• @Woozythebear
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    278 months ago

    Maybe because the Irish came over in huge numbers and are responsible for helping build up America’s infrastructure and manufacturing more than anyone else.

    Could also be that the Irish were persecuted against pretty heavily here in America and in Ireland. Not so much the Scots and Britts

    • @[email protected]
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      148 months ago

      Yeah, like Italians, the Irish weren’t considered White. Whiteness was a concept invented to justify slavery and human exploitation in the New World. It’s interesting to see how different races have become accepted as ‘White’ over time.

      A book I highly recommend is White Fragility by Diangelo.

    • @[email protected]
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      88 months ago

      Yeah, this post smells a little like “Why is there a black history month but no white history month?” Lol

      Or “Why is there an International Women’s Day but no International Men’s Day?”

      Tap for spoiler

      It’s Nov 17th, but some men still go around asking that on International Women’s Day…

      • @ParabolicMotionOP
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        18 months ago

        This really isn’t a post about either of those other remembrances.

    • @ParabolicMotionOP
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      48 months ago

      I agree with WoozytheBear. This was along the lines of what I was thinking, too.

  • @dumpsterlid
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    68 months ago

    I wonder why people might feel compelled to honor Irish immigrants specifically, surely it is just because people are being mean to those poor British people from that tiny backwater island.

    Do you know your history about how Britain starved Ireland during the “””””potato famine””””?

    History, it makes you understand things!

    • @[email protected]
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      48 months ago

      Just to increase your knowledge, the official term is not the famine, but the great hunger. Famine means a lack of food. There was sufficient food for all, but it was crops from wealthy British landowners, sold overseas for profit. The Irish went hungry as the potato croo failed and it was their staple food.

    • @ParabolicMotionOP
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      8 months ago

      Oh, I do. I’m about 1/4 Irish. One of my favorite songs is “Famine”, by Sinead O’Connor. I’m also part British, so I feel guilty when I hear it, too.

      I have no idea why I was downvoted for saying I’m Irish and British by dna.

      • @LordOfLocksley
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        07 months ago

        Because the rest of the world is fed up of Americans claiming they are xyz nationality when in reality

        1. they’ve never set foot in that country
        2. they know nothing of current politics in that country
        3. they know nothing of the current struggles in that country
        4. their only connection to the country is some arbitrary fact like “i like a song from an artist from that country”

        You’re just an ignorant American who has nationality dysphoria.

        Maybe if you stand in a garage you can convince yourself you’re a car? Try drinking only petrol coloured beverages to really convince yourself.

        • @ParabolicMotionOP
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          -27 months ago

          I have actually visited every country that is part of my dna map, except Sweden. Who are you to call someone ignorant? You must have a really high opinion of yourself.

          • @LordOfLocksley
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            37 months ago

            No, I just have a really low opinion of Americans.

  • @NeptuneOrbit
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    28 months ago

    I’ll drink scotch or old speckled hen whenever I please.

  • @[email protected]
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    18 months ago

    The lack of a Scottish American heritage month is a serious injustice.

    The tories can go cry in a corner, though. Fucking white house burners.

    (OK, mostly being a dick for lols, but honestly don’t feel bad that the former colonial power we rebelled against to even have a nation doesn’t have a special holiday)

    • @Etterra
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      18 months ago

      To be fair we don’t have that large a Scottish-ancestry population. We do have a large Scots Irish population, but nobody should be celebrating hillbillies.