Moderator: Community Team
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
bigtoughralf wrote:It's a step in the right direction. Certainly more in the right direction than your jokes about how black people shouldn't wear kilts.
bigtoughralf wrote:Just because a change doesn't immediately have an impact on a number in a spreadsheet doesn't mean it won't be impactful. Giving cultures greater prominence and importance helps stimulate acceptance and culture change, and culture change leads to changes in values and behaviours.
For example, official recognition of the Irish language in Northern Ireland combined with investment in Irish language teaching and promotion (since last year) may well lead to more Northern Irish people developing stronger senses of Irish identity and over time boosting support for a united Ireland. It might also help some culturally Irish NI people to feel less marginalised and therefore less resistant to or distrustful of state institutions.
If recognising an Australian island's history and native culture is 'weakness' in your eyes then I dread to think what your proposed show of strength would look like. Sounds like ol' jim is a fan of Xin Jinping's Uyghur leisure centres.
bigtoughralf wrote:It's a step in the right direction.
bigtoughralf wrote:The guy who pointedly refers to Beijing as 'Peking' is questioning whether nomenclature matters?
bigtoughralf wrote:It's a step in the right direction. Certainly more in the right direction than your jokes about how black people shouldn't wear kilts.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
bigtoughralf wrote:I already gave examples of how it's a good thing. I know you saw them, because you quoted the post they're in. Did I use words with too many syllables?
jimboston wrote:bigtoughralf wrote:Just because a change doesn't immediately have an impact on a number in a spreadsheet doesn't mean it won't be impactful. Giving cultures greater prominence and importance helps stimulate acceptance and culture change, and culture change leads to changes in values and behaviours.
For example, official recognition of the Irish language in Northern Ireland combined with investment in Irish language teaching and promotion (since last year) may well lead to more Northern Irish people developing stronger senses of Irish identity and over time boosting support for a united Ireland. It might also help some culturally Irish NI people to feel less marginalised and therefore less resistant to or distrustful of state institutions.
If recognising an Australian island's history and native culture is 'weakness' in your eyes then I dread to think what your proposed show of strength would look like. Sounds like ol' jim is a fan of Xin Jinping's Uyghur leisure centres.
Neither of these things you suggest as positive outcomes are automatically positive.
In many ways they can also be big negatives.
It’s funny how people use words to suggest a meaning, when they often actually mean or result in the opposite of the suggested meaning.
jimboston wrote:You state that the name change can lead to…
“cultural change” and “changes in values and behaviors”.
So all change is good?
I think so resistance and distrust of state institutions can be a good thing.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users