This created problems for the rest of us on St. Patrick's Day, because if we didn't wear green, it was, "Hey! You're dissing our heritage."
I tended to wear orange and blue and point out that my family was from Ulster. (True). This being the Midwest, nobody either (A) got the joke or (B) beat me up.
Burrell Pepsi would be an interesting name. and to be completely off topic, I went to school with a Laotian immigrant who had taken Pepsi as his American name. He is a sculptor now, though and not a soft-drink manufacturer.
But I don't think that's an American ting so much as it's a corporate name thing. I am sure if a Scot named Guinness wanted to open a brewery, he would be sued.
But if my name was Pepsi & I created a new soft drink and wanted to market it under my own name, I'd be SOL.
Fine, but if Pepsi was the cherished name of one of the most powerful families in the world you'd be up for a fight.
And you can't brew a beer in the Czech city of Budwar and call it Budweiser. The Czechs are quite annoyed by that.
Nice numbah, Sophia. Plus I'm tickled pink to find out that there really is someone named Pepsi.
I tended to wear orange and blue and point out that my family was from Ulster. (True). This being the Midwest, nobody either (A) got the joke or (B) beat me up.
SNERK!
My eyes are green. I feel no especial urge to make any specific adjustments in my wardrobe based on the day of the year. Being, you know, fairly non-Irish and all.
Oh, and one of the things that I always thought of as just a normal part of life until I actually stopped to think about it: on St. Patrick's Day, one of community organizations (the Women's Club or something like that) holds a fundraiser brunch with green bagels with cream cheese and lox.
Before making blanket assumptions about USian history, do a little research on it.
PMM, is this directed at me? I specifically noted that Celtic heritage claiming was on the rise after WWII because I am well aware of earlier American persecution prior to the last century. Look at my name, for goodness' sake.