At a social event on the Ladder over the weekend, conversation turned to Brexit. I mentioned that one of the reasons I am sad/angry/embarrassed about the direction we've been taken is because I feel European. Two of the people I was chatting with, although ardent Reaminers, responded that they didn't really fell at all European.
So, it got me wondering how people in general feel about their European identities. I'm happily a Londoner, an Englishman, a Brit and a European; all identities can live happily side by side. How do you feel?
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You need to own more than one house to benefit from the increase in value. It's pointless the value of our houses going up like this if it means our children won't be able to buy their own place.
Yes, indeed and the question was 'How European do you feel?'
I don't feel European. I perhaps feel a little bit English but definitely not European. I think this is because I only hold a New Zealand passport so have never had the right to live and work there. To me it's just somewhere I go on holiday.
I wonder if it has also to do with speaking other languages? I have fluent French and good Italian, and can get by in Spanish and basic German. I feel very European, and have always been brought up to consider myself that way even though my 'heritage' is 100% English. My parents had lived through WW2 and their parents through WW1 and they saw a united Europe as a force for peace (which it has largely been).
Language teaching in schools these days is even more patchy (sometimes non-existent) than when I was growing up, where you more-or-less had to study French, from a French-speaking specialist, for a few years. Now it's been renamed Modern Foreign Languages, and you often find for example a German specialist having to teach other languages instead. It's possible to pass a GCSE in French now by memorising and parroting, without any real understanding of the language; I know this because I helped a friend's child get a C grade when he clearly didn't really know a word of French (or care less!)
Can you imagine, as a random example off the top of my head, the people of Taiwan announcing that they are not Asian? The absurdity.
Something has become quite clear to me since the 23rd: I am European first and foremost. And I grieve that I no longer feel British.
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What is 'European'? I think the identity split is city vs everyone else in smaller towns/villages, wherever you are. Places like London are so outward looking and interconnected with other cities worldwide it's almost a different planet. Remember feeling the same in Hong Kong.
Maybe the idea of an interconnected Europe is more a metropolitan ideal or construct, helped by transport connections, institutions, media, political power ... and stadiums full of euro football supporters :)
It's more than that, Hugh - I actually feel robbed of my European 'nationality' against my will.
Well yes, assuming Brexit goes through, we will all lose that.
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