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Obviously, Hawaii is an AMerican state of British geneaology, so why not designate my country as both regardless of its previous form? Hawaii is an American state of Bridish heritage, so my country is a British country with American heritage. I am concerned about the Bahamas because my personality is identical to that of the Bahamas. Do you ever have a personality akin to another country? I feel that way about the Bahamas, but should that personality be German, Dutch, Chinese, etc.? Such is my problem, but I am asking about the Bahamas being American in case of a change in British laws. I do not wish for the change to destroy the country and the statehood can act as backup. As a matter of fact, Texas was the same way: a republic that became an American state. Thiink about it!

2006-12-18 14:56:13 · 3 answers · asked by Mew Xacata (Raven) 1 in Arts & Humanities History

3 answers

After a checkered history, The Bahamas are definitely and indisputably British. There is absolutely no chance that they would become American.

2006-12-18 15:07:40 · answer #1 · answered by ElOsoBravo 6 · 1 0

I have no idea about the Bahamas. From what I have seen about that country, it is British. Now Texas is another story - Spanish, French, Mexican, Texan, American, Confederate, American - that is the geneology of the Great State of Texas. That is how the Theme Park "Six Flags" got their name! The Six Flags theme park in Arlington, Texas - Six Flags Over Texas - still has the areas/sections of the park named for the Countries of each flag (although the French section has become more or less just a passage form one section to another, no more "LaSalle's River Boat Ride"!

2006-12-18 23:52:35 · answer #2 · answered by gaptx45 2 · 0 1

If I recall, Hawaii was controlled by people from New England and subsequently incorporated in the late 1800s during the McKinley administration. When you speak of genealology, you're quite mistaken; the people in Hawaii were native Hawaiians, Americans from New England plus labourers from places ranging from the Philippines to Portugal.

As for Texas... that was Mexico, but a few slave-holders couldn't tolerate that and decided to revolt, formed their own country and then became part of the US.

2006-12-18 23:16:55 · answer #3 · answered by Walter 5 · 0 1

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