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Woodpam, sorry I can't be proud of being British rather than English, but I do agree about the possible unnecessary costs involved in devolution. I want to be proud of being English and of being European. My grandmother was Scottish and I have Irish and French blood as well, but I feel English as I was born here and will most likely die here.
TW, it's great to hear a pro-english voice from Scotland. We too often have crazy negative ideas about countries that we are expected to be against. Just the other day I had to set an old woman straight in the supermarket about the French. She said she would never buy French cheese, as all French people were dirty - it's her loss if she wants to harbour such an opinion, but it is depressing to hear. And I'm sure she didn't shower every day - Yuk!
It seems to me that it is often the oppressed minorities that have the strongest sense of who they are as a group. The white, middle class, english, male has not, until now, had to struggle for recognition and has therefore not developed a real sense of identity. I once had to defend a minority in a class at Uni, and tried to argue for this group but no one got it!