Are now over thankfully! Politics, dirty and otherwise, has filled our TV screens here in New Zealand in the lead up to the general election for over a month now. After all the kerfuffle we've ended up with the incumbents re-elected for a third term on a slightly bigger majority
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Comments 12
Pity about the result, but at least I put my two penny's worth in.
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Well... I don't think I'd die for my country. I might die for a belief and I'd certainly die for my kids, but my country... no that's just too woolly.
I'm English and after the Scottish vote I'm even more likely now to say I'm English rather than British, cos the Scots got up my nose something chronic with their anti English rhetoric. But as to Nationalistic, no, possibly because the history of English Nationalism tends to be right wing and rather nasty. Then if you ask me what is is to be English I'd probably turn that round and ask you what you think it means as an Aussie having lived in England for oinks. :-)
Now, when are you settling down, I have a 'Welcome to your New Abode' card to write!
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And ha - I'm not entirely sure what I am, because I feel more at home in England than Australia, and always have - and it's so long since I've been there that my ideas about being an Aussie are probably outdated anyway. I'm always surprised that they seem to have tighter regulations about alot of things - and on the other hand they seem to be a much more socially aware country in some ways. But then that doesn't gel with advertised attitudes to refugees etc, so I'm a bit lost about what it means to be Australian these days! My HSC (A-level equivalent) history course was actually Australian history connected to nationalism - not in a BNP kind of way, but as Australian identity. Interesting that there was a school course in it, come to think of it - but it was rather connected with Australia's relationship with Britain, and becoming an independent country. Which brings us back ( ... )
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A lot of the English people I know are really Northerners, or Yorkshiremen/women, or West Country folk - our emotional ties are less to England in general, but more to our particular region. But if you're Welsh or Scottish, your region happens to also have been a country in legal memory.
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I too was relieved at the referendum results, but I have no doubt that the Yes campaign will be agitating for another election until they get their own way. By the time that comes I'll probably be yelling at them to bugger off and shut the door on the way out. :-)
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