
Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
- tattuchu
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
Would I describe myself as peripatetic? Well that's an odd question. I guess the answer is sometimes. Mostly, though, I drive my truck 

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- Gawdzilla Sama
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
Why would it be weird? Those kind of things don't deconstruct easily. You care for things for obvious and not-so-obvious reasons, just like the rest of us. I have many places that show clearly in my mind right now. Talking with a 6-7 year old at a restaurant in Perth. (He wanted to know why I sounded like the telly.) Standing on the bow of a warship as it transited the Straits of Magellan. (The Straits were formed when the southern end of South America broke off and headed for Antarctica.) Standing on to of Mt. Etna and seeing Africa off in the distance. (And standing in Africa and feeling pumice fall on me from that same volcano.) Special places for me.Svartalf wrote:Is it weird that in ways I feel more patriotic toward Ireland and Scotland, places with which my ties are thin, being materialised by ancestral lines that tied into mine more than two centuries ago, than to the countries of which I am an actual citizen and where I have resided for upward of a year in my life?
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
Well, I've never even been to Scotland, though the story of how a Scottish nobleman married into my ancestry has always been a big one.
and my attraction to Ireland was of the kind that when I was there, I even went to the Sinn Féin to see if they had use for a little frog. (and if they had asked me to do thing to help the IRA on pretense of visiting the 6 counties, I'd probably have done it)
Then again, my motives for despising the sassenach are multifarious and go back 3 centuries, if not more.
and my attraction to Ireland was of the kind that when I was there, I even went to the Sinn Féin to see if they had use for a little frog. (and if they had asked me to do thing to help the IRA on pretense of visiting the 6 counties, I'd probably have done it)
Then again, my motives for despising the sassenach are multifarious and go back 3 centuries, if not more.
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
patriotism is for patridiots.
Our struggle is not against actual corrupt individuals, but against those in power in general, against their authority, against the global order and the ideological mystification which sustains it.
- Gawdzilla Sama
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
You love yourself, nothing else, so I can understand you think that way.sandinista wrote:patriotism is for patridiots.
Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
For many people it's not as polemic as the two extremes you suggest here, but a case of being emotionally neutral (by this, I don't mean apathy). And for many of those people, neutrality is an important aspect of maintaining a higher level of objectivity.Coito ergo sum wrote:I do love the US, and I don't see why loving the country I was born and raised in has to be such a horrid thing. It's certainly no virtue, IMHO, to think that one's country sucks ass. Is that value judgment any "better?" My country sucks? That's o.k.? Or, that's more "nuanced" than "I love my country?"
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- Gawdzilla Sama
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
I find the people who automatically declare they're not a patriot as amusing as those who automatically declare they ARE a patriot. Both extremes aren't thinking about the issue, they're just saying what they're supposed to say.
Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
Evocatively put, zilla.Gawdzilla wrote:Why would it be weird? Those kind of things don't deconstruct easily. You care for things for obvious and not-so-obvious reasons, just like the rest of us. I have many places that show clearly in my mind right now. Talking with a 6-7 year old at a restaurant in Perth. (He wanted to know why I sounded like the telly.) Standing on the bow of a warship as it transited the Straits of Magellan. (The Straits were formed when the southern end of South America broke off and headed for Antarctica.) Standing on to of Mt. Etna and seeing Africa off in the distance. (And standing in Africa and feeling pumice fall on me from that same volcano.) Special places for me.Svartalf wrote:Is it weird that in ways I feel more patriotic toward Ireland and Scotland, places with which my ties are thin, being materialised by ancestral lines that tied into mine more than two centuries ago, than to the countries of which I am an actual citizen and where I have resided for upward of a year in my life?
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
I like my planet. 

Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
I'll like it better once I'm in charge of it.Gawdzilla wrote:I like my planet.

Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
Those who want power should never get it.Ian wrote:I'll like it better once I'm in charge of it.Gawdzilla wrote:I like my planet.

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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
Planetiotism?Gawdzilla wrote:I like my planet.

Atheists have always argued that this world is all that we have, and that our duty is to one another to make the very most and best of it. ~Christopher Hitchens~
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
Gawdzilla wrote:I find the people who automatically declare they're not a patriot as amusing as those who automatically declare they ARE a patriot. Both extremes aren't thinking about the issue, they're just saying what they're supposed to say.

Our struggle is not against actual corrupt individuals, but against those in power in general, against their authority, against the global order and the ideological mystification which sustains it.
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
I can see that. However, by the same token, it ought to be understandable that a person can be loyal and devoted to one's family and country, and still maintain objectivity. That loyalty and devotion need not be absolute or unconditional toward any government, and patriotism often requires active resistance to a government or a State.charlou wrote:For many people it's not as polemic as the two extremes you suggest here, but a case of being emotionally neutral (by this, I don't mean apathy). And for many of those people, neutrality is an important aspect of maintaining a higher level of objectivity.Coito ergo sum wrote:I do love the US, and I don't see why loving the country I was born and raised in has to be such a horrid thing. It's certainly no virtue, IMHO, to think that one's country sucks ass. Is that value judgment any "better?" My country sucks? That's o.k.? Or, that's more "nuanced" than "I love my country?"
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Re: Would you describe yourself as patriotic?
I don't think it's unpatriotic to move to another country or even switch citizenships. My parents did it. SWMBO'd did it. They loved and were loyal to their home countries, and now live here. And, they are loyal to this country now, and love it. They want the best for it. They want it to do right and be right.Geoff wrote:Yes, I see that; I just don't feel it. To me, it's simply an accident of birth. If it was financially viable for me to move, I could see myself looking objectively at other countries' plus and minus points, and moving to the one that suited me the best, and I certainly wouldn't feel at all disloyal in doing so. I can't think of anything that is considered essentially "British" (except perhaps our beer) that I would miss.Coito ergo sum wrote:I think this issue seems to boil down to what definition a person ascribes to the word "patriotism." Those that dislike the word seem to think of it as, like, "my country right or wrong," "if you don't like it, get the fuck out," or "we are awesome and you suck," kind of mentalities. Granted, there are plenty of folks out there that act like that. However, I think those folks on this thread that are comfortable with the word don't think of it in those terms. Those of us, like Gawdzilla and myself, I think, are looking at patriotism as more of a love of country without denigrating other countries - a loyalty to one's country, but not a blind, unthinking, unquestioning loyalty.
I don't think of patriotism in terms of what's best for me and my life or what's best suited for me. I was born and raised here. My family is here. My friends are here. When this country does right, as a member of the citizenry I think it reflects on me. When it does wrong, I regret that and want it fixed. If it is attacked, I would like to help defend it in the ways that I can. That, to me, is part of patriotism.
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