QUOTE(green_meklar @ Dec 6 2006, 08:29 PM)
I really hope you're being sarcastic.
Oh. I was working on the assumption that they weren't physically there and couldn't see. I'd go with profession then.
Depends on the situation. What's the point of this?
Simply to assess whether attitudes towards identification with a person's nation had changed.
It looks like they have - nationalism is in decline.
Moonrocks, b***h!
Druggie.
State of mine. (Yes, these bruises are from fighting. I am enlightened.)
Ninja. Just 'cause I am.
No, seriously, that's my answer.
EDIT: Wait... Crap! That IS proffession! Err... If a mod could give one vote to Profession from Something else, that would be good...
i consider myself the blumpkin god.
QUOTE(CaptainWill)
It looks like they have - nationalism is in decline.
That ended with the baby boomers.
Most people are probably assuming they aren't introducing themselves in a foreign nation. If I was in America, I wouldn't say "I'm an American". (But even then, I would say "I come from America".)
I'm Latvian.
I am a writer. And if in a religious place or around religious people, im an atheist.
CaptainWill, I live in America but it doesn't mean I have to be breathtakingly loyal to it. I prefer Russia, even though it's currently inferior to America in more then a few ways. Therefore, I can't call myself Russian because I'm in America for quite a while nor American because I'm not loyal to it.
America has more then enough faults and is hypocrisy at it's best. I still don't understand why it's generally considered a democracy, and I lived here for a while. Being breathtakingly loyal to a seriously flawed, though superior, country is foolish.
I'd classify myself by my name first... then my country