Australia has a similar story. I've never heard an Aussie say that he is Korean-Australian, for example. Are you trying to say that Australia as a nation is less PC than America.
Perish the thought. Strewth.
Australia has a similar story. I've never heard an Aussie say that he is Korean-Australian, for example. Are you trying to say that Australia as a nation is less PC than America.
Australia has a similar story. I've never heard an Aussie say that he is Korean-Australian, for example. Are you trying to say that Australia as a nation is less PC than America.
:schnauz:Perish the thought. Strewth.
Absolute rubbish anyway, the PC argument.
All the supposed demands that Americans remember that they're all immigrants is tempered with the constant flag waving. Americans are a very patriotic people, no mistake. Americans love being from America, they just want to stand out from the herd.
No, the reason is because there are so damn many Americans who collectively have little to shout about. No history to speak of and certainly no culture to call their own.
It appears that to an American, being just that is rather banal. Much better to spice it up with a little European flavour. Gets the juices flowing for stereotypical thinking.
Irish-American - uproarious, loikes the craic.
Italian-American - watch out, unpredictable.
Latin-American - musically gifted, lithe dancers.
American - ummm ... redneck?
That's the crux of it. Being American is thought of, by Americans, to be less exciting than being European.
You have a surplus of the Welsh model and can do me a terrific deal ... .
Are you attempting humour again. I've warned you about that, you're not very good at it.
Instead, try to discern whether I'm winding you (Americans) up or not.
Truth is that my analysis of why the most powerful country on earth is fixated with prefixing its nationality with that of other nations may not be very diplomatic but it is pretty near the mark. If not smack on it.
Ah, now the tabloid style of my theory should have led you to my true feelings on the matter. Mentioning stereotyping as a bad thing and then stereotyping Americans with neither qualm nor qualification throughout every post.I am practicing the "jaded American" model, with which you have neither experience nor cognition, though this is of utterly no import.
It is telling that you mention the bit about "the most powerful country on earth"; Mr. Ahmadinejad would disagree - don't know if you'd heard that.
Considering you couch your theory that "the...country (inclusive)...is fixated with prefixing its nationality with that of other nations" indicates your lack of perception, as well as the innate clumsiness of your proffer.
Near the mark?
Only as regards those to whom it actually applies, and whose numbers you overestimate owing (no doubt) to your indiscriminate and incomplete media consumption.
In other words, you are, albeit in the most narrow way, correctish.