Yes, that's fine. But where is the white pride? You're conflating skin colour with culture. Irish culture is not the same as German. That is the question that was posed to you in the first place, you named these as examples of white pride groups. So where is the white pride? Celebrating German cultural roots is not white pride. It is German pride. That is almost so obvious, I don't even know why I have to tell you that.
Semantics is an interesting subject. Words have different meanings to different people. To some "white pride" means white nationalism in the present day sense. To others white pride represents an unbroken connection to a past reaching into the mists of time. It's a matter of connection. Celebrating German cultural roots is a form of white pride in the sense of a cultural connection that provides some people with a connection to their identity.
The First Peoples of North America resemble the First Peoples of Europe in their multitude of identities, but all of those separate identities are unified as one in the eyes of their present descendants seeking to maintain a connection with their ancestors and their ancestors' identities. The Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca and Tuscarora were each unique, but collectively were part of a Confederation.
Similarly, a unique Pan-European identity was created in America over the course of centuries. It is with this identity that many people feel an abiding connection. This is the sense of white pride of which I speak.
The Han Chinese are another example of a racial group composed of many different groups who have come to consider themselves an ethnicity that celebrates their connection to each other. The same can be said of the Islamic concept of the Ummah.
Connection to one's identity is not the same thing as believing that one's identity is superior to all others. It is an expression of the present connected with the past.