In Louisiana the heritage is like a "gumbo’. A little bit of this and a little bit of that. For I, French, English, Irish, Native American, Spanish, and German.
After this strip ran, I had all kinds of letters from folks with similar backgrounds wondering where our family had originated and if there was any connection. I wished at the time we could have met some long-lost cousins, but sadly, that didn’t happen.
Actually, you also have some of my distant cousins. The family went from Austria Hungary to all sorts of places. The other side of the family was less mobile. They were drinking buddies with Ben Franklin.
being “American” or “Canadian” or (whatever country of which you are a citizen) should be good enough. If you really feel the need to add in ancestry (which is really a PC way showing just how racist you really are), is a sad statement of just how little foundation there is to your self-esteem.
beside…in the states, if you’ve called a black person an “African-American” only to find out they’re actually British, then you know what it’s like to be (rightfully) called on the carpet in a foreign accent.
Just be American. or Canadian. Adding all those adjectives in front of your name is just another way to divide ourselves. We shouldn’t embrace diversity. We should recognize it and respect it, but we should embrace UNITY first and foremost.
“……racism and secularism is getting stronger by the day.”~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Some day racism will totally disappear because everyone will be blended. But secularism? You say that like it’s a bad thing.
After reading all of these comments I have decided that I would like to be called an EARTHER. Descended from a long chain of histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, valine, alanine, asparagine, aspartic , glutamic, arginine, cysteine, glutamine, tyrosine, glycine, ornithine, proline, and serine. Proudly tracing my heritage back 13.8 Billion year.
My family heritage hails from the Netherlands and 3 Caribean islands (St. Thomas, Puerto Rico and Antigua). When folks ask me “What are you?” I say, “Hungry, what’s for dinner?”
Gweedo – It’s legal here !!! – Murray: hyphenater hater: I’m the same about “ethnicity”. Four syllables of pretention. The word is just two syllables: ethnos (plural ethnoi).
I knew somebody on-line who would say her family was a quarter Native American, because otherwise she’d have to say a quarter Winabago and they’d think she was part SUV.
I’m German, English, Scottish, Polish and Comanche. My kids are all that plus Norwegian and Slovonian. My grandkids are all THAT plus Greek and French-Canadian
Well, as we here in the ’States call ourselves “American”, people living in Australia can call themselves “Aussies.” About the only sure thing about where we “come from” is that we all came out of Africa… ;)
Templo S.U.D. about 10 years ago
So, Patterson is Dutch? I would’ve thought Danish, Norwegian or Swedish.
ORMouseworks about 10 years ago
Holland and England…it is easier to say European-Canadian, eh?! ;)
ReneTray about 10 years ago
In Louisiana the heritage is like a "gumbo’. A little bit of this and a little bit of that. For I, French, English, Irish, Native American, Spanish, and German.
bluskies about 10 years ago
Not as long as we have hyphen-happy PC adults around.
Wren Fahel about 10 years ago
I’m Blackfoot NAI and Canadian French. My husband is Filipino, English, Scottish and German. Our kids are…strange. :)
Mumblix Premium Member about 10 years ago
Lynn’s Notes:
After this strip ran, I had all kinds of letters from folks with similar backgrounds wondering where our family had originated and if there was any connection. I wished at the time we could have met some long-lost cousins, but sadly, that didn’t happen.
rshive about 10 years ago
Actually, you also have some of my distant cousins. The family went from Austria Hungary to all sorts of places. The other side of the family was less mobile. They were drinking buddies with Ben Franklin.
Beleck3 about 10 years ago
im German, English, Welsh, Scots Irish, Irish,,French Norwegian, French and a New Orleanian.
Beleck3 about 10 years ago
oops only Norwegian, not French Norwegian, lol
ladykat about 10 years ago
I’m Irish-French. Hubby is Irish-English-Scottish-French, and somewhere in there is a dash or Mohawk
tjwtrumpet about 10 years ago
being “American” or “Canadian” or (whatever country of which you are a citizen) should be good enough. If you really feel the need to add in ancestry (which is really a PC way showing just how racist you really are), is a sad statement of just how little foundation there is to your self-esteem.
beside…in the states, if you’ve called a black person an “African-American” only to find out they’re actually British, then you know what it’s like to be (rightfully) called on the carpet in a foreign accent.
signed,
A proud Hoosier-American
Cajtri87 about 10 years ago
Just be American. or Canadian. Adding all those adjectives in front of your name is just another way to divide ourselves. We shouldn’t embrace diversity. We should recognize it and respect it, but we should embrace UNITY first and foremost.
princessfiona60 about 10 years ago
My ancestry is “Heinz 57”, my dog has a better pedigree, I am an American.
goweeder about 10 years ago
“……racism and secularism is getting stronger by the day.”~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Some day racism will totally disappear because everyone will be blended. But secularism? You say that like it’s a bad thing.
Mneedle about 10 years ago
Isn’t it time to stop hyphenating ourselves? I am American.
summerdog86 about 10 years ago
I am a lovely mongrel. Scottish, Irish, German with a little bit of Native American.
krys723 about 10 years ago
I wish I have more diversity in me…I’m just African-American. I was born in the South but do you really call that diverse?
mai griffin about 10 years ago
Scottish people would rush to point out that Scotch is whisky, but we know what you mean…!
nosirrom about 10 years ago
After reading all of these comments I have decided that I would like to be called an EARTHER. Descended from a long chain of histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, valine, alanine, asparagine, aspartic , glutamic, arginine, cysteine, glutamine, tyrosine, glycine, ornithine, proline, and serine. Proudly tracing my heritage back 13.8 Billion year.
jppjr about 10 years ago
German and Cajun….guess I’m mongrel!!
barister about 10 years ago
My family heritage hails from the Netherlands and 3 Caribean islands (St. Thomas, Puerto Rico and Antigua). When folks ask me “What are you?” I say, “Hungry, what’s for dinner?”
hippogriff about 10 years ago
Gweedo – It’s legal here !!! – Murray: hyphenater hater: I’m the same about “ethnicity”. Four syllables of pretention. The word is just two syllables: ethnos (plural ethnoi).
BillWa about 10 years ago
You are Michael. You are a Canadian, no more and no less.
gaslightguy about 10 years ago
You are, son, you are.
Asharah about 10 years ago
I knew somebody on-line who would say her family was a quarter Native American, because otherwise she’d have to say a quarter Winabago and they’d think she was part SUV.
agrestic about 10 years ago
racism and secularism is getting stronger by the day
Did you actually mean sectarianism?
luckylouie about 10 years ago
I’m German, English, Scottish, Polish and Comanche. My kids are all that plus Norwegian and Slovonian. My grandkids are all THAT plus Greek and French-Canadian
ORMouseworks about 10 years ago
Well, as we here in the ’States call ourselves “American”, people living in Australia can call themselves “Aussies.” About the only sure thing about where we “come from” is that we all came out of Africa… ;)
kid1at3heart about 10 years ago
I am a mutt. Pure mutt. And I have a shirt to prove it. Check out PureMutt.com.
hippogriff about 10 years ago
Gweedo – It’s legal here !!! – Murray: Ethnic is the proper adjective; ethnos/ethnoi are nouns.
lizilu about 10 years ago
Canadian, eh?
lizilu about 10 years ago
Oh, Canada! That’s where they’re from!