I've loved reading them all, and even though I'm not British (proud American Stoat here) it still brought a tear to my eye, seeing all of the wonderful passion on a largely American web forum on behalf of our dear British Friends and this assault upon their culture and history.
I found another item on this matter that may be of interest:
The Sun Newspaper Online - UK's biggest selling newspaper
Day for pride |
The patron saint of England wasnt even English, after all. And his dragon-slaying adventure is just a myth. Well, The Sun says YES it is important to mark St Georges Day not just for the English, but for every citizen of this United Kingdom of ours. Being proud of your country is becoming more and more difficult as political correctness takes over. Those who claim to preach diversity in our multi-cultural times actually want the opposite. Their dream is of a society where every edge is blurred, where no one is allowed to be different, where we all share the same dumbed-down values in a meaningless, offend-no-one hotchpotch. That is bad for those who want to show pride in being English on one special day a year. But it is equally bad for those who want to celebrate anything that is unique to them. If the English cant be English, how long before the Irish cant enjoy Paddys Day, the Scots cant mark St Andrews Day or the Welsh find St Davids Day is frowned on? What makes Great Britain such a special place in which to live is not just the whole but the many diverse parts of which it is made. Shame on the Navy for banning the Flag of St George from its warships moored alongside Plymouth today. The top brass fear the flag would offend the Turkish Navy, which is visiting the port to mark Turkeys national day. What balderdash! St George was actually born in what is now Turkey. The idea that Turks would be offended by St Georges Day is ludicrous. They are more likely to be offended by the way our Navy insults their intelligence. |