Off Topic St Patrick's Day

  • Please bear with us on the new site integration and fixing any known bugs over the coming days. If you can not log in please try resetting your password and check your spam box. If you have tried these steps and are still struggling email [email protected] with your username/registered email address
  • Log in now to remove adverts - no adverts at all to registered members!
There are people who celebrate it but all a bit low key

British = good

English = toxic
Who says that though?
I know people do, but it always seems to be people complaining that it’s the case as opposed to anyone else significant actually holding that view
..?
 
Who says that though?
I know people do, but it always seems to be people complaining that it’s the case as opposed to anyone else significant actually holding that view
..?


Scot Nat = good
Welsh Nat= good
English Nat= violent xenophobes
 
I've no idea how many people say or think it.

Just 'reading the room' as they say.
You might be right
I don’t pay much attention to it
The whole ‘if I celebrate St Georges Day people will think I’m a racist’ often just sounds made up to me though.
It’s almost like people want to claim they’re being discriminated against for the sake of it?

It’s a spiral though. Only reason SPD is big is because it earns Guinness etc a fortune, so they spend a fortune advertising it, but the only reason it does is because people want to celebrate it in the first place.

Arrange a SGD bash next year?
 
The only connection I have with St Patrick's day is that when my son was born in March, just after Paddy's day, and the nurse who helped deliver him was Irish, so we called him Patrick.
 
I've never understood the fascination with irish day by non irish tbh. ...yet if we English celebrate st George day we are classed as racist thugs.....and yet on my one and only visit to dublin i witnessed the most racist abuse I've ever had..but im not one to moan

I have spent a fair bit of time in Ireland over the years and never experienced or witnessed any racial abuse. However, living in Scotland is another story.
 
  • Like
Reactions: SW3 Chelsea Tiger
You might be right
I don’t pay much attention to it
The whole ‘if I celebrate St Georges Day people will think I’m a racist’ often just sounds made up to me though.
It’s almost like people want to claim they’re being discriminated against for the sake of it?

It’s a spiral though. Only reason SPD is big is because it earns Guinness etc a fortune, so they spend a fortune advertising it, but the only reason it does is because people want to celebrate it in the first place.

Arrange a SGD bash next year?

There are plenty of examples on social media and elsewhere of people calling those clebrating St George's Day xenephobes and racists. They are usually accompanied with comments about St George's nationality, although St Andrew being Israeli doesn't seem to get mentioned.
 
  • Like
Reactions: dennisboothstash
The only connection I have with St Patrick's day is that when my son was born in March, just after Paddy's day, and the nurse who helped deliver him was Irish, so we called him Patrick.
What a remarkable coincidence!

My son celebrated his 29th Birthday yesterday(St Patrick's day).He was born in Rottenrow maternity hospital Glasgow and remarkably he too was delivered by an Irish Midwife!!(Rottenrow was a teaching centre for midwifery and a lot of young Irish lasses would go there to train). I remember to this day holding him and the elderly midwife in her broad Irish accent saying "call him Patrick"...

Needless to say we called him











Paul....:emoticon-0100-smile
 
I have spent a fair bit of time in Ireland over the years and never experienced or witnessed any racial abuse. However, living in Scotland is another story.
Now that is true. I think it's funny how the Scottish hate the English, but most of us are completely indifferent to them.
That is my experience of Ireland and especially Scotland.