@MorganE07969703@Szlater2@Theorised I don't think the law should be a graduate only profession only tbh (there is a sense in which it isn't entirely quite yet I think, if you countt legal executives). And accountancy still isn't in Britane at least, which has caused some problems with cross-recognition before.
@MorganE07969703@Szlater2@Theorised teaching assistants, accounting technicians, physician associates, paraplanners, legal executives to a certain extent, the list goes on
.. it's possible one 'ghost cultural effect' of irish forebears is just to _care_ a bit more about national / ethnic / cultural questions than the average normie in These Islands idk .. i spose morrisey put it best
this is not a bad point, language and culture just _are_ a part of it. I have one scottish, one welsh and three irish (inc one probably irish traveller) great grandparents but no-one, including me, would call me anything but english
this is not a bad point, language and culture just _are_ a part of it. I have one scottish, one welsh and three irish (inc one probably irish traveller) great grandparents but no-one, including me, would call me anything but english
I sympathise with this straight forward riposte but it's clearly more complex than that. For example, it's clearly possible to 'transfer' between the ethnicities of the British Isles. An ethnically Welsh person can become ethnically English without necessarily intermarrying.
I don't know who this bloke is, but he looks like he's stepped straight out of a different era.
The suit. The tie. The moustache. The confidence.
A proper throwback to an England that valued character, individuality and a bit of class.
I don’t know who this bloke is, but he looks like he’s stepped straight out of a different era.
The suit. The tie. The moustache. The confidence.
A proper throwback to an England that valued character, individuality and a bit of class. 👏👍✊🇬🇧👌❤️🙏