would be our first African born president when he ran for office? It wouldn’t have been down to his skin colour, would it?;)

    Norris isn’t a real African to the MSM but anyone born or whom lives here is “New Irish.” Such double standards are as glaring as they are hilarious.

    Certainly interesting, I didn't know that about him either. However, I think it's fair to say that the term "new Irish" has a quite distinct chronology. There were people leaving the country up to a certain point, and then suddenly we actually had 2 coins to rub together and the rest of the world poured in to "help" us, again, at a very certain point of time. They sure as hell saw the value in "being Irish".

    Screenshot-20210331-232324-2.png

    So it's fair to say that the term "new Irish" is quite well defined to many. They weren't here, and then out of the blue they were. So I suppose the likes of Norris escapes it because he was here when the going wasn't so good and didnt come in on the tidal wave (not that his particular situation lends itself to any kind of hardship!)

    So, besides the hard elements of money and housing and healthcare squandered, people are even blase enough to be giving away the very identifier of themselves. Sort of surprising, sort of not.

    Giveitawaygiveitawaygiveitawaynow, giveitawaygiveitawaygiveitawaynow!


  • Registered Users Posts: 524 ✭✭✭DelaneyIn


    joe40 wrote: »
    Well there must be millions of people who think they're English but aren't. Maybe third or fourth generation Irish but don't know it.
    Plenty can't trace their ancestors back more than 2 or 3 generations.

    Do the native English people get a say in how their ethnicity is being eroded and changed dramatically over such a brief period?

    If I settled in New Zealand, I think it would be extremely wrong of me to claim to be as native as the Maori people. Few would disagree with this view. Yet, the native Irish have inhabited this island longer than the Maori have theirs and people would call it racist for someone claiming the above view with regards to the Irish in place of the Maori.

    Why the double standards and hypocrisy?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,128 ✭✭✭✭Oranage2


    DelaneyIn wrote: »
    Do the native English people get a say in how their ethnicity is being eroded and changed dramatically over such a brief period?

    If I settled in New Zealand, I think it would be extremely wrong of me to claim to be as native as the Maori people. Few would disagree with this view. Yet, the native Irish have inhabited this island longer than the Maori have theirs and people would call it racist for someone claiming the above view with regards to the Irish in place of the Maori.

    Why the double standards and hypocrisy?

    Because nationalism and race is associated with Nazism, something we're all thought is wrong.


  • Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 12,894 Mod ✭✭✭✭JupiterKid


    Nationality has everything to do with belonging to a collective society, a common culture, a common interest and the place of one's birth and who they identify as....

    ...but IMO nothing to do with race.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,328 ✭✭✭Banana Republic 1


    Someone born here but who's parents are from another country would be Irish but their heritage would be from that country.

    A person not born here who got citizenship would be an Irish citizen.

    Actually the referendum years back put a stop to that, if your parents or grandparents aren’t Irish, as in Irish born on birth certificate or a citizen then you can’t legally be Irish, that what the law says unfortunately.


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭Munstergirl854


    I (like many) have cousins in the UK who are second generation Irish and I would consider them English.

    Likewise if I met a black lad from Tallaght who was born in the Coombe to Nigerian parents, I would consider him Irish.

    For me, it is the country you are born and raised in that shapes you,the education you get growing up....
    that is your nationality....bloodline is a different thing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,328 ✭✭✭Banana Republic 1


    I (like many) have cousins in the UK who are second generation Irish and I would consider them English.

    Likewise if I met a black lad from Tallaght who was born in the Coombe to Nigerian parents, I would consider him Irish.

    For me, it is the country you are born and raised in that shapes you,the education you get growing up....
    that is your nationality....bloodline is a different thing.

    Unless that guy parents have citizenship that not the way the law sees it unfortunately.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    Actually the referendum years back put a stop to that, if your parents or grandparents aren’t Irish, as in Irish born on birth certificate or a citizen then you can’t legally be Irish, that what the law says unfortunately.
    That referendum was passed with the highest majority of any recent referendum, so clearly it reflected the democratic wishes of Irish voters. The previous citizenship loophole was seen as open to abuse, and it was. Ireland was also the only European nation to have such a law, all the rest operate an ancestry criteria to one degree or other. And rightfully so.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,637 ✭✭✭✭OldGoat


    Me: Multigenerational Irish + born here therefore Irish.
    Wifey: Dual citizenship, neither of which are Irish therefore Durty foreigner.
    Child A: Born outside Ireland therefore 2/3 Durty foreigner + 1/3 Irish - Country of birth = Not Irish.
    Child B: Born in Ireland therefore 1/3 Irish + 2/3 Durty foreigner + Country of birth = Irish.

    Am I doing this right?

    I'm older than Minecraft goats.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,071 ✭✭✭purplepanda


    Are white people who are born in China ethnically Chinese?

    People of Turkic & Indo European background living under Chinese imperialist oppression are currently being interned in massive concentration camps & being indoctrinated & tortured in their millions.

    Their historical oppression of Tibet is well documented. Violation & annexation of Indian territory still continues.

    Obviously China considers those born of non Chinese parents not to be Chinese.

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/apr/25/coronavirus-exposed-china-history-racism-africans-guangzhou


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators, Regional South East Moderators Posts: 11,393 Mod ✭✭✭✭Captain Havoc


    I think being Irish is different things, and it will change as we go on. When you look at Gavin Bazunu's interview after the Luxembourg game, you hear an Irishman and to me, he's 100% Irish even if his background isn't. I have cousins who grew up in England, they consider themselves Irish, they grew up in an Irish bubble in Coventry, they played Gaelic football and hurling and did not feel English, at all, I consider them Irish.

    There's the American sense of the word Irish, which isn't really about being Irish but being connected by your past. When an American says they're Irish, they don't actually believe that they are Irish like me, it's just a cultural thing and people should stop losing their sh1t over it.

    To suggest that skin colour, religion or a certain level of ancestry is needed to be considered Irish is absolutely despicable. Irish people for centuries were forced out of Ireland because of "what the Brits had been doing" and finally our ancestors gained an independence that we could create a nation that is better governed by itself than by a foreign power. Today, we live that nation which is no longer one to escape from but which is attractive to others. These immigrants are part of the Irish story and certainly should not be excluded from it.

    https://ormondelanguagetours.com

    Walking Tours of Kilkenny in English, French or German.



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,328 ✭✭✭Banana Republic 1


    I think being Irish is different things, and it will change as we go on. When you look at Gavin Bazunu's interview after the Luxembourg game, you hear an Irishman and to me, he's 100% Irish even if his background isn't. I have cousins who grew up in England, they consider themselves Irish, they grew up in an Irish bubble in Coventry, they played Gaelic football and hurling and did not feel English, at all, I consider them Irish.

    There's the American sense of the word Irish, which isn't really about being Irish but being connected by your past. When an American says they're Irish, they don't actually believe that they are Irish like me, it's just a cultural thing and people should stop losing their sh1t over it.

    To suggest that skin colour, religion or a certain level of ancestry is needed to be considered Irish is absolutely despicable. Irish people for centuries were forced out of Ireland because of "what the Brits had been doing" and finally our ancestors gained an independence that we could create a nation that is better governed by itself than by a foreign power. Today, we live that nation which is no longer one to escape from but which is attractive to others. These immigrants are part of the Irish story and certainly should not be excluded from it.

    Again that’s not the way the majority thought back at the referendum.


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭Munstergirl854


    Wibbs wrote: »
    That referendum was passed with the highest majority of any recent referendum, so clearly it reflected the democratic wishes of Irish voters. The previous citizenship loophole was seen as open to abuse, and it was. Ireland was also the only European nation to have such a law, all the rest operate an ancestry criteria to one degree or other. And rightfully so.

    So a child born in Ireland to African parents who dont have an Irish passport/citizenship will be considered a citizen of that African country?

    What would the case be in the U.K.?


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  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    To suggest that skin colour, religion or a certain level of ancestry is needed to be considered Irish is absolutely despicable.
    Would you say the same of Korean, Ugandan, Mongol, Maori, Saudi, Japanese? Or more, would you say it quite so definitively? No need to answer, it's more of a thought experiment for people in general, but if there's any great delay between the question and the answer the longer that delay the more the question isn't quite so simplistic and the answer certainly isn't.

    That's one of the issues I have with the current western accepted truth of multiculturalism. Accommodations tend to only go one way and they tend to be particular too with regards to what constitutes diversity in the first place. This anti nationalism very understandably sprung from the embers of WW2 and that clusterfcuk of extreme nationalism. Add in American thought on trying to solve their own and it seems intractable clusterfcuk of ethnicity and their melting pot melting. Then we have Ireland and the Irish psyche in particular which tends to look beyond our shores for guidance from above and has a long history of insecurity about ourselves. And here we are. A notion, a dream, of well sure nobody really belongs anywhere, or is really of a place and culture and it's all random chance so let's hold hands. It's a laudable dream and one I would actually share in theory, but as history has also shown and continues to show, it doesn't tend to survive much by way of contact with the enemy of human nature, or cultures who retain a much greater sense of themselves.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    So a child born in Ireland to African parents who dont have an Irish passport/citizenship will be considered a citizen of that African country?

    What would the case be in the U.K.?
    IIRC the child is conditionally considered a citizen, or can become one, but not the parents. Pretty much the case everywhere in Europe and much of the world. To quote from wikipedia on Jui Soli(birthright citizenship):

    Since the Twenty-seventh Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland was enacted in 2004, no European country grants citizenship based on unconditional or near-unconditional jus soli.

    Almost all states in Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania grant citizenship at birth based upon the principle of jus sanguinis ("right of blood"), in which citizenship is inherited through parents rather than birthplace, or a restricted version of jus soli in which citizenship by birthplace is automatic only for the children of certain immigrants.


    Ireland was the odd man out in Europe, because of an unforeseen side effect of the Good Friday Agreement. Hence our non EU immigration jumped massively in the late 90's early 00's until a referendum was held to close that loophole.

    The Americas, that is nations based and once reliant upon colonisation and immigration retain more of the jus soli idea for obvious reasons. Or what were obvious reasons. Since their populations grew and immigration was less a requirement, the conditions for citizenship increased. So in the US if you're born their you're an American citizen, but if your parents aren't they don't get automatic citizenship or leave to stay.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Registered Users Posts: 900 ✭✭✭Midlife


    It's not neat, there's a scale.

    On one end is people who speak Irish and can trace only Irish ancestors as far back as whenever and at the other end are people who have never even heard of Ireland.

    Where on the scale you want to define the border between 'Irish' and 'non-Irish' is up to you but there's no neat definition.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,479 ✭✭✭AllForIt


    Off topic but I was just listening to Lammy's show on LBC in the last hour and he had a caller who was saying that afro caribbeans were being put ahead of white ppl in something related to covid, but it struck me he didn't sound genuine and he sounded just like Tommy Robinson. Afterwards some ppl txt in and said he was lying and of course it's April Fools day!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,147 ✭✭✭OldRio


    As a side note on this. That quintessential English Author John LeCarre became an Irish Citizen before his death.
    He was totally disillusioned with the way Britain and Brexit had changed England.

    (Obviously with the day that's in it I may have fell for some rather sick prank)


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    But I would like to know how, in one line, you came to a view that a group of protestants are less ethnically Irish (less Irish than...? I know not).

    You said this without any knowledge of their lives, or backgrounds, or cultural integration and I'm just wondering what your thought-process is.
    Anglo Irish protestants are going to deviate from the average - and on average of course - from the "local"; genetically, politically, socially, culturally and length of time in the region. The average is what sets the well, average, the mean of "Irishness" as it were and they would deviate from that to some degree or other. So therefore they would be "less" or better described as more "different" Irish than that average majority.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    And how would you factor social reproduction?
    I;d certainly factor it anyway. The problem is it is consistent across every "multicultural" nation. And damned right racism is a huge part of it. I wish it weren't, but the reality and the reality on the ground shows this repeatedly and the same narratives continue to be played out time and time again and place and place again. Racism isn't the entirety of it either. Culture is a huge part of it too. EG East Asian demographics consistently trend towards equal to or higher in the socioeconomic and educational trends compared to the background White Western "locals". In the US Asian Americans outperform European Americans in education and wealth and America is hardly a pro East Asian culture.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,700 ✭✭✭Montage of Feck


    “All right, but apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, a fresh water system, and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?”

    🙈🙉🙊



  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 80,776 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sephiroth_dude


    I've had to delete several posts that were completely off topic and frankly some were crossing a line. Get back on topic and enough with the sweeping, disparaging statements about entire groups of people.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,017 ✭✭✭SharpshooterTom


    Irish is a nationality, English is not at present nor since 1707.

    My English stepmother always said we Irish kids born with both Irish parents couldn't be English, we were Celtic not Anglo Saxon. Back in the '70's & 80's such as statement was considered uncontroversial & matter of fact. If your parents & your family were Italian, Spanish or Chinese that's what the children were called.

    Well the caller was 80 herself so it kind of proves your point. I think their are a lot of people who still hold this opinion, although they are a lot less vocal about it now.

    Despite having growing up in England with an English accent, I was always called Irish and never once English or British. Though I grew up Suffolk which doesn't have a lot of diversity and where the vast majority of the population is ethnically English whose parents and grandparents were all born there, so obviously having Irish parents I stood out.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 524 ✭✭✭DelaneyIn


    Oranage2 wrote: »
    Because nationalism and race is associated with Nazism, something we're all thought is wrong.

    Outside of the western world, this isn’t the case. If I moved to China and had a child there, nobody would seriously see my child as native to China as the Han people. If I moved to Nigeria and had a child there, nobody would consider my child to be as native as the Igbo people. When Senator Norris was born in what is now the Congo, nobody every refers to him as Congolese nor African.

    This is not considered racist in the slightest. So why the hypocrisy and double standards?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,807 ✭✭✭ShatterAlan


    rossie1977 wrote: »
    Nice one. So nobody outside native Americans can call themselves American so..


    Wouldn't Inuits and eskimos be classed as American, much like Chileans or even Falklanders? They all come from the Americas...or at least were born there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,184 ✭✭✭riclad


    How would one define ethnically irish?
    when theres black and chinese people living here having children.
    this is not the 1970s ,
    when most people living here were white causcasian .
    i think anyone who is born here and has parents living here for years is considered irish in the eyes of the law.
    i don,t think being irish could be considered part of an ethnic group.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,071 ✭✭✭purplepanda


    According to the BBC report on the passing of Prince Phillip, he wasn't Greek despite his birthplace, they state he was of German, Danish & British ancestry.

    So all those "plastics" of Irish families & ancestry are now officially Irish, as my English Stepmother always maintained.

    Doubtless some forelock tugging serfs will be along shortly to claim there's different criteria for royals over mere Plebs.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,269 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    What?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,707 ✭✭✭Bobblehats


    riclad wrote: »
    How would one define ethnically irish?
    when theres black and chinese people living here having children.
    this is not the 1970s ,

    Blue eyes? Snub nose... tawny hair

    Vintage Horslips raglan; beneath double denim attyre.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    Do you have to be an actual German Shepherd to be a German Shepherd?

    If a sudden influx of poodles start mingling with German shepherds, then the poodles are also German shepherds.

    German shepherds = German shepherds

    German shepherds + poodles = German shepherds

    Ergo

    Poodles = German shepherds

    Meanwhile

    German shepherds cannot be poodles just about every else on earth.

    That above is the shockingly lacking depth of critical thought on display here. Just woefully dim. There's nothing wrong with poodles or German shepherds, but it's all akin to pissing on someone and telling them it's raining. Intellectual dishonesty and ignorance.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,614 ✭✭✭WrenBoy


    So basically being Irish is just an administrative designation on a passport. Thats all.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,301 ✭✭✭Snickers Man


    99nsr125 wrote: »
    No

    No Irish heritage not Irish

    Would you consider someone Chinese just because they lived a while in China.

    Holding a passport is not the same as being

    So in these days you can rise through the social classes thanks to universal education and equality laws,
    you can change your religion (as you always could)
    people are so racially intermingled that many people can pass themselves off as being of another race, despite the fact that they do not in fact have any heritage n the race they are claiming
    you can even change your gender through "reassignment" surgery
    .......but you gotta be a freckly, hurling playing, bony elbowed red haired blue eyed dancing-at-the-crossroads native to be properly Irish?

    Gimme a break!!!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 368 ✭✭antfin


    Gradius wrote: »
    Do you have to be an actual German Shepherd to be a German Shepherd?

    If a sudden influx of poodles start mingling with German shepherds, then the poodles are also German shepherds.

    German shepherds = German shepherds

    German shepherds + poodles = German shepherds

    Ergo

    Poodles = German shepherds

    Meanwhile

    German shepherds cannot be poodles just about every else on earth.

    That above is the shockingly lacking depth of critical thought on display here. Just woefully dim. There's nothing wrong with poodles or German shepherds, but it's all akin to pissing on someone and telling them it's raining. Intellectual dishonesty and ignorance.

    Are you suggesting that racial characteristics in humans is akin to breeds of dogs with that analogy?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    So in these days you can rise through the social classes thanks to universal education and equality laws,
    you can change your religion (as you always could)
    people are so racially intermingled that many people can pass themselves off as being of another race, despite the fact that they do not in fact have any heritage n the race they are claiming
    you can even change your gender through "reassignment" surgery
    .......but you gotta be a freckly, hurling playing, bony elbowed red haired blue eyed dancing-at-the-crossroads native to be properly Irish?

    Gimme a break!!!

    It's all trollocks.

    Being different is amazing, how dare you not celebrate it!?

    Simultaneously

    We're all the same, how dare you differentiate me?!

    It's a vapid dead-end idealogy that is basically used as a weapon to disenfranchise certain people and empower certain people.

    "Disenfranchise"...could there possibly be a better example of dis-enfranchising people than convincing them that they essentially don't exist?

    Dangerous stuff.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    antfin wrote: »
    Are you suggesting that racial characteristics in humans is akin to breeds of dogs with that analogy?

    No, I'm not suggesting, I'm pointing out the cold, hard, inescapable truth of existence.

    Yes, different breeds of dogs behave differently, look different, have different characteristics, suffer from different ailments and so on. Similar, but not the same. Just like people with some added complexities on top.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 33 Monkey arris


    If you're born somewhere that's where you are from. We are quick enough to claim Athletes, actors and Presidents.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 368 ✭✭antfin


    Gradius wrote: »
    No, I'm not suggesting, I'm pointing out the cold, hard, inescapable truth of existence.

    Yes, different breeds of dogs behave differently, look different, have different characteristics, suffer from different ailments and so on. Similar, but not the same. Just like people with some added complexities on top.

    Comparing dog breeds to human racial characteristic has been proven to be not a suitable comparison. Historically, at best it's been used as a misguided unscientific basis to implement, legitimise and enforce racial division and at worst it's been used to justify extreme racism. Biologicially it doesn't make any sense. The genotypic and phenotypic variation in humans is far lower than dogs.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,170 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    riclad wrote: »
    i think anyone who is born here and has parents living here for years is considered irish in the eyes of the law.
    The law is not a great arbiter of truth or reality as history has shown.
    i don,t think being irish could be considered part of an ethnic group.
    OK, but would you be so quick to say that of being Ethiopian, Japanese, Indian, Roma, or San? Or African Americans? Or more locally Travellers? I'm quite sure people in those groups wouldn't be nearly so quick to discard their ethnicities, indeed they're far more likely to celebrate it, but it seems this notion of being so quick to discard ethnicity is very much of a White Western trend and almost only ever applied to White Westerners.
    So in these days you can rise through the social classes thanks to universal education and equality laws,
    To some degree yes and more in the West.
    you can change your religion (as you always could)
    Depends on your culture. In Ireland easy peasy, in Iran not so much.
    people are so racially intermingled that many people can pass themselves off as being of another race, despite the fact that they do not in fact have any heritage n the race they are claiming
    Hardly. In places like America where there has been some mixing on the edges of different populations(often unwillingly in the past) yes, but for the vast majority of the world's peoples that's most certainly not the case. A native of Sudan could not pass themselves off as a native of Sweden or vice versa. Now you can and do have Sudanese White people and Swedish Black people, but their ancestry is not a native one to those respective geographies.
    you can even change your gender through "reassignment" surgery
    No, I'm afraid you can't. Legally yes, socially depending on culture, but not biologically or medically.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    3DataModem wrote: »
    Those who celebrate accidents of birth are not to be trusted.

    There's no "accident" involved in being born. People don't spontaneously come into creation with no rhyme or reason.

    Your birth is the result of myriad factors, the environment of your parents, the history that led to that environment, the collective effort of possibly generations of people's decisions, were your parents educated, the entire history attached to the development and dissemination of that educational system across populations. Or the absence of those same factors, and thousands of other concious/subconscious/unconscious decisions.

    Being born is not an accident, it's a result.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    antfin wrote: »
    Comparing dog breeds to human racial characteristic has been proven to be not a suitable comparison. Historically, at best it's been used as a misguided unscientific basis to implement, legitimise and enforce racial division and at worst it's been used to justify extreme racism. Biologicially it doesn't make any sense. The genotypic and phenotypic variation in humans is far lower than dogs.

    So dogs are more different than people? Much of a muchness.

    A long winded way of stating the same thing, people are different. I'm glad you agree with reality, for your own sake.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 125 ✭✭AlejGuzman68


    As a foreigner to your shores, what do you define as being Irish ethnically? Is it just being born here or being able to trace your roots to hundreds of years here? But also have to take in account of Viking raids and other conquests from other nations. Every nation is a mishmash of another nation. To be ethical means a certain breed line which doesn't exist. In this day and age no one is a pure ethical standing,imo.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    As a foreigner to your shores, what do you define as being Irish ethnically? Is it just being born here or being able to trace your roots to hundreds of years here? But also have to take in account of Viking raids and other conquests from other nations. Every nation is a mishmash of another nation. To be ethical means a certain breed line which doesn't exist. In this day and age no one is a pure ethical standing,imo.

    The challenge of an argument should never be placed on the defence of reality, it is up to the challenger to prove their position.

    If someone tells me that oxygen is made of marshmallow, the onus is not on me to disprove that bullshyt by jumping through hoops.

    Therefore the question for you.

    Do you consider yourself Irish?

    If not, how do you distinguish that fact? How do you define your own people as distinct to Irish people, or German, or Chinese?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,224 ✭✭✭Gradius


    The usual intellectual introspection and defence of absurdly unfounded beliefs

    *crickets*


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