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[OT] National Pride?
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<blockquote data-quote="Henry" data-source="post: 572640" data-attributes="member: 158"><p>I think the better analogy here is the feeling a Southerner gets when he visits a state north of the Mason-Dixon line, or a New Yorker visiting a midwestern state. You may see Americans that have never left the U.S., but you RARELY see an American who has never left the state they were born in, even for a short trip. </p><p></p><p>You have to remember that Countries like the U.S. and the Former Soviet Union, and Ancient Rome are anomalies in history - most sovereign countries in history are the size of Texas or smaller. Whenever this wasn't the case, it was usually invaders conquering another people to acquire large sections of territory that didn't have the same culture.</p><p></p><p>Europe, though I have never been, has struck me with a much mroe cosmopolitan history, and more open to differences in culture and traditions among near neighbors. So, where we in the southeast talk about taking a trip to Atlanta for the weekend, a French citizen might speak of visiting London or Prague for the weekend getaway. It's as much differences of scale, as it is differences of cultures.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Henry, post: 572640, member: 158"] I think the better analogy here is the feeling a Southerner gets when he visits a state north of the Mason-Dixon line, or a New Yorker visiting a midwestern state. You may see Americans that have never left the U.S., but you RARELY see an American who has never left the state they were born in, even for a short trip. You have to remember that Countries like the U.S. and the Former Soviet Union, and Ancient Rome are anomalies in history - most sovereign countries in history are the size of Texas or smaller. Whenever this wasn't the case, it was usually invaders conquering another people to acquire large sections of territory that didn't have the same culture. Europe, though I have never been, has struck me with a much mroe cosmopolitan history, and more open to differences in culture and traditions among near neighbors. So, where we in the southeast talk about taking a trip to Atlanta for the weekend, a French citizen might speak of visiting London or Prague for the weekend getaway. It's as much differences of scale, as it is differences of cultures. [/QUOTE]
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