Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
If you only define ethnicity as the origin of your ancestors, as seems to be the approach in the US, then you are Irish. If you adopt the definition that includes common language, culture, values, etc then you are not Irish.
If someone has Irish nationality, they are legally Irish, but that doesn’t make them ethnically Irish either by descent or common culture etc. Someone can immigrate to Ireland from Korea and obtain Irish nationality and not be ethnically Irish.
Irish and irish-Americans share common language, culture, religion, values, etc. There isn't some vast difference between the two groups.
I suppose. On that basis, you could be ethically English.
I probably share more in common with the English than I do many other Americans who speak different languages, have different values, religions, and customs. If Americans don't have these things in common then what are people allowed to claim as their ethnicity if they were born here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Fathers Family moved to Ireland around 1520 from England. Unlike my Father my mothers side is true Irish always in Ireland.
My whole Irish mothers side considers my fathers side English. They have only been in country 500 years. Not true Irish.
And religion don’t matter my father converted to Catholic (big deal back then)
So something like your father's 12x great grandparents moved to Ireland and account for a teeny % of his ancestry? I bet your mother's family have a few Norse genes mixed in which they rather conveniently don't know about.
My mothers family still own two farms for over 1,000 years. They were their pre St. Patrick.
My father interesting came over with King Henry the VII who had a castle in Northern Island he worked at. That castle still there as a tourist exhibit and my relative has a statue on the grounds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
If you only define ethnicity as the origin of your ancestors, as seems to be the approach in the US, then you are Irish. If you adopt the definition that includes common language, culture, values, etc then you are not Irish.
If someone has Irish nationality, they are legally Irish, but that doesn’t make them ethnically Irish either by descent or common culture etc. Someone can immigrate to Ireland from Korea and obtain Irish nationality and not be ethnically Irish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Fathers Family moved to Ireland around 1520 from England. Unlike my Father my mothers side is true Irish always in Ireland.
My whole Irish mothers side considers my fathers side English. They have only been in country 500 years. Not true Irish.
And religion don’t matter my father converted to Catholic (big deal back then)
So something like your father's 12x great grandparents moved to Ireland and account for a teeny % of his ancestry? I bet your mother's family have a few Norse genes mixed in which they rather conveniently don't know about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
If you only define ethnicity as the origin of your ancestors, as seems to be the approach in the US, then you are Irish. If you adopt the definition that includes common language, culture, values, etc then you are not Irish.
If someone has Irish nationality, they are legally Irish, but that doesn’t make them ethnically Irish either by descent or common culture etc. Someone can immigrate to Ireland from Korea and obtain Irish nationality and not be ethnically Irish.
Irish and irish-Americans share common language, culture, religion, values, etc. There isn't some vast difference between the two groups.
I suppose. On that basis, you could be ethically English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
If you only define ethnicity as the origin of your ancestors, as seems to be the approach in the US, then you are Irish. If you adopt the definition that includes common language, culture, values, etc then you are not Irish.
If someone has Irish nationality, they are legally Irish, but that doesn’t make them ethnically Irish either by descent or common culture etc. Someone can immigrate to Ireland from Korea and obtain Irish nationality and not be ethnically Irish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
If you only define ethnicity as the origin of your ancestors, as seems to be the approach in the US, then you are Irish. If you adopt the definition that includes common language, culture, values, etc then you are not Irish.
If someone has Irish nationality, they are legally Irish, but that doesn’t make them ethnically Irish either by descent or common culture etc. Someone can immigrate to Ireland from Korea and obtain Irish nationality and not be ethnically Irish.
Irish and irish-Americans share common language, culture, religion, values, etc. There isn't some vast difference between the two groups.
I suppose. On that basis, you could be ethically English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
If you only define ethnicity as the origin of your ancestors, as seems to be the approach in the US, then you are Irish. If you adopt the definition that includes common language, culture, values, etc then you are not Irish.
If someone has Irish nationality, they are legally Irish, but that doesn’t make them ethnically Irish either by descent or common culture etc. Someone can immigrate to Ireland from Korea and obtain Irish nationality and not be ethnically Irish.
Irish and irish-Americans share common language, culture, religion, values, etc. There isn't some vast difference between the two groups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
If you only define ethnicity as the origin of your ancestors, as seems to be the approach in the US, then you are Irish. If you adopt the definition that includes common language, culture, values, etc then you are not Irish.
If someone has Irish nationality, they are legally Irish, but that doesn’t make them ethnically Irish either by descent or common culture etc. Someone can immigrate to Ireland from Korea and obtain Irish nationality and not be ethnically Irish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You’re an idiot. There is a difference between Irish ethnicity and nationality. I suppose you only consider Kurds as either Turks or Iraqis. The US is full of different from different ethnicities. Do you deny descendants of American slaves claims to Africa? How about Poles who retained their Polish identity when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was wiped off the map of Europe for 125 years?
Are you saying an American whose great grandparents were born in Ireland and who says they are Irish is actually ethnically Irish?
African-Americans are racially different. They have African genes. I doubt they claim to be ethnically African though.
According to my DNA testing, I am 96% Irish. All of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland.
Conan O'Brien is 100% Irish, but he was born in the United States.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_1SrUquSmU
So neither of us is Irish, ethnically speaking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
+1
Absolutely incorrigible. Single-handedly the most annoying identity group in the United States.
Nah, its it the italians that are worst
"it's not sauce, its GRAVY"
"capiCOUL" "gabaGHOUL"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh god, people who are hung up on their Irish ancestry are the most annoying ethnic group in America. A typical conversation with them:
Them: “I’m Irish.”
Me: “oh, cool. You don’t have an accent. When did you come over?”
Them: “I was born here.”
Me: “oh. When did your parents emigrate?”
Them: “well, actually they were born here, too.”
Me: “oh. So, your grandparents came over from Ireland?”
Them: “….no.”
Me: “ah.”
You think that is annoying but I think it is one of the most charming characteristics of those of Irish decent. Having one great, great, great, great grandparent from Ireland is enough to get you into the club. It is hard to believe that you would be bothered by this.
+1
My great-grandparents were all born in Ireland and although I'm not Irish, it is noticeable to me how many certain Irish turns of speech and customs my family has retained. There's no question in my mind that my Irish ancestry has played a role in how I've developed as a person.
Same. My siblings and I got off the airplane in Dublin and after walking a few moments through the airport, my brother asked if anyone else felt like they had just landed in a family reunion. Everyone was eerily familiar. That feeling did not go away no matte where we went. It was such a strange feeling.
Anonymous wrote:My Fathers Family moved to Ireland around 1520 from England. Unlike my Father my mothers side is true Irish always in Ireland.
My whole Irish mothers side considers my fathers side English. They have only been in country 500 years. Not true Irish.
And religion don’t matter my father converted to Catholic (big deal back then)