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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 12-Mar-2008, 04:03
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

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Originally Posted by EMAIL REMOVED - Send PM to This User Instead View Post
I stand corrected.
Persons born in Ireland are technically "Irish."
However, I also feel that persons born anywhere in the UK are UK citizens, and hence British.
If I was referred to as British by anyone, I would not be in the least annoyed that technically they are mistaken. It is a political and cultural anomaly and if people are really bothered then they can look at how the term is used and its effect via the Good Friday Agreement.

A lot of us have moved on from this and many use the UK reference in terms of international business, so don't "stand corrected"! If I started on the contradictions... Hehehehe...

Happy Paddy's day this weekend!!!
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 13-Mar-2008, 21:23
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

Batfink: I'm afraid I don't quite understand how your quote from the Act of Union shows Ireland to have been (constitutionally) different from Great Britain.

Happy St Patrick's Day to youse all, too.
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  #13 (permalink)  
Old 14-Mar-2008, 04:44
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

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Originally Posted by iconoclast View Post
Batfink: I'm afraid I don't quite understand how your quote from the Act of Union shows Ireland to have been (constitutionally) different from Great Britain.

Happy St Patrick's Day to youse all, too.
Happy Paddy's Day to yousins!!!

They are separate entities in the forming of the Union. Therefore, it is not technically correct to say that the people in Northern Ireland are British. I am not Chinese because I live and work here.

PS The UK, Great Britain and Northern Ireland, is one of few countries not to have a written constitution. Hence, arguments (in a debating way) like this. That is why many of us hold credence in the Good Friday Agreement. It is the nearest thing to a constitution therefore invaluable in my self determination in regards to my citizenhood (if that is not a word, it should be).
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  #14 (permalink)  
Old 14-Mar-2008, 16:42
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

As I understand it from my reading of Irish history, the Act of Union constitutionally merged the parliament of the Kingdom of Ireland, which had hitherto technically been independent (and had gotten too uppity), into that of the Kingdom of Great Britain, thereby creating the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in much the same way as the 1707 Union of the English and Scottish Parliaments had created the Kingdom of Great Britain. As I pointed out previuosly, unless it's been changed, sovereignty still lies in the antiquated Parliament-plus-Crown set-up. Therefore, all subjects of His/Her Britannic Majesty in the UK were officially British subjects, which, for example, is presumably why the leaders of the Easter Uprising could be tried for wartime treason against the Crown, or why 19th-century coffin ships that America turned away could not be refused entry by Canada.

Whatever the truth of the matter, it wasn't really until the 20th century that ordinary folks ever started travelling in any great number and that people ever applied for a passport - and that increasing restrictions on international travel came into being. I just wonder what protocol authorities followed when dealing with 18-century Ulster-Scots escaping penalisation, or with 19th-century emigrants fleeing the Famine. If movies like 'The Godfather' are anything to go by, the "home" authorities seemed happy to get rid of you, and the American authorities gave you an austere but welcoming "come on on on in".

Hmmm. All this nationality business does complicate things today, doesn't it? That's why, when asked, I'm Irish when it suits me, and British when that suits me, too. But then, 1971 was the last time I ever lived in "Darkest Ulster" (as I then not very funnily called today's "Sunny Nornirn"), so what do I care! Nevertheless, on MArch 17th I be in our local "Irish bar", one of those identikit numbers sold all over that must be making a few boyos a euro or two. Slainte.
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Old 15-Mar-2008, 00:42
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

In reply to Batfink, who said "I am not Chinese because I live and work here": rephrased , "Living and working in China does not make me Chinese." That is true, but being born in China does make one Chinese.

There seems to be a confusion between a person's statutory citizenship and the person's ethnicity. A person whose ethnic backgrounnd is Irish can be by birth a citizen of China. Likewise, a person whose ethnic background is Chinese can be by birth or naturalization a citizen of the UK.

I was born in Canada, so I was and am a Canadian citizen, but my own ethnic background is mixed. My mother's Mennonite forebears emigrated to the United States to escape religiious persecution in Europe. Later, they moved to Ontario, Canada with a group of United Empire Loyalists. Later, Mother's parents moved to Alberta, where my mother was born and later I was born. My father was born in Scotland, then emigrated to Canada, where he met and married my mother.

I have lived in Canada, the U.S., the UK, and New Zealand. I had emigrant status in New Zealand. When I was asked where I was from, I said "New Zealand," but nobody paid any attention to that.
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  #16 (permalink)  
Old 15-Mar-2008, 05:15
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

Slainte!!!

I entirely agree with the last two posts. I must add that words on a paper never the person make!
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  #17 (permalink)  
Old 29-Mar-2008, 02:14
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

"My father was born in Scotland"

You do realize, of course, that this makes you a British citizen?
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  #18 (permalink)  
Old 29-Mar-2008, 02:16
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

A person born in Northern Ireland is a British citizen regardless.
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  #19 (permalink)  
Old 29-Mar-2008, 06:56
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

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Originally Posted by JJM Ballantyne View Post
A person born in Northern Ireland is a British citizen regardless.
"Regardless" of what? Of your stance? Well you are on your own as I can state (constitutionally) what I have posted and all you do is post in bold. Yawn... Here, I cite the Good Friday Agreement on the constitutional status of those born and living in the north of Ireland (I suggest you post something that you know about):


Irish Northern Aid, Inc./1998 Good Friday Agreement

(vi) recognise the birthright of all the people of Northern Ireland to identify themselves and be accepted as Irish or British, or both, as they may so choose, and accordingly confirm that their right to hold both British and Irish citizenship is accepted by both Governments and would not be affected by any future change in the status of Northern Ireland.


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  #20 (permalink)  
Old 29-Mar-2008, 12:22
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Default Re: How can I refer to a person from UK?

[quote=EMAIL REMOVED - Send PM to This User Instead;264821]
There seems to be a confusion between a person's statutory citizenship and the person's ethnicity. A person whose ethnic backgrounnd is Irish can be by birth a citizen of China. Likewise, a person whose ethnic background is Chinese can be by birth or naturalization a citizen of the UK.
[/quote]

Not all countries extend statutory citizenship to anyone born there, do they?
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