Being asked 'where are you from?' is an exasperating experience for black musician Nura from the band SXTN. The rapper said that when she tells people she’s from Germany, they often press further by asking, “but where are you really from?”. Her experience is common all over the world and it persists despite endless programming to make us believe that holding a German passport makes you German. I'm reminded of that clownish Bishop of Dublin with his fatuous observation on Muslim Brotherhood 'activist' Ibrahim Halawa (this fine young Irishman is pictured here with his lovely sisters) to the effect that 'he's as Irish as any of us'.
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It's vital that Whites clamp down on this insidious nonsense and it's possible to do so without being unduly "offencive" to normies. So here's my proposed elevator pitch* for use the next time you hear Mo Farah described as British or other such nonsense. It's important not to let it pass.
"But he's not Irish [or any other White nationality] because the Irish today have evolved over thousands of years, sharing territory, ethnicity, language, culture, religion, history, traditions, myths and legends which have fused to make us what we are today, which is in effect an extended tribe with unique characteristics and a strong sense of national identity. Being born here to African parents affords him none of that. It doesn't mean he's a worse person or anything, it just means he's not Irish. If I had been born in Japan would it not be understandable for people to ask me 'but where are you really from?' If he can be deemed Irish then the word has lost all meaning."
I think that's a powerful pitch. It can of course be modified - if the conversation continues! - to show that European peoples are merely an extended version of White nations. That is, we have more in common with one another than we ever will with those of different races.
*So-called because it represents the duration of a typical elevator ride in which you have to make your point to a prospect.

It's vital that Whites clamp down on this insidious nonsense and it's possible to do so without being unduly "offencive" to normies. So here's my proposed elevator pitch* for use the next time you hear Mo Farah described as British or other such nonsense. It's important not to let it pass.
"But he's not Irish [or any other White nationality] because the Irish today have evolved over thousands of years, sharing territory, ethnicity, language, culture, religion, history, traditions, myths and legends which have fused to make us what we are today, which is in effect an extended tribe with unique characteristics and a strong sense of national identity. Being born here to African parents affords him none of that. It doesn't mean he's a worse person or anything, it just means he's not Irish. If I had been born in Japan would it not be understandable for people to ask me 'but where are you really from?' If he can be deemed Irish then the word has lost all meaning."
I think that's a powerful pitch. It can of course be modified - if the conversation continues! - to show that European peoples are merely an extended version of White nations. That is, we have more in common with one another than we ever will with those of different races.
*So-called because it represents the duration of a typical elevator ride in which you have to make your point to a prospect.