TeamSkyFans said:The term United Kingdom (UK) refers to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
It is a political union rather than a geographical term.
That's exactly what a country is?
TeamSkyFans said:The term United Kingdom (UK) refers to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
It is a political union rather than a geographical term.
TeamSkyFans said:You are all relying far too much on wikipedia.
From Ordnance Survey:
The term United Kingdom (UK) refers to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
It is a political union rather than a geographical term.
In international law and international relations, a state is a geographic political entity possessing politicial sovereignty, i.e. not being subject to any higher political authority. (see Montevideo Convention 1933)
In casual language, the idea of a "state" and a "country" are usually regarded as synonymous. The United States are not made up of several 'countries' and the United Arab Emirates are made up of seven 'emirates'. They are both countries too.
and for the record, technically neither wales or northern ireland are countries..![]()
abbaskip said:I guess at the end of the day, it depends on your definitions.
If a Nation and a Country are the same thing, then Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland are most definitely not nations. As the nationality (represented by a passport) of their citizens is British (ie. of the UK of GB & NI).
However, it could be said that they are 'countries within a nation'. If this is the case, then your argument is invalid anyway, as Nations should be represented at the Olympic Games.
Australia has a Prime Minister (and a national government), Australia is in the olympics. The UK has a Prime Minister, the UK has a PM (and national government) and is in the olympics.
abbaskip said:Basically, for all international purposes, outside of Rugby and Football (and the Comm Games if you call them international), the UK is treated as the country.
The UK is the EU member, the UN member, the IOC member. Are there three bigger international bodies in the world? The UK also has the Prime Minister, the Army, Navy and Air Force.
I know no one has replied, but I have written half of this already, and it doesn't seem to be getting in. What more evidence do you need. Next time you disagree, please use some constructive arguments, not just "England is a country, not the UK".
abbaskip said:The UK is the EU member, the UN member, the IOC member. Are there three bigger international bodies in the world?
M Sport said:Anyone bring the USA into the argument needs to brush up on the difference between a federal state and a unitary state,
Tuarts said:FIFA.
too short
Tuarts said:Mind you (wow is this going off-tpoic) if FIFA do that then the same needs to be applied to all those FA's who have teams competing as nations and are under other countries (eg some carribean teams who have autonomy but fall under 'France').
Still its never a clear cut case in each individual case.
abbaskip said:Then there is places like Taiwan (ie. the Democratic Republic of China) who aren't even accepted into the UN as a nation. As PR China still claim ownership.
TeamSkyFans said:I think any country where 90% of the population live in poverty should not be spending millions on a sporting event. Simple as that! I for one, wont be watching.
Ferminal said:Funny how they held "China's" post-war permanent spot on the security council for a couple of decades even though they had been overthrown on the mainland. They basically swapped places as official nations. This caught me out at a trivia night once as the question was "Which international organisation did the PRC become a member of in 1971", UN was the only realistic answer but knowing full well that "China", as an allied victor was one of the five permanent members on the security council it didn't make any sense.
It was only some time later that I learned about what actually happened at the UN between PRC/ROC.
Is the RoC/Chinese Taipei/Taiwan what you would call a nationless state?
Ryo Hazuki said:poverty has mostly to do with india's religion not with poor national management. most poor people actually think they deserve it
El Pistolero said:India's religion doesn't make people poor.
In Belgium for example, the poor people also thought they deserved it in the 19th century. It was like that in most countries were the industrialization began. Religion doesn't make one poor, it only justifies it.
Ryo Hazuki said:poverty has mostly to do with india's religion not with poor national management. most poor people actually think they deserve it
Tuarts said:Interesting video and transcript about media pandering the flames of the "security threat"
http://www.abc.net.au/mediawatch/transcripts/s3023099.htm
Ryo Hazuki said:no it does. when people believe they deserve poverty then how are they supposed to climb out of it when they don't want to?
I once met a dutch man who lives in india and he told me one time that the country is so poor but in mental wellbeing the country isn't much less than europe, maybe even opposite. he is very poor and lives sober(not as in drunk) live as a budhist in delhi.
Ferminal said:I don't see the definition of nation/country/state being subject to some measure of autonomy. For me it's whatever it says on your birth certificate/citizenship certificate/passport - that is your nationality, and the only country you live in.
The SARs of the PRC are highly autonomous, but are still no more than regions within one country, China.