>>212322496 (OP)
anglo-american just want to be spicy and exotic. They say they’re “German” when their DNA test shows that they’re 34% English, 46% Scottish, and 20% German.
>>212322496 (OP)
Your map is gerrymandered. Besides americans lie about their ancestry all the time because they want to seem unique. Most of them know nothing about germany besides muh sauerkraut, socks and sandals
The parts the Germans occupy are barely populated.
>The most commonly reported ancestries of non-Hispanic White Americans include German (13%), Irish (10%), English (9%), Italian (6%), French (4%), Polish (3%), Scottish (3%), Scotch-Irish (2%), and Dutch, Norwegian, Swedish, and Russian (each 1%), respectively >The British Americans' demography is considered a serious under-count as the stock tend to self-report and identify as simply "Americans" (7%), due to the length of time they have inhabited the United States, particularly if their family arrived prior to the American Revolution.
So basically English + Scottish + Scotch-Irish + American = British
British: 21% (not even counting the Welsh, which would probably push it to 22%)
German: 13%
>>212322996
I will never stop being stupid. You will never be able to make me stop being stupid. You lack the strength and authority to make me stop being stupid. You lose.
>>212322996 >>212322496 (OP)
Correct. This map he posted is very fake, here is the real ancestral census for the U.S. As you can see, the most populated areas are majority British (The South alone has like 100 million people). Only the Upper Midwest & very rural plains states are majority German, and Pennsylvania, due to the Amish primarily.
>>212322926
Neither is Kentucky or West Virginia. I grew up in Kentucky & outside of the Cinci suburbs, which is like 0.002% of the state, having German heritage is unheard of unless its very Anglicized colonial PA Dutch heritage.
>>212323252
Its very common within the South to have just British heritage, though. Not a single British heritage, e.g not 100% English or whatever, but being a mix of English, Welsh, Scottish, Ulster Scot, Irish etc is the norm here. As I said in >>212323225 I grew up in rural KY and all my heritage goes back to the UK, any non UK heritage would be from Norman/Viking rapists or something and not traceable via genealogy.
>>212323545
You'd be hard pressed to find a British person who is just of one British Isles ancestry too. Like a good 40% of people in northwestern England have Irish grandparents or great-grandparents.
>>212323631
Meh, even in that case they're usually Ulster Scot-English mixtures. The Ulster Scot immigrants intermarried pretty heavily with English indentured servants in colonial Virginia. "Britmutt" is basically the most accurate way to describe the average American Southerner.