ain'tcha?
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DuckyGirl — 14 years ago(July 20, 2011 05:14 PM)
Oh, how very funny. Actually, most of us "Yanks" do realize this. And in fact, when I've traveled abroad, I've found that wasn't as true as I'd thought. Most people were really nice about me being from the US and wanted to know more about it. Almost no one called me names or made cruel generalizations about me based on my nationality. And all the Canadians I met were very nice. I can't say the same for you, though. I hope you've grown up in the past two years.
Same goes for you, Americans who are doing the same to Canadians. -
ShotgunRex — 13 years ago(February 10, 2013 11:13 AM)
Most people in the US look at Canadians as a bunch of p-ssies with no backbone. Seriously, what's Canada's most famous war.oh wait it hasn't happened yet. They just sit back and leech off other countries. Enjoy your socialized medicine.
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student_points — 12 years ago(January 01, 2014 06:29 AM)
the fact that canada doesn't have a famous war should speak volumes, in a positive way. If having a war is an expression of your coolness, then i go for the biggest nerd!
- "is this the secret headquarters of the gestapo?"
- "It was"
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Siddhartha_Wolf — 16 years ago(June 22, 2009 12:58 PM)
English, reasonably pleased with being so, it could be worse. Got a healthy respect for the Swedes, Iranians/Persians (regardless of their messed-up political system at the moment, I really hope they dont get sucked into the Western hegemony, a vortex that seems to be sucking in the whole world, Mousavi is a better option than Ahmedinajad I feel though), Irish, Hungarians, Dutch, Polish, indigenous Americans, Indians, French, and Ethiopians though.
In most cases the appeal is really quite shallow (Hungarian language for example).
I have no idea how what I just wrote really relates to anything (within or without this thread), sorry.
A golden egg, floating through space.
