Hey /int/
A couple of weeks ago I visited my grandma and I asked her about my ancestors and how old they were when they came to America, what part of Germany they came from and she went on and said that both her and my grandpa's family came from the same village. I learned that the village is just south of Strasbourg, France. My great grandfather came over when that area was considered Germany, but my question is; would I be still considered German if where my European family lived is now French land?
>>75111666
I think it could still count as german but I'm not sure. Also checked
>>75111666
You're American, not German
>>75111796
Says the African
>>75111901
You realise how retarded the muhh hurrtage logic is, right? How many people do you think go around saying they're English in the States?
>>75112355
I wouldn't know because my state has a shitload of people with German, Irish, Eastern European and Italian roots. I don't think I've met someone with English roots here.
>>75111666
>would I be still considered German
No. You're a burger.
>>75111666
Elsaß-Lothringen ist Deutsch.
Not that that means you're German, amerimutt.
>>75111666
Alsace-Lorraine is a border region, so it's hard to say. I won't say it's german, but germanic, there's a nuance. Because people here feel french, and not german, despite having a germanic culture and language.
t. alsatian
>>75119322
>t. Dog
>>75119322
Also the land have been annexed by France in 1697 with the treaty of Ryswick, and the alsatians experienced the french revolution.
So even if all the history before the annexation was basically France being a huge greedy cunt, alsatians consider themselves part of France by the time.
>>75119387
?
>>75112821
You are american and not german.
>>75119387
85% of the Anglos are Britons LARPing as Saxons
>>75122053
If an African Elephant is born in Asia, is it an Asian Elephant?