Gabbafella
Well-known member
- Aug 22, 2012
- 4,907
My mum lives closer to Paris than me
And I live in France
But you haven't said where your mum lives. She could live on the outskirts of Paris for all we know.
My mum lives closer to Paris than me
And I live in France
"You're French, and you know you are..."
Living where we do I feel I have more in common with the French , Belgians, Dutch and Irish than I do most of England.
Why? I would love to live in the Highlands but suspect it may be tiresome for an Englishman living in a city in Scotland given the rise in racism towards the English up there.
Did you bottle it in a fight Zef ?
I was a student in Dundee for 4 years and never had any problems with the Scots, far from it.
As for history, all of us working, living and travelling in an EU Single Market has created a feeling of being European. History is not so important anymore. I enjoyed being in the EU and feeling European, being part of 500 million people with a similar outlook on human rights, democracy, climate, workers rights. Real, tangible stuff - and it's dificult to feel affinity with an England that voted to reject all that.
Who knows how we would have ended up without the Polish airmen, and the US and Canadian Army?
Again fair enough. Without wishing to discuss the referendum, there are many citizens of the EU, a sizeable amount, who like the people who voted leave, are also not enamoured with it and would vote leave given a chance.
It appears to me that you like the freedom of the EU and all the advantages it gives which is understandable, but are willing to ignore the part of the European population which would choose the same outcome as the British you now feel no affinity with.
I can't understand that. If there were universal love for the EU in the EU then fair enough. But there isn't.
You embraced the European idea well, I have never felt 'European' in as much as I did not like the way the EU operated. Having said that, I felt and knew I was a European by birth and loved visiting my family in Germany and friends in France amongst other places.
Although a leaver, I much regret the referendum for the division it has caused in the UK and I also feel sadness that there will likely be difficulties between us and the EU, which is particularly galling in this time of world crisis.
More than one line? Wow! They knew how to party those French Huguenots.
Hang on, you’re not going to turn into one of these are you?
#EuropeanNotBritish
#FPBE
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The English and Welsh don't have much love for the Scots
B.O. and garlic breath?
Living where we do I feel I have more in common with the French , Belgians, Dutch and Irish than I do most of England.
The anti- EU feeling in Europe is nothing like it is in England and Wales, and I think a big reason is that the ravages of war across that continent is a binding factor that doesn't resonate with Brits to the same extent.
I supported the Union position in the Scottish Independence referendum but now I find myself hoping they vote to leave the UK next time around. The English and Welsh don't have much love for the Scots, in much the same way they don't care for the EU much either. Scotland will do well in the EU, in time.
Strange but today but my wife and I read the memorial/tutorial on Worthing seafront by the Canadian flag which waves on West Worthing promenade for those who lost their lives during the Dieppe rain in august 42...... 65 Worthing women married Canadian serviceman based in Worthing during their time here.
I just checked on google maps. Dublin 120 miles, London 184 both as the crow flies.
Who knows how we would have ended up without the Polish airmen, and the US and Canadian Army?