Very good. Lublin your work.I War-saw what you did there.
Very good. Lublin your work.I War-saw what you did there.
Bit early, shirley?....Alright for you retirees, poncing about. Some of us have work to do Making Britain great again.Happy St George's day fellow English folk. I am off to the pub to raise a glass or two.
Stop Gdansk-ing around the issueVery good. Lublin your work.
Yep, I don't remember when the St George's cross became so prominent at England games either. This is England fans in Turin during Italia 90, a lot more Union flagging:Same here, don’t recall a single year when St George was celebrated. It only seems in recent times folk have even bothered with the St George cross;,it was the Union flag when I was a kid. Starting a celebration now seems a bit false, a plastic show of patriotism. Besides, it’s too close to International Workers Day…I save my energies for this.
The older I've got the less I identify as anything really. I'm English, I'm fine with that. If anyone asks I tell them.This is the really weird stuff. Perhaps I miss it but if you believe these kinds of posts there are people everywhere complaining about people saying they are English.
How do you get yourself in this kind of quandary when the evidence around you points in a different direction.
Or have I missed it all?
Fwiw, I very much identify as English and get reminded of my Englishness many times a week. Although my Englishness is more your drinking tea and aplologising for everything.
Yep, I don't remember when the St George's cross became so prominent at England games either. This is England fans in Turin during Italia 90, a lot more Union flagging:
Keep what's on the end of your pole to yourself pal.Needs to come to my house, massive England flag displayed at the end of a pole.
We have a great St Patrick's Day celebration in Portugal every year. My local even gives hats out.Part of me finds it mildly disappointing that we don’t celebrate our national day. The other part of me thinks this kind of thing is for noddy little countries like Ireland and Australia, not for a 1,000+ year old country like England.
Fact is, if enough people cared then it would be a money-spinner, just like St Patrick’s Day is, and then there would be St George’s crosses everywhere but they don’t.
I do share the gruff-voiced man’s sentiment about St Patrick’s Day in England though.
Except when England are playing in the World Cup or any other international sporting event where England has been represented in recent years. Nationalist fervour during sporting competition, isn’t just limited to ultra sports fans as I think it used to be but has become an all-age, public wide, flag-waving form of our own performance nationalism in recent years that I personally find nauseating. It seems to have got worse since Euros 2020s which apparently rekindled some sense of post-Brexit national identity. Personally I also find all the politicians, members of the Royal Family and MSM becoming ’proud flag-waving Englanders’ during international sporting events, along with the singing of ‘Rule Britannia’ etc ‘pretty nauseating’ too but each to his own, that’s just me. I just think it has become OTT. There is no doubt though that there has been is a movement of progressive patriotism in international England competitive sport that not only appeals to nationalistic sentiments but has rightly or wrongly, used that platform to assume the mantle of being arbiters of social reform too.I personally find the performative nationalism of somewhere like the US pretty nauseating. I'm glad that we do not feel need to the express ourselves in such a fashion, it's a lot more dignified and dare I say it....more English to be pretty cool about it.
A former GF of mine is German. She absolutely loathed what she called 'English Verdplay'. The way we say things that are not quite correct, either for comedy porpoises, or because we aren't particularly bothered about the accuracy of certain things. I sometime look back on a conversation I have had and have thought "I should of done better, there", but in reality ambiguity, whether deliberate or carless, is part of being English.The older I've got the less I identify as anything really. I'm English, I'm fine with that. If anyone asks I tell them.
One of the ironies is that a lot of folk who talk about being English and proud have a problem with gay folk not keeping it to themselves. But I say being gay is more relevant to a person day by day than the nation they were born in.
But that feeds into one thing we English do very well. Hypocrisy. I should know that. I'm English and I'm very good at hypocrisy.
Most English folk don't celebrate today because they can't be bothered. We are English, and not being bothered is a human right.
Well....there is a panto element to it. Football patriotism, I mean.Except when England are playing in the World Cup or any other international sporting event where England has been represented in recent years. Nationalist fervour during sporting competition, isn’t just limited to ultra sports fans as I think it used to be but has become an all-age, public wide, flag-waving form of our own performance nationalism in recent years that I personally find nauseating. It seems to have got worse since Euros 2020s which apparently rekindled some sense of post-Brexit national identity. Personally I also find all the politicians, members of the Royal Family and MSM becoming ’proud flag-waving Englanders’ during international sporting events, along with the singing of ‘Rule Britannia’ etc ‘pretty nauseating’ too but each to his own, that’s just me. I just think it has become OTT. There is no doubt though that there has been is a movement of progressive patriotism in international England competitive sport that not only appeals to nationalistic sentiments but has rightly or wrongly, used that platform to assume the mantle of being arbiters of social reform too.
This article should interest anyone (who can be bothered to read it)
Dear England? Nationalism and “progressive patriotism” in sport • International Socialism
What has made sport so uniquely effective a medium for inculcating national feelings…is the ease with which even the least political or public individuals can identify with the nation as symbolised by young persons excelling at what practically every man… Continue Reading →isj.org.uk
She does take a very one-sided view of thew world. I read about a third of it but gave up when she criticised the royal family "getting in on the act" because Prince George (aged 7) was seen celebrating the win over the Germany in the 2020 Euros.Except when England are playing in the World Cup or any other international sporting event where England has been represented in recent years. Nationalist fervour during sporting competition, isn’t just limited to ultra sports fans as I think it used to be but has become an all-age, public wide, flag-waving form of our own performance nationalism in recent years that I personally find nauseating. It seems to have got worse since Euros 2020s which apparently rekindled some sense of post-Brexit national identity. Personally I also find all the politicians, members of the Royal Family and MSM becoming ’proud flag-waving Englanders’ during international sporting events, along with the singing of ‘Rule Britannia’ etc ‘pretty nauseating’ too but each to his own, that’s just me. I just think it has become OTT. There is no doubt though that there has been is a movement of progressive patriotism in international England competitive sport that not only appeals to nationalistic sentiments but has rightly or wrongly, used that platform to assume the mantle of being arbiters of social reform too.
This article should interest anyone (who can be bothered to read it)
Dear England? Nationalism and “progressive patriotism” in sport • International Socialism
What has made sport so uniquely effective a medium for inculcating national feelings…is the ease with which even the least political or public individuals can identify with the nation as symbolised by young persons excelling at what practically every man… Continue Reading →isj.org.uk
Colne Town Hall flies it every day of the year (barring Union Jack national days). As they said, they have a flagpole, they might as well use it.At least there were some Albion flags in the vid!!!
23rd April aside, post Brexit the St. George cross seems to have largely disappeared. Its a not just Brighton.
A decade or so again you'd see it everywhere during to Euros or a WC. Can't help many feel it represents "little England" a uncomfortable form of nationalism which is a bit sad.
Looks like I was wrong, and that is indeed your Lodz.
There's another priceless video with him announcing that he decided not to move to Spain but instead wanted to stay in the UK and fight the good fight. Making comparisons with his grandfather who fought in the Second World War, against....fascism.The issue is the kind of chap who is desperately calling for St Georges flags also has videos titled:
WOKE POLICE harass PATRIOT
POLICE FAIL to protect FLAG IN LONDON
Woke england shirt
Tommy Robinson court highlights.
That’s a very interesting article. Not to go on a tangent but I really don’t understand what point of England players kneeling achieves. It just comes as gaslighting, activism without no fruits just comes across as an empty gesture.Except when England are playing in the World Cup or any other international sporting event where England has been represented in recent years. Nationalist fervour during sporting competition, isn’t just limited to ultra sports fans as I think it used to be but has become an all-age, public wide, flag-waving form of our own performance nationalism in recent years that I personally find nauseating. It seems to have got worse since Euros 2020s which apparently rekindled some sense of post-Brexit national identity. Personally I also find all the politicians, members of the Royal Family and MSM becoming ’proud flag-waving Englanders’ during international sporting events, along with the singing of ‘Rule Britannia’ etc ‘pretty nauseating’ too but each to his own, that’s just me. I just think it has become OTT. There is no doubt though that there has been is a movement of progressive patriotism in international England competitive sport that not only appeals to nationalistic sentiments but has rightly or wrongly, used that platform to assume the mantle of being arbiters of social reform too.
This article should interest anyone (who can be bothered to read it)
Dear England? Nationalism and “progressive patriotism” in sport • International Socialism
What has made sport so uniquely effective a medium for inculcating national feelings…is the ease with which even the least political or public individuals can identify with the nation as symbolised by young persons excelling at what practically every man… Continue Reading →isj.org.uk