Winner
Diverse in Unity
Darkness said:Not anglo-saxon either... I'm Dutch.
There is no difference. You simply interpret them differently.
No, you're just wrong. Read again the definitions you've pasted. Personally, I don't get what's so hard to understands about it.
No, I do not see the difference.
Texans are distincly different from other Americans (no disrespect intended to either group!). They may not be seen as a nation anymore, but they surely were in the 1830's.
I've been to the Alamo this summer and the place is just packed with pure "Texanness". The people who fought and died there definately fought for their Texan Republic, for their nation.
That doesn't mean they're a nation, jeez. They're Americans. I am Czech, but I feel a strong affiliation to my home city. Does that mean, that people of Brno are a nation? Oh my God...

That's just bitterness speaking. Move on. The damage can never be repaired, not even by excuses or damage-payments or whatever. Just don't dig yourself a deeper hole by being bitter about it.
If it was a bitterness, I'd feel the same towards Germans. I don't and I've explained why. You don't understand - your problem.