Would you do that if you it would be your country and not Ukraine?Would Ukrainians be better off if they ended the war and surrendered to Russia? — frank
Would Ukrainians be better off if they ended the war and surrendered to Russia?
— frank
Would you do that if you it would be your country and not Ukraine? — ssu
Yep!During the 100 year war the Burgundians favored surrender to England because France was suffering so much from the conflict. 1/3 of the arable land wasn't being farmed. 1/3 of the churches were empty, many of them robbed by French soldier/brigands.
I can't say they were wrong. — frank
That's some nationalistic values you have there: the grandeur of the state's legacy over the well being of the people? — frank
The grandeur in this case is of course the French state and the French language where prior there was a multitude of other different languages and cultures.That's some nationalistic values you have there: the grandeur of the state's legacy over the well being of the people? — frank
It was in 1790, barely a year after the Bastille was stormed, that the first ever linguistic survey of France took place. The Rapport Grégoire established that French was the sole language in only 15 of the 83 départements, and that over 12 million citizens – mainly in rural areas – couldn’t speak enough French to carry out a conversation, and that only 3 million people could speak French ‘properly’, with even fewer able to write it. In effect, Paris and its hinterland was virtually an isolated island of monolingual French speakers surrounded by a sea of regional languages.
Language was to play a key role in this re-education of the French people. French, and French alone, was to be the language of freedom and the universal values embodied by the Déclaration des Droits de l’Homme. While it may have, theoretically, been done in the spirit of equality and democracy – a national language ensured that all citizens had equal access to the benefits of the Revolution – the practical application of the policy and the language had a decidedly authoritarian bent.
You really think so?Yeah but your descendants aren't going to care what your nationality was, or what language you spoke, or what you looked like, or what your religion was. It's all vanity. — frank
So it's not nationalism I'm preaching here (or you are confusing the term), but you frank might not understand that what you say might unintentionally be promoting imperialism. — ssu
A few years? What are you talking about?. Is it worth killing to preserve it for a few more years? — frank
You think in a few years English language will just die out? Or is it just Finnish, Estonian, and other small languages that will "fizzle out", in a few more years? — ssu
Do the Native Americans have a right to their language and culture? Are their demands for "nationalism" so bad, inherently evil? If your logical, I guess it would be so. Or do you just change the discourse when it's politically correct to do so? — ssu
This seems to be the typical ignorant attitude of someone who's own culture hasn't been under threat of possible extinction — ssu
1000 years? Sure, in a 1000 years not much is consistent and doesn't change. But yes, I think the time range of one millennium isn't the most preferable one when tackling the problems of the present societies.Yes. Although I'm aware that my time sense has been warped a little by my adventures into geological history and the history of the Bronze Age. I got so used to diving into the past that the present moment started seeming far away.
It gets me in trouble with climate change angst too. I realize that a thousand years isn't really that long. — frank
Really? How can you say that?There isn't any Native American nationalism. — frank
Some very prominent Native writers and intellectuals such as Vine Deloria Jr., Taiaiake
Alfred, Jeff Corntassel, David E. Wilkins, Glenn T. Morris, Tom Holm, Waziyatawin Angela Wilson, and Simon Ortiz have reflected on the concept of tribal sovereignty and self-determination and, in order to achieve self-reliance and self-confidence, have called Native peoples to return to the positive energy of Indigenous epistemologies that is desperately missing from Native communities. Along the way, for instance,
Ortiz, in Woven Stone, concurs:
We need to insist on Native American self-sufficiency, our heritage of cultural resistance, and advocacy for a role in international Third-World de-colonizing struggles, including recognizing and unifying with our indigenous sisters and brothers in the Americas of the Western Hemisphere.
Thus, academically-based and community-grounded Native intellectuals and writers alike are expressing the need for Native societies to restore the health and prosperity of the people using historical Native ways of governing.
Fair enough. But do note that the discussion started from Ukraine, a country that was invaded and has now for seven years fought a war with Russia. And if it was bad (nationalism) for them to defend their country? Yet I think we agree on this issue.And I didn't say nationalism is inherently evil. That is your knee-jerk reaction — frank
So hopefully your country does promotes that diversity! There's a lot of countries where those of mixed heritage are left outside the political/ethnic/racial divide and have no place in the political discourse. And that is extremely sad.Oh no, you got personal, so I'll have to pull rank on ya. I'm from the Melting Pot. I am Assimilation Personified by virtue of my diverse genetics. — frank
1000 years? Sure, in a 1000 years not much is consistent and doesn't change. But yes, I think the time range of one millennium isn't the most preferable one when tackling the problems of the present societies. — ssu
Really? How can you say that? — ssu
And if it was bad (nationalism) for them to defend their country — ssu
I do believe it isn't a lost cause. The only thing is that actual culture cannot be just remembering the past, something new has to be created also.That was a call for reinforcement of Native traditions. That's a lost cause. You can take my word for it, or believe what you want. :razz: — frank
If you haven't lived where the combat has taken place, it has been quite normal. Remember that this basically has been now a border war fought with limited resources. For instance air power hasn't been used by Russia.It's been devastating to the people. That's what I was thinking about. — frank
For example, there are only 10 000 Sami people in Finland. Try upholding an own culture (music, literature, art) with that. But with even a few hundred thousand it's totally possible. Icelandic language and culture will surely prevail. I simply cannot fathom that somehow they would forget their language and start talking something else. — ssu
Well @frank, if you have Native American heritage, links to them or would have studied them, that might sound more credible. I think Robert Zimmermann's ancestry is Jewish from Eastern Europe.Native Americans aren't like that. Their cultures are gone. There's a really sad Bob Dylan song about it. — frank
I'll let you believe those cultures still exist. There's no harm in that. — frank
Exactly.P.S. No culture is stagnant. They either change or die. Every single one. — James Riley
P.S. No culture is stagnant. They either change or die. Every single one.
— James Riley
Exactly.
If for example people don't have in ceremonies folk costumes from the 19th Century (and some from the 18th Century) doesn't mean that Finnish culture is dying. Culture isn't just remembering the past, but adapting to the present and creating something new in one's own way. Besides, there has always been the a lot of influences across cultures. Good luck trying to separate which Nordic traditional folk costumes comes from which country. They actually are quite similar. — ssu
If only things would be this way, that people would hold native peoples as humans and not either as "noble savages" or just as victims of Western imperialism. Yet those prejudicial, uninformed views do dominate. Either you have the classical derogatory (racist) views or then the more woke ideas, which also can go into nonsense just from a totally different path.I thought their culture must truly be dead if it did not fit my prejudicial, uninformed and wholly biased view. - I don't hold romantic views of Indians. They are humans and I'm no big fan of humans. — James Riley
The White House, not happy with the news media's coverage of the supply chain and economy, has been working behind the scenes trying to reshape coverage in its favor. Senior White House and admin officials — including NEC Deputy Directors David Kamin and Bharat Ramamurti, along with Ports Envoy John Porcari — have been briefing major newsrooms over the past week, a source tells me.
The officials have been discussing with newsrooms trends pertaining to job creation, economic growth, supply chains, and more. The basic argument that has been made: That the country's economy is in much better shape than it was last year. I'm told the conversations have been productive, with anchors and reporters and producers getting to talk with the officials...
If you’ve seenthis administration’smy propaganda, you knowthey’llI'll stoop to any level to paintthemselvesthe Dems in a certain light, even though it is comes off as phoney as a three dollar bill. — the real NOS4A2
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