Are you irish? Scottish? Proud of it?

United States
March 16, 2009 10:15pm CST
Im personally scott-irish, and am proud of it! St. Patricks day is tomorrow, and I'd like to get to know all you scotts, and irishmen lol.... Tell me about yourself!
1 person likes this
7 responses
1 Apr 09
Im Welsh personally, and although the celts were predominantly Welsh...Irish and Scottish were partly celtic along the line somehwere......but its all good...
1 person likes this
• United States
8 Jun 09
Welsh... cool... But if you're Celtic - technically - , why do you speak Welsh and not Gaelic?
• India
1 Apr 09
I am not scottishh ... but I would like to know about it .. if you have any link related to it .. then please do send me .. so I can get more info on it ...
• United States
1 Apr 09
Just go to yahoo.com and in the search bar type in history of the scottish, irish, celts....
@Jamdin (110)
• United States
23 Mar 09
I am part Irish, Scot and German.
• United States
1 Apr 09
HEy me too! im all three..
@dodo19 (47336)
• Beaconsfield, Quebec
17 Mar 09
I am half-Irish, as a matter of fact. I can definitely proud of being Irish, even if it's only half-Irish. It's still a part of me.
• United States
20 Mar 09
Me too, im scott-irish and maybe only half idk but i embrace it.
@celticeagle (168478)
• Boise, Idaho
29 Sep 09
I was told by my mother that i have Irish, Scottish, and Welsh blood. Yes, I am proud of it! This must be a very old discussions.
@jb78000 (15139)
7 Oct 09
oh you're a mixture like me (half english half scottish) - which one do you live in at the moment? i've lived most of my life in scotland, briefly in england (and several years in some other countries) and i'm now back in scotland. terrible weather and basically like an eastern block country in the wrong place but hey it's home.
• United States
8 Jun 09
I'm proud of my Irish Catholic background, and the role the Irish played in saving Europe's knowledge, and in preserving Christianity. I'm Mexican, French, German, and Irish, 1/4 of each, though a little more Mex and a little less Irish.