K4ziuHa [#5]people picking ethnicity are fraudulent af [especially if they're from assmerica]
but but but but but their great great great great grandfather was 1/4 german
chrlxz [#7]but but but but but their great great great great grandfather was 1/4 german
the US doesn't go that far back
cloudberry [#2]I might do ethnicity someday, but until I feel comfortable doing that I'm sticking to country. Unless I decide to do heritage/origin (like if you follow my family's roots back as far as you can via last name) which is actually different than ethnicity, which could be cool to do
fair enough
for me my ethnicity isn't really something I'm uncomfortable from sharing (you'll find out if you google my name) but for me it's more of an identity thing. I was born in England and have lived here for like half my life but I don't feel 'patriotic' in any sense. But at the same time I'm not completely in sync with my ethnicity either, I've visited my 'home' country many times but I've never really lived there.
Aayan [#12]fair enough
for me my ethnicity isn't really something I'm uncomfortable from sharing (you'll find out if you google my name) but for me it's more of an identity thing. I was born in England and have lived here for like half my life but I don't feel 'patriotic' in any sense. But at the same time I'm not completely in sync with my ethnicity either, I've visited my 'home' country many times but I've never really lived there.
Totally feel you in that regard. I've been Canadian for most of my life, and yet I don't understand the culture here, but rather the culture back home... which I don't feel super connected to either, admittedly