bomber Posted April 24, 2019 Posted April 24, 2019 1 minute ago, Stocky said: Some say he was a roman,seems highly unlikely he was english,all seems fantasy to me but dreams make people happier.
Stocky Posted April 24, 2019 Posted April 24, 2019 3 minutes ago, bomber said: Some say he was a roman,seems highly unlikely he was english,all seems fantasy to me but dreams make people happier. Who said he was English!! Try reading a thread from the start rather than plunging in half way through and uninformed. I said in my first post in response to the OP that St George was a Roman soldier of Turkish origin!
Jip99 Posted April 24, 2019 Posted April 24, 2019 7 minutes ago, bomber said: Some say he was a roman,seems highly unlikely he was english,all seems fantasy to me but dreams make people happier. You seem very anti-English. St George is symbolic.... that is it, that is all, Nothing else to see here........ move along. 1
bomber Posted April 24, 2019 Posted April 24, 2019 2 minutes ago, Jip99 said: You seem very anti-English. St George is symbolic.... that is it, that is all, Nothing else to see here........ move along. Not anti english at all...mind your neck back in
bomber Posted April 24, 2019 Posted April 24, 2019 3 minutes ago, Jip99 said: You seem very anti-English. St George is symbolic.... that is it, that is all, Nothing else to see here........ move along. Symbolic if it makes you feel better
Popular Post grollies Posted April 24, 2019 Popular Post Posted April 24, 2019 We used to celebrate St. George's day every year, at school and home. Mind you it was a private school which held up English tradition. Our local pub was called The Morris Dancer, had traditional folk music live every Sunday and a folk festival every year. Unlike some on here we were once proud to be English. Sadly, no longer. 3 4
billd766 Posted April 24, 2019 Author Posted April 24, 2019 12 minutes ago, grollies said: We used to celebrate St. George's day every year, at school and home. Mind you it was a private school which held up English tradition. Our local pub was called The Morris Dancer, had traditional folk music live every Sunday and a folk festival every year. Unlike some on here we were once proud to be English. Sadly, no longer. Many of us here still are proud to be English. You can tell the difference by the way people post. 2
Oxx Posted April 25, 2019 Posted April 25, 2019 Apparently "Oppressed English forced to meet underground to wish each other a happy Saint George’s Day". https://newsthump.com/2019/04/23/oppressed-english-forced-to-meet-underground-to-wish-each-other-a-happy-saint-georges-day/
bomber Posted April 27, 2019 Posted April 27, 2019 On 4/25/2019 at 5:47 AM, Oxx said: Apparently "Oppressed English forced to meet underground to wish each other a happy Saint George’s Day". https://newsthump.com/2019/04/23/oppressed-english-forced-to-meet-underground-to-wish-each-other-a-happy-saint-georges-day/ what an absolute load of pap
Oxx Posted April 27, 2019 Posted April 27, 2019 5 minutes ago, bomber said: what an absolute load of pap I guess you (a) have no sense of humour, and (b) don't recognise satire when you read it. 1
bomber Posted April 27, 2019 Posted April 27, 2019 2 minutes ago, Oxx said: I guess you (a) have no sense of humour, and (b) don't recognise satire when you read it. i do but some brexit voting spoonies regulars will believe that its true,but only the one's capable of reading that is ????
evadgib Posted April 27, 2019 Posted April 27, 2019 5 hours ago, bomber said: i do but some brexit voting spoonies regulars will believe that its true,but only the one's capable of reading that is ???? Yet the only pillock to fall for it trolls for the other side! ???? 1
billd766 Posted April 28, 2019 Author Posted April 28, 2019 On 4/25/2019 at 11:47 AM, Oxx said: Apparently "Oppressed English forced to meet underground to wish each other a happy Saint George’s Day". https://newsthump.com/2019/04/23/oppressed-english-forced-to-meet-underground-to-wish-each-other-a-happy-saint-georges-day/ From my local paper back in the UK. I don't that the English here are meeting secretly, do you? https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/17601933.st-georges-day-scout-parades-taking-place-across-dorset-on-sunday/ https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/17601988.letter-to-the-editor-why-dont-we-celebrate-st-georges-day/
billd766 Posted April 28, 2019 Author Posted April 28, 2019 51 minutes ago, billd766 said: From my local paper back in the UK. I don't (think) that the English here are meeting secretly, do you? https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/17601933.st-georges-day-scout-parades-taking-place-across-dorset-on-sunday/ https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/17601988.letter-to-the-editor-why-dont-we-celebrate-st-georges-day/ I missed out the word "think" in the second line.
BlueScouse Posted April 28, 2019 Posted April 28, 2019 St Edward the Confessor ( died 1066) was patron saint of England until Edward 111 adopted St, George in about 1350.
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