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crimkadid's profile
Uriah
Uriah
Uriah
@crimkadid

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Uriah

@crimkadid

If you are a normal person, don't follow this account. Just browse the tweets and you won't get in trouble.

Joined May 2013

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    1. Liam Hogan‏ @Limerick1914 28 Jul 2017

      Liam Hogan Retweeted Paul Joseph Watson

      3% of the total population of England and Wales (1851) and approx 20% of the population of Liverpool (1861) were Irish born.https://twitter.com/PrisonPlanet/status/890658172158881793 …

      Liam Hogan added,

      Paul Joseph WatsonVerified account @PrisonPlanet
      Britain experienced no "mass migration" until the latter half of the 20th century. Fact. Look at me. LOOK AT ME. I'm the historian now. 🤭 https://twitter.com/MikeStuchbery_/status/890629120756862977 …
      25 replies 151 retweets 304 likes
    2. Dr. Rachel Schneider‏ @r_schneide 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @Limerick1914 @mattlaschneider

      I know @medievalhistory could tell more about early Viking & French invasions too--English as lang developed b/c of immigration.

      1 reply 1 retweet 4 likes
    3. Chris 😷Riedel‏ @medievalhistory 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @r_schneide @Limerick1914 @mattlaschneider

      Oh yeah, this guy. He's getting schooled so many ways I could build a bibliography from it

      1 reply 1 retweet 8 likes
    4. Chris 😷Riedel‏ @medievalhistory 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @medievalhistory @r_schneide and

      Not to mention Anglo-Saxon (Jute, Frankish) migration, before them Romans (who brought EVERYBODY, Libyans, Sarmatians, Syrians, etc etc)

      1 reply 3 retweets 8 likes
    5. Chris 😷Riedel‏ @medievalhistory 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @medievalhistory @r_schneide and

      And before that the Celts themselves, who come from Central Europe & contrary to pop belief did not build Stonehenge (centuries older)

      1 reply 4 retweets 4 likes
    6. Chris 😷Riedel‏ @medievalhistory 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @medievalhistory @r_schneide and

      And who knows before that? Hundreds of English words have unknown origin w/no indo European origin (e.g. dog)

      2 replies 3 retweets 5 likes
    7. Chris 😷Riedel‏ @medievalhistory 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @medievalhistory @r_schneide and

      Didn't stop after massive viking settlement or later Normans. Think of all the French Huguenots and Dutch dissenters in early modern period

      1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes
    8. Chris 😷Riedel‏ @medievalhistory 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @medievalhistory @r_schneide and

      There is literally no extended period in recorded history that Britain was not a melting pot of immigration.

      2 replies 3 retweets 9 likes
    9. Uriah‏ @crimkadid 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @medievalhistory @r_schneide and

      The experience of Jews in England suggests that the place was not what we today would call a melting pot.

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      Uriah‏ @crimkadid 28 Jul 2017
      Replying to @crimkadid @medievalhistory and

      The Danes massacred on St. Brice's Day and the Flemish weavers attacked by Wat Tyler and co. probably did not see the English as tolerant.

      10:01 AM - 28 Jul 2017
      • 1 Like
      • Julie
      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        1. New conversation
        2. Matt Schneider‏ @mattlaschneider 28 Jul 2017
          Replying to @crimkadid @medievalhistory and

          I think you're mistakenly conflating diversity with tolerence

          1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
        3. Chris 😷Riedel‏ @medievalhistory 28 Jul 2017
          Replying to @mattlaschneider @crimkadid and

          Indeed. There have always been xenophobes, and they have always lost

          2 replies 1 retweet 3 likes
        4. Show replies

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