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entombed in the shrine of zeroes and ones ([personal profile] rone) wrote2005-03-17 03:29 pm
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coöpted culture holidays

So St. Patrick's Day is when we pretend we care about Ireland by eating something nobody in Ireland eats, Cinco de Mayo is when we pretend we care about Mexico by drinking something nobody in Mexico drinks... what else is out there (not counting all the Pagan holidays the Christians swiped)?

Re: Bastille Day

[identity profile] infrogmation.livejournal.com 2005-03-18 07:30 am (UTC)(link)
Bastille Day and Cinco de Mayo are the pro and anti French holidays. The Queen's birthday and the 4th of July are, I guess, the pro and anti English holidays. Here in New Orleans they are excuses to drink, as is any other event.

Re: Bastille Day

[identity profile] lusercop.livejournal.com 2005-03-18 08:07 am (UTC)(link)
Here in England - I'd have trouble telling you when the Queen's birthday (official or real) was. I think this thread has summarised all the important ones, though. One thing that I've noted about all this fake irish crud from last night, is that I'm only aware of it having really happened in the last 2 or 3 years, and mainly as some kind of Guinness marketing campaign. I suppose the other one that gets celebrated in England is Burns Night (with Haggis and Whisky - not that I really need an excuse to drink a decent scotch!), but I don't think that's particularly widespread, and it may well be that all the people I know have a scottish connection.

(at this point I'm thinking of Bill Bailey when talking about the terrorism threat, and somehow he'd ended up imagining a world without cheese: "the Welsh national dish would be toast!")

Re: Bastille Day

[identity profile] ptomblin-lj.livejournal.com 2005-03-18 05:51 pm (UTC)(link)
In Canada one of the biggest drinking holidays of the year is Victoria Day. The birthday of a monarch who never visited Canada, and who is long dead. But it's a good convenient time to open up the cottage or go camping.

Re: Bastille Day

(Anonymous) 2005-03-19 09:52 pm (UTC)(link)
One of the two -- official or actual -- is April 21st. I know because that's my birthday too. I was in England at that time of year at least three times and so I'd wake up to a parading fanfare of guards in front of Buckingham Palace on television. I always thought it was quite cool even though it wasn't for me :-)

Thib ;-)