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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by cajunscot
    Not to start anything, but my experience has been the reverse. Our local (and now defunct) Celtic Society used to provide the colour party for the front of the local St. Patrick's Day parade, and we usually would get some semi-negative (and anti-Scots) comments from some of the more militant Irish. I remember being asked by one of them why the Scots were part of the Celtic Society, since only the Irish are "Celtic". (They really didn't like it when you would respond that neither was St. Patrick, since he was a Romano-Briton from either Wales or Scotland, take your pick!)

    Now, that being said, I now plenty of folks of Irish heritage (many of them here) who are not that way at all. I don't like generalizations, though, and with many different ethnicities, states, provinces, countries, etc. designing their own tartans, I don't think it's fair to paint all Scots with that brush.

    Green Beer...to quote Michaeleen Og Flynn in "The Quiet Man", "The Borgias could do better!" :mrgreen:

    Cheers,
    Hmm, gotta be differences in locale: here in Denver (and back in Connecticut growing up, for that matter), St Padraig's day seems to foster a "the more the merrier" attitude. I've seen some of the older members of my clan society practically grilling people at the highland games, then dismissing them when it turns out they'd no affiliation w/ the clan; the best I can describe their behavior is "prickly". On the other hand, I've swapped shots of Glenmorangie for Jamesons from more than a few fellows with green tophats on their heads over the years.

    Bryan...by the way, I only mentioned green beer-I didn't mean to imply I actually *drank* the stuff :-P

  2. #2
    macwilkin is offline
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    locale...

    Quote Originally Posted by flyv65
    Hmm, gotta be differences in locale: here in Denver (and back in Connecticut growing up, for that matter), St Padraig's day seems to foster a "the more the merrier" attitude. I've seen some of the older members of my clan society practically grilling people at the highland games, then dismissing them when it turns out they'd no affiliation w/ the clan; the best I can describe their behavior is "prickly". On the other hand, I've swapped shots of Glenmorangie for Jamesons from more than a few fellows with green tophats on their heads over the years.

    Bryan...by the way, I only mentioned green beer-I didn't mean to imply I actually *drank* the stuff :-P
    I think you hit on something: age, not locale -- I've seen that same attitude before working as a genealogical librarian -- being young and college educated makes you a marked man in that enviroment, let me tell you! ;)

    Anyone is welcome at my clan tent at the games, Cumming/Comyn or no! :mrgreen:

    T.

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