they're what a Cornish separatist movement would evolve into given enough time and support
Cornish Liberation Army Rising
Cornish is literally 100% recreated; hell they even had to debate about using late Cornish or Medieval Cornish as the base because there were zero native speakers when they jumped back to it; there's about a hundred and fifty years between the last speaker dying and the first "new" speaker. It's sort of neat in that way but it really is sort of shaky to me
It would be a good way to co-opt a nationalist identity that can use language and culture as an excuse for ethnic preservation
I support it!>>10239475
Dude, English people serve jews. Fuck off!
The IRA also supported FARC, Che, Castro and other Commie fucks you stupid fucking yank. And lets not forget that the leader of """""(((based)))""""" Sinn Fein is a nigger lover- youtube.com
The UDA and UVF are literal white supremacist organisations and have done more to advance the cause than any fucking Ameri-cuck.
They aren't, though. (((Some people))) just want you to think that way.
Prasie the Lord, Bubba. That fucker Cromwell doomed the white race…
(((stein)))
OY VEY hes jewish
en.wikipedia.org
Stein Name Meaning German and Jewish (Ashkenazic): from German Stein ‘rock’, Middle High German stein, hence a topographic name either for someone who lived on stony ground or for someone who lived by a notable outcrop of rock or by a stone boundary marker or monument. It could also be a metonymic occupational name for a mason or stonecutter, or, among Jews, an ornamental name. This name is widespread throughout central and eastern Europe. Dutch: from a reduced form of the personal name Augustijn (see Austin). Norwegian: habitational name from any of ten or more farmsteads, notably in southeastern Norway, so named from Old Norse steinn ‘stone’. Scottish: from a reduced form of the personal name Steven (see Steen, Steven). Northern English and Scottish: from the Old Norse personal name Steinn meaning ‘stone’. Southern English: habitational name from a place named with Old English st?ne ‘stony place’, for example Stein in Sussex or Steane in Northamptonshire.
stein: occupational name for a mason or stonecutter, or, among Jews an ornamental name.
99% of the 1% are jewish