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PSW's avatar

My great-grandfather and great grandmother were first and second generation Irish immigrants, respectively. They ended up having 10 sons, no daughters. In WWI, the eldest sons enlisted and the younger sons made plans to enlist when they reached the appropriate age. My grandfather fought in Europe and went to Mexico during the Pancho Villa invasion of 1916. My family has a letter from Woodrow Wilson thanking the family for their patriotic sacrifices.

Contrast this with groups of people shouting Death to America and committing desecration of the flag and historical monuments. Under our Bill of Rights, these people certainly have the right to assemble peacefully, and realistically can chant anything they want as long as they don't commit violence on others or vandalism. I wonder if they appreciate that very fact?

If I were to migrate to another country of my own free will, I would expect to be somewhat loyal to that country and its ideals, otherwise, why go there?

I'm sure that those opposed to the Trump/Vance ticket will ascribe some type of White Nationalist meaning to Mr. Vance's phrasing, but I think it's nothing more than perhaps some loyalty to the original values the colonies fought for to obtain independence from Great Britain.

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Ralph J Hodosh's avatar

Another thing that makes us American citizens is that we all trace our heritage back to the founders of our nation regardless of when we or our ancestors arrived. It's as if we were all in Philadelphia at the constitutional convention, in the audience at Gettysburg to hear Lincoln's address, and at other seminal moments in our nation's history.

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