Fred 24th November 2004 |
if you aint American, you dont have anything to be proud of. |
Brad 3rd December 2004 |
Very typical, Fred. You have very little to be proud of at this moment in your history. |
Sara_United arab Emirates 11th December 2004 |
i think most of people in UAE are very proud of their nationality . |
alistair 21st March 2005 |
Im scottish (british) very proud to be both. Britain has done alot for this world so alot to be proud of in my opinion |
Cormac 15th August 2005 |
Well, not so surprising about the US, seen as they sing the national anthem every morning in there schools. At least in Ireland we choose to be patriotic! |
Meysaw 16th August 2005 |
I hear y'll. I strongly agree that this survey is either old or biased. You all have no clue how proud I'm being an Ethiopian. |
Andrew 1st September 2005 |
Waltzing Matilda is patriotic??? Hmmm... |
kayla 7th September 2005 |
Note to Pat: stop spending hours researching to devise witty comments that attack others while attempting to insult everyone else's intelligence... although amusing to me, its more obnoxious than anything else... |
Gary 19th September 2005 |
Hello, I recently travelled to Sarajevo and Mostar in Bosnia-Herzegovina, after 10 years of peace the scars of war are still very strong, but there is hope as this nation is starting to lift from it`s feet after 5 years of mindless detruction and death, let us all hope and pray that we don`t end up in a most detructive war of Nationalism this would be too terrible to even imagine |
michael 2nd November 2005 |
IRELAND IRELAND IRELAND!!!! Greatest country on this god damn planet! |
Frank 12th November 2005 |
Irish are proud of thier heritage??? The "Fighting Irish" were nuetral in WWII. |
Jeff 18th November 2005 |
Dont be jealous that the US is the greatest country int he world...we are completely FREE therefore of course we have patriotism, more than everyone else as present. |
Anonymous 2nd March 2006 |
It would seem that Ireland is more patriotic than the U. S. NOT less or tied. Not only that but many Americans are dissatisfied with the government no matter what it does. |
Nuwan Liyanage 10th March 2006 |
Patriotism and nationalism are not the same thing, A. Crowe |
Geograph (San Francisco) 5th May 2006 |
Patriotism is not an issue here people! Take this section on this site called "Undesirable Neighbours." Go to "Heavy Drinkers" category. Any similarities? Now, here's the connection! |
LG (United States) 24th May 2006 |
Nationalistic pride is nothing to brag about. Germany was also very, very proud of itself and look what happened in WW-II. Remember: "Double the pride, twice the fall".
The only reason any of us are in the nations we are in is due to blind chance/luck. Be GLAD - not proud - that you are alive and not starving to death in some 3rd world nation. |
Juanito - España (Castellon (Valencia) España) 25th May 2006 |
I life in SPAIN and im very proud for living here. It's sunny, there are big parties and enjoying, and you can find a work (alwais you want).
I LIKE LIVING IN SPAIN!! |
Tomas (San Diego) 5th June 2006 |
I am 29 years old originally from Germany. I moved to US when I was 17 and I am a teacher now. Schools do not sing the national anthem everymorning as one poster incorectly said. The "Pledge of Allegiance" is recited every morning but it is completely optional. Further more I believe many nations are confused about Patriotism in the US. It is not an ethnic thing and anyone from any race or country in the world can become an American. The US is very diverse, its not like saying we as a ethnic group of people are better than you, like in Germany or Japan. Thats why I am now a proud American. |
Shamus (Yorkin) 3rd August 2006 |
Frank, we're talking about now.
Nuwan Liyanage,
nationalism
nationalism [násh'nəlizəm]
noun
1. desire for political independence
2. PATRIOTISM: proud loyalty and devotion to a nation
3. excessive devotion to nation: excessive or fanatical devotion to a nation and its interests
|
Skie Troehan 22nd September 2006 |
Can you renew that stat? The 1990's sound pretty old right now... |
Anastasia (US) 27th October 2006 |
Anonymous, I beg to differ. I'm an American who isn't happy with the government, but I'm damn proud of what my country stands for, our Constitution, and all the freedoms and possibilties that go along with being American. |
Zack (USA) 2nd November 2006 |
Cormac: actually, here in georgia anyways, children say the pledge of alleigance, not the national anthem. I still think 77% of people in the US being very patriotic is not right. 77% might think they are, but most don't even know the words of the star spangled banner(our national anthem) all of the way through. |