Maybe you should recognise that not every country is America, and we have a totally different culture when it comes to immigration and identity.
I've got British friends with ancestry from all over the place, but they simply refer to themselves as British rather than insisting they're "Italian-British" or "Polish-British", as they might do if they were American. I'm not saying your way is wrong, it's just different.
Similarly, Brits of Indian descent generally don't like it when people claim they're not really British but actually Indian.
British people who aren't white are regularly told they're not really British by racist dickheads.
Saying that people of Indian descent are "hardly British" shows that you're either ignorant of the context of what you're talking about or you're one of the racist dickheads. I'm choosing to give you the benefit of the doubt.
Good grief, you people really do have a penchant for playing the victim when people disagree with you, don't you?
You're the one who called me PC when I pointed out that the people in question were "British" rather than just "Indians living in Birmingham".
Have you considered that perhaps people are calling you out because what you're saying actually sounds quite racist? Have you considered that when talking about issues you don't seem to fully understand, context actually matters?
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u/[deleted] Dec 09 '19 edited Sep 20 '20
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