Tyrannical wrote:So, she spoke her mind?
I bet an awful lot of real British people also feel the same way, but are afraid to talk because of oppressive laws.
Not being openly racist is almost purely a "White" thing, or more specifically a product of mostly White countries with a smaller non-White populace. The rest of the World is not like that, in fact I think many of them think we are quite crazy to behave the way we do.
Just imagine a White person born in or immigrated to China that claimed to be Chinese. What do you really think the local reaction would be?

What about people born and raised in the county?
Is a person with Irish grandparents not American, despite being born and raised in New Jersey?
Who counts as "pure British"? The very idea is nonsensical. It can only mean "a bit more British than you" (a bit more Scandinavian, a bit less Germanic, a dash more French, a drop more Celtic blood?). We are all n
th generation immigrants to these islands. The difference is then the value of 'n', and the ideological commitment to some nebulous notion of "Britishness".