The entire concept of nationality as bestowed us since the
Peace of Westphalia of 1648 following the
Thirty Years War (1618- 1648), a curiously foreign notion of statehood and sovereignty, especially in its most unnatural rendition facilitated by colonial interests, is not only very awkward, but also impractical.
Granted we have accepted these borders and lived with them for years, but do we have to squabble over these made up nationalities even when the rules of the new game allow for otherwise cohesive coexistence?
I for one consider myself a citizen of the world, on matters like these, I would often be reminded of an Albert Einstein saying.
When describing the negative aspect of nationalism, most probably because of first hand experience of how the Nazi machine exploited nationalism to attain its darkest desires in Germany in particular and most of Europe in general, Einstein said
"Nationalism is an infantile disease, it is the measles of mankind".
I would like to separate myself from such a diseased notion, and let the beacon of reason give me the tools to rid myself of all myopic ventures whose outcome could only be in the saddest annals of unintended consequences.