Though it's not like they could care anymore. It's your choice to be upset about that, not theirs.
Because I respect them, I respect their memory, and I respect the goals that they were trying to achieve. I fail to see how this is a bad thing.
But that's the basic principle that for example leads to men blowing themselves up over a dispute that started over 2000 years ago.
No it's not. Having respect for oneself and one's kind does not lead to having contempt for others. There's nothing wrong with being proud with one's culture, what's wrong is when people view their culture as being perfect and superior to all others. I hold no such views.
Nobody is responsible for the doings of their ancestors, nor is there any kind commitment resulting from those doings.
Nor did I ever claim any such thing, please stop arguing against strawmen.
And for crying out loud, stop feeling insulted when you aren't even the target of the insult.
I'm curious, were you at any time a black slave, or were you murdered during the holocaust?
and your God obviously doesn't care either
I believe in no gods.
People are born in a country, a skin color and a gender by chance.
No, they're not. What, do you think it's like some sort of lottery, that I could have been born in Mongolia and be the same person I am now? I am the product of my genetics and my personal experiences, both of which come mostly from Ireland. I could not have been born to Swedish parents because I would have been an entirely different person, genetically. My parents could have moved to Australia before I was born and my life experiences would have been mostly Australian, which would make me a different person from what I am now. Not better, not worse, but not
me.
Patriotism, nationalism, racism, fundamentalism of all sorts, and clinging to age old conflicts that have been started by people that are already dead for a long time, that's childish behavior.
Let's cut to the chase here; many people around the world mistakenly refer to the Irish (and the Scottish and the Welsh) as English, because we were a part of the British Empire. Most Irish people do not like the British Empire; it was unjust, discriminatory, and caused atrocities against our people. We did not want to be a part of the Empire, we were forced into it through arms, and when we rose up against it (several times), we were defeated. We do not want to be associated with that Empire, we do not want to be reminded of the crimes committed against our people (and many other cultures around the world) by that Empire.
The modern-day United Kingdom bears little resemblance to the Empire of old; it is a fair, just and democratic society that is imperfect, but so is every other country. I have no serious objections about the UK or its people.
That being said, I am not English, and I object to being called English because it is a reference, intentional or not, to the legacy of an Empire that I despise.
I am Irish, I am not English, there is a difference. If you do not care to learn that difference, then do not choose to speak of it.