Talk:British nationalism

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DUP-UKIP-BNP Merger[edit]

I have removed the above section. There are a number of reasons for doing this, and I don't attempt to prioritise them:

- the section appeared twice. I'm sure this was an oversight, but at least one version had to go
- nothing in it was sourced. Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia, and we need to be able to say where our information comes from.
- to me, it doesn't feel as if this is the right article for this information. The tone of the existing article seems to be about British Nationalism in general, and admits of the possibility at least that there may be a left wing variety, but the new information is about parties which would happily define themselves as being on the right.

If the information can be verified, then there's a place for it in wikipedia. But I'm not sure this article is the place.

Grblundell (talk) 12:54, 18 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Lede[edit]

This sentence in the lede does not actually make sense:

As Britain has been the place where both Conservatism and Liberalism have grown, Nationalism has been new to both the 20th and 21st century ever since the collapse of the British Empire, mass immigration, globalism and the EU resulting with extreme opposition from Nationalist groups such as the National Front which gained mass support in the 1970s and today's British National Party[1]. Some elements have occurred in the United Kingdom Independence Party where they have eschewed the EU and have a 5-year pause on immigration.

I am removing it. It needs re-writing if it is to be included.BobFromBrockley (talk) 15:03, 18 September 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Nationalism and Unionism[edit]

This section looks like it needs to be redone and reorganised as it appears to have strayed from actually explaining that English/Scottish/Welsh/Irish nationalism and unionism are opposing political forces/British nationalism is associated with unionism. It could generally do with a bit of restructuring, in my opinion. It also seems quite lacking in references.--Jonesy1289 (talk) 01:05, 23 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Labour, Lib Dems?[edit]

I don't really see how Labour or the Liberal Democrats are British nationalists to any notable extent--Matt Downey (talk) 14:11, 3 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Note to people who keep removing this: Irish people have been considered a British people by British nationalists, and currently there are more Irish living in the UK than in the Republic of Ireland[edit]

Regardless of the political conflict between Irish nationalists versus the British government, the fact remains that British nationalism is based upon the view that all people of the British Isles as being British people - including English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh peoples in particular. The UK has accepted the independence of the Republic of Ireland, but that does not mean that ethnic Irish have ceased to be viewed as a British people, the UK continues to use the Irish Saint Patrick's Saltire on the Union Jack, and the UK's coat of arms include the Irish Clàrsach. As of today, the ethnic Irish population in Britain is NOT small or insignificant, note that current statistics state that while 4,500,000 ethnic Irish live in the Republic of Ireland, that a larger number of 6,000,000 ethnic Irish live in the United Kingdom.--74.12.192.5 (talk) 22:31, 4 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Thats your opinion, not back it up with some citations. Also if you are editing under different ID please stop. Leave the article as it is until you have agreement here to change it. ----Snowded TALK 06:49, 5 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't sign in before, stop violating WP:Assume good faith. But what you've said is total nonsense. YES, Irish people have been part of the United Kingdom - both historically and to this day. British nationalism sought to include the Irish. Irish symbolism is used on the British coat of arms. You have no right to order me to distort a reliable source that I added, that you endorse distorting by taking out "Irish" and putting in only "Northern Irish" - there are a substantial number of British people with Irish descent, those who are 25% + Irish descent (one grandmother or grandfather) account for 6,000,000 people or 10% of the population of the UK and such people can also apply for Republic of Ireland citizenship, see here: [1]. As I have said, there are numerically more people of Irish descent living in the UK than in the Republic of Ireland, if you don't believe me you can look it up yourself, start by reading material on Irish in Great Britain, here: Irish migration to Great Britain. --R-41 (talk) 23:14, 22 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]

BNP don't belong in this article[edit]

The BNP has no place in this article, as stated on their wiki page they are white nationalists, they don't need a special mention on a page about British Nationalism. There is no mention of Neo-Nazi groups in the American Nationalism wiki page and no mention of the National Front in the French article which is a huge party compared to the BNP.JasonnF (talk) 07:28, 5 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Are you actually suggesting the BNP are not British nationalists? 2 lines of K303 07:36, 5 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]
It doesn't matter what the BNP say on their web site, there is a reliable source referenced in the article which places them within the field. You need to argue against that or come up with other third party sources to support your views. ----Snowded TALK 07:38, 5 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The BNP are a tiny minority of British Nationalism so why do they get a special mention in this page? If any political party deserves a mention on this page it's UKIP, it is hugely more popular than BNP. The article currently reads as though the BNP and other Neo-Nazi groups are a big part of British Nationalism and this simply isn't the case. JasonnF (talk) 20:19, 5 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Find a reference and we can include UKIP. Otherwise references count over your opinion, its way things work around here ----Snowded TALK 13:55, 6 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Thank god Wikipedia has you two around to remind us how evil and racist British people are. JasonnF (talk) 21:55, 6 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Read up on WP:AGF and WP:NPA. I suggest you strike the above remark. If you can't keep your own opinions out of discussion you will get no where here. Read up on WP:RS, that describes how material is sourced. ----Snowded TALK 22:32, 6 September 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The first sentences in the intro as it is re-arranged appears POV[edit]

First of all as a note: I forgot to sign in before, when I reverted two edits to the intro.

Now to the point:

The way the intro has been written now is clearly aiming at a POV of delegitimizing the British nationalist claim by strongly suggesting that the possibility of the existence of a British nation is merely hypothetical. First of all this is an article about British nationalism, so in order to describe it, we mention their claim that they view the British people as composing a nation. Second of all, the way I wrote it was concise and clear.

This does not mean that I am advocating the opposite stance that there is a British nation "cast in stone" that "obviously" exists, but I am inquiring something. If the user or users imply that the British nation is hypothetical has based such a stance on the common and very valid scholarly argument that all ethnicities and nationalities are socially-constructed identities, by logic if the British nation should be labelled as a socially-constructed hypothetical community out of the English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh; then why has/have the user or users, not also taken their efforts to the articles on English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh nationalisms, and state that their identified nations are also hypothetical communities?--R-41 (talk) 02:08, 21 November 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The lead and nations within nations[edit]

I removed this statement not only because it is appallingly phrased but, more importantly, because it is self-evidently not true, as a matter of deductive logic and basic common description. You can be a British nationalist while also accepting the nationhood of Wales, England etc. Plenty of British nationalists make this very point (often when trying to bat off "separatist" nationalism). And the defence that the content is "sourced" falls rather flat when one looks at the book itself and see that pp62-63 says nothing whatsoever about British nationalism "rejecting the claim that the British are a collection of nations" or anything similar. Indeed, later in the book (p144) a visible online excerpt suggests that the text at that point says that the constituent parts of the UK all "shared in" British nationalism.
This highlights two problems: so many changes and switches have been made to content in the lead by two warring editors that there was no longer any clear association or link between this claim and the source being used to directly support it (it seems to have been first slotted in with this edit, at a point when those cited pages were actually being used to back up a different point); and even if it had been there in the Motyl text, it would only have been one opinion. One source does not and cannot provide definitive fact when it comes to this sort of thing. Someone please sort it out. Thanks. N-HH talk/edits 22:14, 12 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]

No, you can be a British patriot and regard Britain to be composed by multiple nations. Patriotism involves a connection to a country or homeland. But if you are a British nationalist, you believe that the British are a nation. Patriotism and nationalism are often blurred or connected but the distinction is between a commitment to a country or homeland in patriotism, and a commitment to a community group in nationalism. Nationalists typically justify incorporation of self-identified ethnic groups by regarding them as akin to a tribal branch of a nation that has interconnecting cultural bonds between them.--R-41 (talk) 03:19, 17 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Well, that's your personal definition of the terms and concepts and the distinctions between them, and your personal opinion of how they might apply in this context, but WP isn't much interested in that. Things are rarely that simplistically definitive and so strictly distinguished: as the fact that there was in fact no specific source for the explicit claim about British nationalism by definition denying the nationhood of the constituent parts that I removed demonstrates. It's touching that you continue to assert your faith in it though, and do so in quite such a patronising tone. N-HH talk/edits 11:11, 17 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
How can you be a nationalist if you do not believe that the group you identify with is a nation? The nationalism then has no legitimacy. It doesn't make any sense. Nationalism is indeed controversial, and it requires asserting the existence of a nation. For instance, the nationalist variant of Yugoslavism identified groups such as Serbs, Croats, Slovenes etc. as tribal sections of a Yugoslav nation, not denying their existence, but claiming they were a part of a broader nation, not nations themselves. I believe you are confusing patriotism with nationalism.--R-41 (talk) 15:32, 17 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not confusing anything with anything, nor did I ever say anything about British nationalists not believing Britain is a nation. And, as noted, please stop being quite so patronising. This is an esoteric non/meta-debate, unrelated to the content of this page as a whole or, now, to any proposed specific part of it, and is based wholly on your own random and individual assertions/interpretations as to what nationalism "means" and how it differs from "patriotism", as if such things are set in stone (and that you're the only person who gets it). N-HH talk/edits 15:47, 17 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
You can accuse what I am saying as being patronizing but I am actually being skeptical of a claim that appears illogical. I do not know of nationalists accepting nations within nations. Evidence is needed to demonstrate if this is the case with British nationalism involving acceptance of nations within a British nation.--R-41 (talk) 20:36, 17 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
As noted, what might appear to one person to be "illogical" or what that person might "not know" is, ultimately, of no interest to how a WP entry should be written. Sometimes that's the way the world is and something individuals have to get their own heads round. Also, as noted, in the absence of any specific proposals for changes or additions to this page, with appropriate sourcing to back them up, this is a pointless meta-debate anyway. And, btw, no evidence is needed as to whether British nationalists accept other nations definitely exist within Britain, since the article does not explicitly make that claim, nor am I proposing that it should; you seem to be ignoring the entirely legitimate middle ground that lies between claiming definitively that they do not and claiming definitively that they do, which is easily covered by not making definitive assertions one way or the other about that point. And, finally, that rather gaping lacuna in your theoretical understanding is what is slightly irking me when you attempt to patronise me by telling me I'm supposedly not understanding something or am confused about matters, while italicising and bolding some of your terms for emphasis. Cheers. N-HH talk/edits 23:24, 17 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]

External links/BNP etc[edit]

Actually, I kind of agree with R-41 that the page is probably better off without these. The topic here is the broad concept of British nationalism, and it seems undue to focus on the manifestos of minority far right parties. That's even before we get onto the slight queasiness I feel about effectively offering a platform and a link to the ramblings of such groups. N-HH talk/edits 11:27, 3 December 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Whoever wrote this has no notion.[edit]

Major problems:

Irish nationalism is concerned with the existence of the Irish state, as it happens, free from Britain. The author doesn't even realise that Irish nationalism has always been set against British expansion/imperialism/nationalism. Ludicrous really.

Ireland unilaterally declared freedom from Britain in 1919, starting the War of Independence 1919-1921. There was no "secession", nor was independence "granted".

It goes without saying that if the author thinks that Ireland rebelled against British rule (like the rest of the world) due to religion, he/she is clearly a moron.

Modern day British nationalism is still heavily influenced by narrow-minded British imperialism and its relation to Ireland is to support unionism/loyalism in Northern Ireland.

The author should really consider finding out what constitutes British nationalism rather than forcing it on Ireland and dodging the reality of what it really is nowadays .ie BNP, UKIP, anti-EU, etc. — Preceding unsigned comment added by AnClaidheamh (talkcontribs) 22:04, 15 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry, if you read the article its links and refs, you may understand what is being said. That aswell, your edits are blankingof content. Murry1975 (talk) 23:26, 15 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Misleading[edit]

"However with the Protestant Reformation a schism arose in the British Isles between Catholics and Protestants that was especially strong in Ireland, that led to civil unrest and demands for Irish independence from Britain, the largely Catholic Southern Ireland seceded from the UK while the largely Protestant Northern Ireland remained within the UK." (or even the poorer "and demands for Irish independence from Britain, the largely Catholic Southern Ireland seceded from the UK while the largely Protestant Northern Ireland remained within the UK.")

The problem with this is it reads that civil unrest and independence where along religious grounds, which they were not. It should be removed. Murry1975 (talk) 14:58, 17 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]

The Brexit Party and the Conservatives[edit]

I feel both of these parties constitute as nationalist, the Brexit party is run by prominent nationalist Nigel Farage and takes a very pro-British stand point. As for the conservatives, instances such as May's focus on "British values" in schools shows that they are nationalist, albeit less so than other parties. Furthermore, this is the party of Boris Johnson and Jacob Rees-Mogg JJThunder1 (talk) 12:05, 3 May 2019 (UTC)[reply]