Mackenzie Click-Mickelson
Chugging along the path of life
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2015
- Messages
- 30,171
Well I'm guessing that's kinda a two-fold statementI find it really weird when they say I’m so proud I was born in Texas (for example). Why are you proud when you had zero say in the matter? It’s like saying I’m proud that I have blue eyes. Genetics did that, not me.
I'm assuming majority of those who would say "I'm so proud to be born in ____" are still living there where they were born but there's another way of saying it and that's simply using the state's nickname for the citizens and to get even more nitty gritty you can also say you're proud or happy by using the city or the metro nickname for the citizens that live there. Same concept.
While moving can be quite difficult or impossible in some circumstances when there's choice in the matter many people in the U.S. find themselves saying they are happy or proud to live where they live. It can mean many things such as quality of life, family friendly, affordableness, political alignment and sometimes that also means while there's more diversity (as in where you live doesn't necessarily have an overwhelming majority of just one party) there's also groups and laws and activists that reflect your viewpoint, then there's activities to do, arts, inclusivity, overall culture, etc. So much.
And I'm assuming there's at least a possibility of the same thing going on in Canada, the idea of being proud or happy to be living in the province or territory where you live because of the things that exist there. Most of us in the U.S. probably wouldn't say we're proud to be a citizen of a state we were born in and yet left years before and haven't moved back, I'm also assuming there's at least a possibility of the same thing going on in Canada. You might identify as a citizen of the state (or in the case of Canada province or territory) you were born in but how strongly you feel about that probably depends on how your time went in the state you were born in. I'm a Missourian by birth but have lived as a Kansan since I was a few weeks old. My first identity is a Kansan not a Missourian however I most identify as a Kansas Citian by which I mean the KC Metro which is counties on both the Kansas and Missouri side. A Kansas Citian can also refer to a resident of either KCK or KCMO to make it all the more confusing. I'm quite proud (for the most part) of living where I live, there are things I'm not so proud of but for the most part I am.
Your example though of Texas is sorta unique. Texas has had a long history of being both part of the U.S. and yet feelings of just being their own.