So, yeah. I'm like 1/8th German.

Recommended Videos

Lukirre

New member
Feb 24, 2009
472
0
0
I don't know about the lot of you, but there happen to be a number of individuals around where I live who thoroughly enjoy making comments such as the title of the thread.
The sorts of people who weave rich tapestries of cultural history and attempt to emblazon their names across the top.
People who believe they are the ethnic almalgamation of all of their predecessors.

A great-great-great-great grandfather who resided in a quaint cottage in Ukraine. You must be part Ukrainian.
An ancestor from the dead center of what is now Russian territory. Definately have some Russian scrubbed into you as well.
And what's that, you have another ancestor from Ireland? And another from Scotland? Well right on lads and lasses, you might as well chock them onto your ethnic heritage as well.

Do you see what I'm trying to get at here?
I'm not trying to make this sound like a big deal, nor am I trying to say it's not right for people to say this. I genuinely would like to know if anyone else supports my opinion that it is inaccurate to lay claim to a cultural background just because someone in the high branches of your family tree happened to come from there.

In my opinion, to say that you belong to certain cultues is to actually have been raised within that culture.
I can understand how that would be difficult for a Canadian, because our cultural values are all so clear (guffaw, guffaw).

So if you're raised in a North American society, say...Canada, you're Canadian. Just because you have an ancestor from a different part of the broken Pangea doesn't mean you're part of it as well.

If your parents are from a different country, and upon immigrating here, raised you with the cultural values of their previous home, then yes, it is understandable that you would have that as your ethnic background.

This question is mostly asked because of various incidents where individuals claimed to be "culturally offended" because they were "part ", when really, it was one of their most previous ancestors that reigned from that culture.

...Discuss. Anyone found people like this before?
 

Berethond

New member
Nov 8, 2008
6,474
0
0
That happens because, unlike Europeans, we in North America have not spent two thousand years staring at their great-great-great-greatx1000 grandparents graves. We all came from a place other than North America, we are not native, and the odds are extremely high most of our family's been here less than four generations.
 

El Poncho

Techno Hippy will eat your soul!
May 21, 2009
5,890
0
0
Well when people say that they don't neccesarily mean that they are apart of the culture, maybe they just want to tell you where their familys spread to/be traced back to.
 

Sir Lewis Hazard

New member
Jul 27, 2009
10
0
0
Yeah, I know people like this.
What happens/happened to you defines who you are, not what location on the globe minuscule parts of your genetic structure come from.

And...
REUNITE PANGEA.
 

SilverHammerMan

New member
Jul 26, 2009
448
0
0
I totally agree, in fact I even started a thread about the broad definition nationality. But then everyone here called me a nationalist and a fascist. Seriously, I'm not kidding, they called me a fascist and a nationalist and said some crap about people saying whatever they want. A bunch of jerks were they.
 

RedPandaMan

I bought this to skip ads.
Oct 23, 2008
310
0
0
Valate said:
So yea I'm like 1/8 Human. The other 7/8 is Homo Sapien.
I see what you there.

OT: Meh, doesn't really bother, I think it is saying where their ancestry is from to explain certain genetic traits, rather than cultural. But yes, I'm 7th generation in America with no other cultural values. I'm American.
 

Lukirre

New member
Feb 24, 2009
472
0
0
poncho14 said:
Well when people say that they don't neccesarily mean that they are apart of the culture, maybe they just want to tell you where their familys spread to/be traced back to.
I can understand people who use it from that point of view, because to be honest, I would probably be terribly interested in where my family was from as well.

But I tried to mention it in the last little tidbit. There were people claiming that they were offended for an off colour remark made about a culture they didn't belong to, yet they insisted that a portion of them was part of it.

SilverHammerMan said:
I totally agree, in fact I even started a thread about the broad definition nationality. But then everyone here called me a nationalist and a fascist.
...You're not?
I mean, I'm not... no way.
...Unless you are.
 

rokkolpo

New member
Aug 29, 2009
5,375
0
0
i only go as far as my grandfather is part whatever.

past that limit it's bullshit.

not that it matters i,m pretty much 100% dutch i guess.
 

quiet_samurai

New member
Apr 24, 2009
3,897
0
0
My mom's side of the family is Mexican, my father's is Irish. So when people ask my heritage I say I'm an Irish-Mexican.... It's about who you are heritically, not where you live.
 

SilverHammerMan

New member
Jul 26, 2009
448
0
0
Lukirre said:
SilverHammerMan said:
I totally agree, in fact I even started a thread about the broad definition nationality. But then everyone here called me a nationalist and a fascist.
...You're not?
I mean, I'm not... no way.
...Unless you are.
Totally not.... no, yeah, totally not. Totally. Yep, I'm definitely not a nationalist or a fascist.... publicly that is....
 

Fraught

New member
Aug 2, 2008
4,418
0
0
Valate said:
So yea I'm like 1/8 Human. The other 7/8 is Homo Sapien.
In that case, I'm 1/3 Homo, 1/3 Sapien and 1/3 Latin.

My native language, though? That can go fuck itself.