UK Cultural Identity and Nationalism
Users discuss English identity, nationality, and heritage, with some expressing pride in being British while others tie Englishness to ancestry.

Suella Braverman MP
@@SuellaBraverman
2d
I am not English. I am a proud British Asian. I am grateful for everything that this great country has given my family and me. I love England and the British people. This is not racist.

Konstantin Kisin
@@KonstantinKisin
1d
I love England, English culture, English history, English literature, English people and the English language. But I wasn't born here and I don't have any English ancestry. Like many people who have made these beautiful islands my home, I am proud to be British. Simple, really.

Aman Bhogal
@@AmandeepBhogal
2d
I am not English. I am a proud British Indian. I am grateful for everything that this great country has given my family and me. I love England and the British people. This is not racist. I agree with @SuellaBraverman

Jess Gill
@@jessgill03
2d
Englishness comes from heritage and ancestry, from the continuity of a people carried through time. English people exist and deserve their own land.

Morgoth
@@MorgothsReview
2d
Of all the crimes the British State has committed against its native population, denying them the right to call themselves what they are is perhaps the most cruel and vindictive. If 'English' is reduced to only a bureaucratic procedure, then the English people become stateless.

Matt Goodwin
@@GoodwinMJ
1d
Englishness is an ethnicity. This is why, for example, the American census asks people if they are English. I know the British Left is desperate to create a world where anybody and everybody can be English but this is not reality. I am amazed we are still debating this.

Wall Street Mav
@@WallStreetMav
2d
The indigenous people of England, Scotland and Wales deserve their own homeland.