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Ok, so some things in the golden era were not too cool...

Benny Holiday

My Mail is Forwarded Here
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3,805
Location
Sydney Australia
Benny you have a point. As a Canadian I find Americans to be the nicest people you would want to meet, then every once in a while they go completely nuts.

Australians on the other hand, are reliably strange all the time but hardly ever show it.

Here's a tip, Stan: Australia started out as a convict nation . . . and in some ways it still is.
 

Matt Crunk

One Too Many
Messages
1,029
Location
Muscle Shoals, Alabama
You mean the two solitudes.

Anywhere in the world outside the US, a Yankee is anyone from the United States.
In the South it is anyone from north of the Mason Dixon line.
In the North it is someone from New England.

I never understood how the Mason-Dixon line came to represent the line between North and South. It runs between Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Delaware for God's sake.
 
My parents are from East Tennessee and they were a little embarrassed to admit that their part of the state generated as many regiments for the Union as they did for the Confederacy. I bet that caused some confusion among the US Army to see designations for numbered TN regiments in their armies...

Kind of like reminding a Texan that all their "national" heroes (Sam Houston, Davy Crockett, Stephen F Austin, etc) were from Tennessee and Virginia.
 

p51

One Too Many
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1,119
Location
Well behind the front lines!
Kind of like reminding a Texan that all their "national" heroes (Sam Houston, Davy Crockett, Stephen F Austin, etc) were from Tennessee and Virginia.
Yeah, years ago I went to the Alamo and they had a room in the mission building filled with flags representing each of the defenders who died. More TN flags than any other.
In 2012 there were no flags there and I asked why. One of the staff people admitted that all those Southeast state flags annoyed people...
 
Messages
15,563
Location
East Central Indiana
Yeah, years ago I went to the Alamo and they had a room in the mission building filled with flags representing each of the defenders who died. More TN flags than any other.
In 2012 there were no flags there and I asked why. One of the staff people admitted that all those Southeast state flags annoyed people...

Most likely only a few people..or maybe only 'one'. Seems like that's all the complaints it takes anymore to have everyone running for the hills to appease.
HD
 

Veronica T

Familiar Face
Messages
84
Location
Illinois
crikey_zpsb2a35814.png


[video=youtube;lofgud4wLLo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lofgud4wLLo[/video]​
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,081
Location
London, UK
Here's a tip, Stan: Australia started out as a convict nation . . . and in some ways it still is.

I suspect the native population may rather disagree with you on this - weren't they there first? ;)

I never understood how the Mason-Dixon line came to represent the line between North and South. It runs between Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Delaware for God's sake.

Geography, schmography.... The most northern part of Ireland is in County Donegal, and it's south of the border...

Oh man! You remember those blokes JP?! I was a junior in high school then.

I was in primary school, and I remember their big hit... Long enough ago to forgive you all for them. Kylie Feckin' Minogue, on the other hand..... :mad:

And Russell Crowe, Jeffrey Rush, Hugo Weaving, Cate Blanchett, Heath Ledger, Hugh Jackman, Toni Collette, Naomi Watts, Jack Thompson, Bryan Brown, and, of course, Paul Hogan. :D

Ceptin', of course, that Russell Crowe is actually a Kiwi... ;)
 
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KILO NOVEMBER

One Too Many
Messages
1,068
Location
Hurricane Coast Florida
I suspect the native population may rather disagree with you on this - weren't they there first? ;)

Yes, they were, but "Australia" isn't a place, or just a piece of geography, it's a social construct, which didn't exist before the arrival of the surplus Irish population. Many Irish were exported in the 19th Century, including one of my great-great grandfathers, but in his case, it was to Pennsylvania.

In the U.S., we had our own penal colony, Georgia. In Georgia's case, the prisoners were mostly from debtors prisons, and not convicted of offenses which were ordinarily considered crimes.
 

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