Virote_Considon
The Great Dictator
The Irish Isles of Great Ireland (i.e. Ireland) and Lesser Ireland (i.e. Great Britain)
The Irish Isles of Great Ireland (i.e. Ireland) and Lesser Ireland (i.e. Great Britain)
My dad he'd prefer British imperialists over French imperialists any day. Granted, we're Vietnamese, and granted, that's not saying much, but hey.
Isn't Vietnamese preference for imperialists like
1. Anyone but the French and the Chinese
2. the French
3. the Chinese
My dad he'd prefer British imperialists over French imperialists any day. Granted, we're Vietnamese, and granted, that's not saying much, but hey.
Hmm. I do have to say I like monocles, is that British enough? And, like, there's a few nice-looking British gals here and there?
Yeah, pretty much.
Anyone but French and Chinese
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French
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Chinese
I think not liking the evil Chinese Empire is one thing the commies back in 'Nam and the anti-communist Vietnamese diaspora can agree on. Actually, it's one of the few cases in which the latter will cheer on the former, no strings attached.
The British are just Vikings that pretend to be French.
Where would the Japanese rank in this?
"Lesser Ireland" (Scotia Minor) is actually one of the historical names of Scotland, so there's certainly precedent.The Irish Isles of Great Ireland (i.e. Ireland) and Lesser Ireland (i.e. Great Britain)
I could have sworn those little channel islands were part of the UK. TIL, I guess.
There's a weird arrangement by which legally, they're feudal dependencies of the crown, and practically, they're administered as overseas territories like Gibraltar et al. It's all a bit bizarre and medieval and seems to exist largely for the purpose of letting people avoid paying taxes.Technically they are part of the ex-Duchy of Normandy.
The Republic maintained its sovereignty over the Six Counties until the Good Friday Agreement in 1998. They've never formally retracted the claim, but the constitution as re-written as something ambiguous that allows for the possibility of reunification without actively demanding it.Does the Republic of Ireland officially maintain expansionist foreign policy goals?
The Irish often use a different name for the British Isles, in the same way that the French have a different name for the English Channel ("La Manche"). They typically use variations on "The British and Irish Isles". The Irish government officially does not use "The British Isles" at all.
Since occupying the street is not getting any response, some protesters change their strategy and occupy the road in front of UK embassy instead.
While it may not bring any change to current situation, at least more useful than protesting to Beijing.
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/hong-kong-democracy/1486110.html