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VC: Why TG-16 and not PCE in Europe?

Started by Monster Bonce, 06/05/2007, 04:49 AM

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Golgo13

You know whats funny, is they brag about how "Multicultural" they are, and yet none of them have any culture themselves (Or are so preoccupied with somebody elses) .  They have the shittiest food I have ever tasted in europe, and im not just talking about Dutch food, they manage to fuck up every other type of food they decide to copy.

Monster Bonce

Well, a friend of mine swears by bitter ballen. How amusing that sounds to my ears...

Swing by Belgium. The Wallonian food is good. French influence.

Golgo13

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/07/2007, 02:05 PMWell, a friend of mine swears by bitter ballen. How amusing that sounds to my ears...

Swing by Belgium. The Wallonian food is good. French influence.
Actually I already did that, I went to Brugge, it was Great!  But here, oooo noo, just a bunch of barbarians.

Monster Bonce

Barbarians might be a bit strong but Dutch politics is a mess. They fancy themselves as liberal but they're not really. Actually they're just super permissive conservatives. You can do what you like as long as you stay out of their pockets. If there's money to be made publishing Sadistic Rape Monthly someone in Holland will do it. That doesn't necessarily make you liberal.

Or perhaps it does, but it certainly doesn't make you left wing. Maybe the Dutch are right and the US meaning of liberalism should be expunged from political discourse because it confuses thing so badly.

I also find it hilarious that they're complaining about nasty non-liberal foreigners messing-up their multi-cultural society. Liberals against immigration—priceless.

Golgo13

Thats the Irony of it, All the feminists in holland claim to feel for the oppressed muslims, but when the "Oppressed Muslims" become numerous enough, its not gonna be any more "Sex and the city" on TV and women saying "I can do what I want"  Nope, just a trembling, scared little girl with a black eye.  Just some turks bitch.  HAHAHAHAHAHA

Monster Bonce

Let's not forget, when the Dutch rule the world CD-I will be the only games console permitted. Luckily there will be some great Zelda and Mario games for it...

Enough. I quite like Holland and here I am slagging an entire country off. Tut, tut.

Golgo13

HAHAHA CDI is the console equivelent of dutch food.

Golgo13

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/07/2007, 02:19 PMI quite like Holland and here I am slagging an entire country off. Tut, tut.
What ive noticed is that everybody likes holland who doesnt live there, it has a very big reputation, but it all depends on what kind of person you are whether you will like living here or not.   The Dutch claim many things they are, which they are not, they say one thing and do another, they often contradict themselves alot too.  For a guy like me who is from a very different world than the one the dutch live in, its hard to adjust.

Monster Bonce

On the food front, the country I'm from is pretty grim. Don't get me wrong, there are plenty of good restaurants but there's no real native food or food culture.

There is also too much Italian and pseudo-Italian food (particularly the latter). Italian food has usurped French food as the ultimate in cooking. I can only assume this is because people can make half-arsed pseudo-Italian food at home whereas French food is considered too complicated.

The same thing is happening with European wine vs. New World wine, where people are avoiding European wine in favour of New World because they want to know what grape type is used in a wine—as if they can tell anything much from grape type or it's somehow easier to understand than terroir.

Current debates in France about whether or not the French have lost it, French food outside of France is on the whole superior to Italian food outside of Italy. Most "Italian" food in Europe is just dull pasta dishes. Part of my family is of Italian (and Wallonian) extraction and I grew up eating a lot of Italian food. I am, I have to be honest, a bit bored with it but more than that I am sick of the middlebrow crap that is presented as Italian food in most of Europe.

Unfortunately, such is its culinary dominance that French restaurants are now confined mostly to the expensive and super-expensive end of the market and I can't afford that very often. In France you can get great food for very little money.

Monster Bonce

Quote from: Golgo13 on 06/07/2007, 02:24 PMWhat ive noticed is that everybody likes holland who doesnt live there, it has a very big reputation, but it all depends on what kind of person you are whether you will like living here or not.   The Dutch claim many things they are, which they are not, they say one thing and do another, they often contradict themselves alot too.  For a guy like me who is from a very different world than the one the dutch live in, its hard to adjust.
That's probably true of anywhere. I'm sure I'd find the US baffling in a way I don't find most of Europe. Despite coming from a (mostly) Anglophone country I even find England rather different from what I'm used to.

termis

People seem to go through stages when they live somewhere else.  (Basically, culture shock.)
1.  Everything is new and exotic, wow!
2.  The novelty wears off, and all the little different things that used to be exotic is now an annoyance.
3.  After awhile, you sorta settle in, realize things are just the way they are, and don't really need an explanation WHY everything is works the way they do.

It's in your best interest to get to #3 as quickly as possible, but a lotta people never seem to get out of #2, and get the hell out of Dodge ASAP -- I've seen it happen soooo many times...

Golgo13

Quote from: thumpin_termis on 06/07/2007, 03:07 PMPeople seem to go through stages when they live somewhere else.  (Basically, culture shock.)
1.  Everything is new and exotic, wow!
2.  The novelty wears off, and all the little different things that used to be exotic is now an annoyance.
3.  After awhile, you sorta settle in, realize things are just the way they are, and don't really need an explanation WHY everything is works the way they do.

It's in your best interest to get to #3 as quickly as possible, but a lotta people never seem to get out of #2, and get the hell out of Dodge ASAP -- I've seen it happen soooo many times...
Absolutely, for me growing up in an Italian neighborhood for most of my young life, made me really appreciate food and be very critical of it, my whole family is like this and we weren't exactly the wonderbread and kool-aid type of americans, so pretty much anywhere I go, im very observant of the food, and just to give you an example of my culinary critique take a look at this:

IMG


now the dutch word for this is a food item called "Frikandel".  The tri-state area's word for this would be "A piece of dog shit in a mailbox"

Golgo13

YES.. im afraid its....

termis

Yeah...  :P  I myself am at #2 right now (I'm in Calgary).  Slowly crossing over to #3, but the terrible thing is that I completely skipped #1 and went right to #2 -- as in, nothing here was new or interesting!

Wait... In that case, maybe it's not so much culture shock - Calgary just sucks!  :-s

Seldane

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/07/2007, 02:43 PMOn the food front, the country I'm from is pretty grim.
What country might that be then?
Quote from: Seldane on 04/21/2007, 07:28 PMDVDs are for suckers. Illegally pirated and stolen videos all the way. No menus. No "DO NOT PIRATE THIS!" screens. No fuss. Only perfection. I honestly only pirate movies because that "don't pirate this" screen annoys me. :wink:
IMG
Indeed, it's AV time. Check out: IMG! Sir, the door was open.

Monster Bonce


Golgo13

#66
You know I went to a Catholic school that was run by Irish nuns, not Irish-American ones, but real ones right from ireland.  The mother superior was named "Ursula Doherty".   They were very strict but actualy very nice old ladies.

Actually there is alot of Irish people where im from, staten island is about 15% Irish, they own alot of bars along one of the main streets in staten island, alot of them sit and get piss drunk and stagger out the bars later at around 2 am.  Most of them are very happy drunks though.

nat

Quote from: Golgo13 on 06/07/2007, 05:28 PMMost of them are very happy drunks though.
Those are the ones that are gettin' da ass...

Keranu

God bless the Irish. I have Irish blood and so damn proud, I could care less about what other ethnicities are in me.
Quote from: TurboXray on 01/02/2014, 09:21 PMAdding PCE console specific layer on top of that, makes for an interesting challenge (no, not a reference to Ys II).
IMG
Click the banner to learn more about Alex Chiu and his "immortality rings"

nat

You damn Irish are all the same. I bet you're extremely pale, too.

Keranu

I am extremely pale! Most people say I'm the whitest person they know. Please don't say I'm a drunk though because that stereotype sucks.
Quote from: TurboXray on 01/02/2014, 09:21 PMAdding PCE console specific layer on top of that, makes for an interesting challenge (no, not a reference to Ys II).
IMG
Click the banner to learn more about Alex Chiu and his "immortality rings"

nat

Naw, you're too young. Give it another year or two.  :wink:

Keranu

I used to drink hard liquor for a year straight from 16-17, but I quit that shit. Drinking is a waste of life.
Quote from: TurboXray on 01/02/2014, 09:21 PMAdding PCE console specific layer on top of that, makes for an interesting challenge (no, not a reference to Ys II).
IMG
Click the banner to learn more about Alex Chiu and his "immortality rings"

Golgo13

Many, but not all of the Irish I knew liked to drink. Its not just a stereotype though, recently I read a study that Ireland has the highest rate of binge drinking in europe, around 22% of young people, If I recall england and other  countries up there also rank high.  The lowest was Italy and Greece with around 2%.  I worked in a nightclub in Athens and I indeed saw very few people get really drunk.  The Irish nun I had in school used to get really pissed about this Irish like to drink stereotype, but she was a nun and did not drink a single drop of alcohol.

Keranu

Here's a great page dealing with Irish discrimination.

I don't mean to turn this thread around, but I really do think Irish stereotypes are junk. People may not see any harm in calling an Irish a drunk, but it can. Just imagine my brother, who has recovered from strong alcoholism over the past couple of years, if he was talking to someone and he found out my brother was Irish and started ragging him on about drinking, which is probably the last thing my brother would want to hear. I just really hate to see how it seems so acceptable to say Irish stereotypes on TV and such. Don't even get me started on Muslim stereotypes.
Quote from: TurboXray on 01/02/2014, 09:21 PMAdding PCE console specific layer on top of that, makes for an interesting challenge (no, not a reference to Ys II).
IMG
Click the banner to learn more about Alex Chiu and his "immortality rings"

Monster Bonce

Let's not get carried away here. But, yes, drunken Irish is a stereotype. So is drunken Finns and drunken Norwegians. I think the British make more top of the class A grade angry drunks than anyone else, but that's still a stereotype

Besides, I've always felt that Americans can't hold their drink—at least the ones I've met. I suspect that most Europeans drink more, though America is so vast there are, I'm sure, huge differences in attitudes to alcohol.

PS Irishness is not an ethnicity, it's a nationality.

Golgo13

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/08/2007, 06:13 AMPS Irishness is not an ethnicity, it's a nationality.
Explain how Irishness is not an ethnicity.  I was just wondering this, because where im from, we always viewed the Irish as an ethnic group, just as Italians, Greeks, Germans etc.  We all spoke english and it was just assumed we are americans, but we still did not forget about where we came from, unlike many people in other parts of America.

I mean I never understood how the dutch for example, could call a morrocan "Dutch" it seems only they are stupid enough to believe in such logic.  Just to give you an example of what I mean, If I walked around Holland and happened to have been born in china and spoke fluent chinese, went around here telling people I was chinese, they would all laugh in my face.  And yet, when some Morrocan or Turk calls himself "Dutch" because he was born in Holland, they look at him with a straight face, and take it very seriously.

Monster Bonce

#77
Quote from: Golgo13 on 06/08/2007, 02:52 AMMany, but not all of the Irish I knew liked to drink. Its not just a stereotype though, recently I read a study that Ireland has the highest rate of binge drinking in europe, around 22% of young people, If I recall england and other  countries up there also rank high.  The lowest was Italy and Greece with around 2%.  I worked in a nightclub in Athens and I indeed saw very few people get really drunk.  The Irish nun I had in school used to get really pissed about this Irish like to drink stereotype, but she was a nun and did not drink a single drop of alcohol.
You do realise that binge drinking is complete nonsense, don't you? The government statistics are ridiculous. Two glasses of wine with your dinner and you're a so-called "binge drinker".

Moreover, the methodology is faulty. There is no internationally recongised as to what constitutes a 'binge'. The UK minimum definition, for example, is 'more than six units of alcohol on a single occasion'—that's two pints of beer.

According to the WHO Luxembourg has the highest consumption of units of alcohol per head, not Ireland. In fact, dear old Luxy has the highest per capita consumption in the world. For such a small country they certainly know how to put it away. Where is the moralising and hand-wringing of the drunken Luxembourgeois? The Czech Republic is second, Ireland is third and France is fourth.

Countries with "above average" consumption include Latvia, Lithuania, Germany, France, Ireland, Spain, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Austria, Croatia, Denmark, Switzerland, Portugal, Slovakia and Moldova. Given that that is most of Europe it does rather beg the question: what the hell does "above average" actually mean?

Not very much, I would suggest. Could it be that such, cough, "European" countries as Turkmenistan, Armenia, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Kyrgystan and Kazakstan (which were included in the report for some reason) that happen to have Muslim majorities are actually distorting the average by dragging it down? Heaven forbid!

Also, many of those "studies" come from dubious think tanks and charities. One recent one made the headlines in Britain. It later turned out that it was from a group founded by the Salvation Army whose current head is a devout Muslim. Hardly the people I'd ask to do a study on alcohol.

Even the WHO is less than impartial.

Meanwhile, the British government has recently come out saying that pregnant women shouldn't drink at all. I'm aware that middle America has long been used to thinking of pregnant women as disabled and wrapping them up in cotton wool, but such an attitude is unheard of in Europe. Or rather it was until now.

Monster Bonce

#78
Quote from: Golgo13 on 06/08/2007, 06:27 AMExplain how Irishness is not an ethnicity.  I was just wondering this, because where im from, we always viewed the Irish as an ethnic group, just as Italians, Greeks, Germans etc.  We all spoke english and it was just assumed we are americans, but we still did not forget about where we came from, unlike many people in other parts of America.

I mean I never understood how the dutch for example, could call a morrocan "Dutch" it seems only they are stupid enough to believe in such logic.  Just to give you an example of what I mean, If I walked around Holland and happened to have been born in china and spoke fluent chinese, went around here telling people I was chinese, they would all laugh in my face.  And yet, when some Morrocan or Turk calls himself "Dutch" because he was born in Holland, they look at him with a straight face, and take it very seriously.
Any person of Moroccan descent born in Holland is Dutch. End of story. He can call himself Moroccan or of Moroccan descent if he wants, but he is primarily Dutch.

However, that's not my point. Irish people—actual Irish people in Ireland—would be offended if you told them they were ethnically distinct from other Europeans. Ireland is a country and a nation and it has a culture, but that's it.

I think the difference here is that you are American and I am European and we think about these things in different ways.

By the same token, the way Americans define "Hispanics" as being non-white baffles Europeans. It does seem like racism to us. I'm not saying it is, it just comes across this way. A sort of unnecessary stressing of difference.

Golgo13

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/08/2007, 06:39 AM
Quote from: Golgo13 on 06/08/2007, 02:52 AMMany, but not all of the Irish I knew liked to drink. Its not just a stereotype though, recently I read a study that Ireland has the highest rate of binge drinking in europe, around 22% of young people, If I recall england and other  countries up there also rank high.  The lowest was Italy and Greece with around 2%.  I worked in a nightclub in Athens and I indeed saw very few people get really drunk.  The Irish nun I had in school used to get really pissed about this Irish like to drink stereotype, but she was a nun and did not drink a single drop of alcohol.
You do realise that binge drinking is complete nonsense, don't you? The government statistics are ridiculous. Two glasses of wine with your dinner and you're a so-clled "binge drinker".

Moreover, the methodology is faulty. There is no internationally recongised as to what constitutes a 'binge'. The UK minimum definition, for example, is 'more than six units of alcohol on a single occasion'—that's two pints of beer.

According to the WHO Luxembourg has the highest consumption of units of alcohol per head, not Ireland. In fact, dear old Luxy has the highest per capita consumption in the world. For such a small country they certainly know how to put it away. Where is the moralising and hand-wringing of the drunken Luxembourgeois? The Czech Republic is second, Ireland is third and France is fourth.

Countries with "above average" consumption include Latvia, Lithuania, Germany, France, Ireland, Spain, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Austria, Croatia, Denmark, Switzerland, Portugal, Slovakia and Moldova. Given that that is most of Europe it does rather beg the question: what the hell does "above average" actually mean?

Not very much, I would suggest. Could it be that such, cough, "European" countries as Turkmenistan, Armenia, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Kyrgystan and Kazakstan (which were included in the report for some reason) that happen to have Muslim majorities are actually distorting the average by dragging it down? Heaven forbid!

Also, many of those "studies" come from dubious think tanks and charities. One recent one made the headlines in Britain. It later turned out that it was from a group founded by the Salvation Army whose current head is a devout Muslim. Hardly the people I'd ask to do a study on alcohol.

Even the WHO is less than impartial.

Meanwhile, the British government has recently come out saying that pregnant women shouldn't drink at all. I'm aware that middle America has long been used to thinking of pregnant women as disabled and wrapping them up in cotton wool, but such an attitude is unheard of in Europe. Or rather it was until now.
Yeah, I think your right, but I based what I said more on my personal experiences with Irish people, It may very well be true that they are not the top drinkers in europe and its all bullshit.  But one thing I was always certain of is that they can drink much more than I can, and can function much better than I can after drinking as a general rule.   
I had a girlfriend in high school who was from belfast, and she did not drink much at all, but she told me many of them do drink there.

Monster Bonce

I'm not saying Irish people don't drink. They certainly do on the whole and they're definitely in the top ten in Europe, no doubt about that. It's just that it's all so subjective. Americans seem to drink so little. It's doubtlessly a cultural difference.

The legal age being 21 in some (most?) US states seems laughable to us. And it won't work.

Anyway, I have to go out for a while. Will resume later.

Golgo13

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/08/2007, 06:45 AM
Quote from: Golgo13 on 06/08/2007, 06:27 AMExplain how Irishness is not an ethnicity.  I was just wondering this, because where im from, we always viewed the Irish as an ethnic group, just as Italians, Greeks, Germans etc.  We all spoke english and it was just assumed we are americans, but we still did not forget about where we came from, unlike many people in other parts of America.

I mean I never understood how the dutch for example, could call a morrocan "Dutch" it seems only they are stupid enough to believe in such logic.  Just to give you an example of what I mean, If I walked around Holland and happened to have been born in china and spoke fluent chinese, went around here telling people I was chinese, they would all laugh in my face.  And yet, when some Morrocan or Turk calls himself "Dutch" because he was born in Holland, they look at him with a straight face, and take it very seriously.
Any person of Moroccan descent born in Holland is Dutch. End of story. He can call himself Moroccan or of Moroccan descent if he wants, but he is primarily Dutch.

However, that's not my point. Irish people—actual Irish people in Ireland—would be offended if you told them they were ethnically distinct from other Europeans. Ireland is a country and a nation and it has a culture, but that's it.

I think the difference here is that you are American and I am European and we think about these things in different ways.

By the same token, the way Americans define "Hispanics" as being non-white baffles Europeans. It does seem like racism to us. I'm not saying it is, it just comes across this way. A sort of unnecessary stressing of difference.
No, its got nothing to do with american or european, its got to do with common sense and understanding the old meaning of the word nation, versus the modern "Politically Correct" word for Nation.  I lived in Greece and there people viewed Albanians and others with Greek passports as "Albanians" pure and simple.  The primary reason the Dutch for example feel the overwhelming need to call morrocans dutch is because they have guilt complexes about the colonies and foreign peoples they exploited, whereas in Greece they had no such history like this, so the calling somebody what they actually are is not associated with any kind of racism or predjudice, just common sense.

Monster Bonce

Well what is your definition of nation?

One last thing I'll say: beware of priests. Regardless of whether they're actual priests or political or medical authorities delivering moral lectures, they're all full of shit.

Gotta go.

Golgo13

I can help answer your question

"By the same token, the way Americans define "Hispanics" as being non-white baffles Europeans. It does seem like racism to us. I'm not saying it is, it just comes across this way. A sort of unnecessary stressing of difference."

The Spanish are just like any other europeans, but in America, real Spanish descended people are really rare, there are however many people who are a mix of spanish and the original native peoples of mexico, and the puerto ricans who are a mix of spanish and africans.  They all speak spanish, and so this is how the term "Hispanic" was coined, and this is why people in america associate "Spanish" or "Hispanic" with non white.

Now as for the definition of nation, what MY definition is really irrelevant because I did not invent the word, I just know the root meaning of the word.  It is rooted in the Latin word meaning "Birth" which meant at that time a people related by common blood or ancestry.  Cicero used the word in this way in 44 BC:

"Omnes nationes servitutem ferre possunt: nostra civitas non potest."
("All races are able to bear enslavement, but our community cannot.")

Now, this is where the problem comes in, because the American idea that "If you were born here, your one of us" has made its way into western europe, particularly countries that had a history of exploitation of other peoples.   The reason for this is because they have such a guilt complex about thier own ethnic identity and national history, that they are terrified of insulting a Morrocan or Pakistan among them by calling them "Morrocan" or "Pakistan".

In most of eastern and southern europe, no guilt complex exists like this, so ethnic minorities are called what they are based on where they come from, regardless of where they were born, the meaning of the word nation had not been altered for the sake of political correctness.

Now, in my case I am an American of Greek, and a small amount of Italian ancestry, I grew up in a neighborhood where all of us were descended from immigration to Ellis Island, which is where many Irish and others also came in.  And as a result, we always felt different than the other Americans outside the city.  If I am talking with somebody from my area about somebody else, for example "Anthony" I would say "Anthony's Italian" I wouldnt say "Anthony Is american" because he is American by default simply because he was born in america and speaks english.  We dont refer to each other as "Americans" where I am from.

CrackTiger

Quote from: Keranu on 06/08/2007, 03:31 AMHere's a great page dealing with Irish discrimination.

I don't mean to turn this thread around, but I really do think Irish stereotypes are junk. People may not see any harm in calling an Irish a drunk, but it can. Just imagine my brother, who has recovered from strong alcoholism over the past couple of years, if he was talking to someone and he found out my brother was Irish and started ragging him on about drinking, which is probably the last thing my brother would want to hear. I just really hate to see how it seems so acceptable to say Irish stereotypes on TV and such. Don't even get me started on Muslim stereotypes.
I don't even think that the people stereotyping Muslims even get that specific. The have a problem with anyone they think looks a-rab.
Justin the Not-So-Cheery Black/Hack/CrackTiger helped Joshua Jackass, Andrew/Arkhan Dildovich and the DildoPhiles destroy 2 PC Engine groups: one by Aaron Lambert on Facebook, then the other by Aaron Nanto!!! Him and PCE Aarons don't have a good track record together! Both times he blamed the Aarons and their staff in a "Look-what-you-made-us-do?!" manner, never himself nor his deranged/destructive/doxxing toxic turbo troll gang which he covers up for under the "community" euphemism!

Golgo13

#85
Quote from: guest on 06/08/2007, 07:15 AM
Quote from: Keranu on 06/08/2007, 03:31 AMHere's a great page dealing with Irish discrimination.

I don't mean to turn this thread around, but I really do think Irish stereotypes are junk. People may not see any harm in calling an Irish a drunk, but it can. Just imagine my brother, who has recovered from strong alcoholism over the past couple of years, if he was talking to someone and he found out my brother was Irish and started ragging him on about drinking, which is probably the last thing my brother would want to hear. I just really hate to see how it seems so acceptable to say Irish stereotypes on TV and such. Don't even get me started on Muslim stereotypes.
I don't even think that the people stereotyping Muslims even get that specific. The have a problem with anyone they think looks a-rab.
The problem here in western Europe is simple, they piss and moan about what the muslims are doing, when its nobodys fault but their own.  Last time I checked, Holland was not on the border of Morroco, THEY Let them in, and THEY wanted to exploit them for cheap labor.  and THEY were the ones who years ago told anybody who was concerned about the possible cultural friction that may result to Shut the fuck up. 

I really honestly don't have a problem with the Muslims, because they are not the root of the problem as far as im concerned.  If the Dutch want to blame somebody for their problems, all they have to do, is look in the mirror.

CrackTiger

I do find it weird that people who group by ethnicity have so many distinctions for so-called darker races, but throw together such a huge variety of cultures and different physical traits under the label of "white".
Justin the Not-So-Cheery Black/Hack/CrackTiger helped Joshua Jackass, Andrew/Arkhan Dildovich and the DildoPhiles destroy 2 PC Engine groups: one by Aaron Lambert on Facebook, then the other by Aaron Nanto!!! Him and PCE Aarons don't have a good track record together! Both times he blamed the Aarons and their staff in a "Look-what-you-made-us-do?!" manner, never himself nor his deranged/destructive/doxxing toxic turbo troll gang which he covers up for under the "community" euphemism!

Golgo13

Quote from: guest on 06/08/2007, 07:30 AMI do find it weird that people who group by ethnicity have so many distinctions for so-called darker races, but throw together such a huge variety of cultures and different physical traits under the label of "white".
Yeah personally I don't like the term "White" just as many "Black" people don't like the term "Black" and prefer "African American" or such things. To me "White" is far too general a term, and frankly I don't want to be associated with being simply "White".  I have about as much in common culturally with some american "White" people as I do an eskimo, actually I probably have more in common with the eskimo, because the eskimo still has a cultural idenity, whereas many "White" americans have none.

MrFulci

Wow, thread is pretty derailed, haha.

Chiming in to say a bit about drinking.

A person's background, and their family background, can play a part in how their body handles drink (along with social situation, body build, etc). About the age of 6 or so my grandfather gave me my first sip of Cognac.... haha. I was asking about a drinking set he had, and he decided to let me have a taste. With his background, letting a 6 year-old have a sip of Cognac wasn't a big deal. I recall the Cognac bruning my mouth, that stuck with me.

I'm not a heavy person, that seems to be the the biggest factor in how much I can drink in an hour and keep most of my bearings.
"Damnit, Beavis, put that away. You're not supposed to have your _____ out when you're cooking".

Monster Bonce

#89
Too much to respond to above in the time I have right now (gotta go out again). A couple of quick points:

There is a lot of confusion about the different meanings of country (the land within the borders and, arguably, its people), the state (a country's political apparatus) and the nation (a primarily cultural entity based on descent that can span national borders). The terms are not interchangeable.

Nevertheless, if you are born somewhere and take on that place's culture, then you are a member of that nation. I would say that that is the mainstream European view. If people segregate themselves—as distinct from being segregated by the society they live in, an entirely different matter—then there is clearly a problem and Europe has certainly seen some of that.

Overall, the concept of the nation is not particularly helpful today. If you've got citizenship then that is all that should matter. This is not a particularly US view.

Greece is often considered quite a racist country by some Europeans. I know nothing about Greece and that perception in itself could be nothing more than prejudice—lazy-minded Northern European contempt for Southern Europeans. However, viewing someone whose parent were born outside of the country as foreign is not common in much of Europe and it's not political correctness that has informed this. If you are born somewhere then that's where you're from. This doesn't preclude multiple identities.

One problem is that while multiculturalism was well-meaning it, like all post-modern theories, refuses to make qualitative judgements and argues that no culture is superior to another. As a result it actually promotes difference. All identity politics do this. They're bogus and divisive by their very nature.

Immigration is not a problem everywhere in Europe. Some people, such as myself, are all in favour of it. However, I also demand a secular, humanist state and have no truck with religious nonsense. The French so-called "ban" on religious iconography in school seems perfectly sensible to me.

Where there is an immigration problem it is partly as a result of what you say. However, there are other issues. France, for example, has failed to live up to its republicanism by stuffing people into the banlieiux and then forgetting about them, happily discriminating against them and their descendants. Similarly, Germany's fear of Turks is rooted in Germany's own failures.

Golgo13

Perhaps you could care to explain how Greece is Racist, and countries like England, Holland and France are not?

In my opinion Greece is a country that is very traditional and has carried on many traditions and ideas much longer than many western european countries have been around.  Are the Japanese racist because they dont consider korean immigrants Japanese?

Golgo13

"Germany's fear of Turks is rooted in Germany's own failures."


What about Greece and the rest of the balkans fear of turks, what failures brought that on?

Monster Bonce

#92
I didn't say it is. I said there is that perception. I also said that that was probably a prejudice in itself. In fact, there are a lot of Northern European prejudices about Southern Europe—even within countries, viz. Italy.

Also, are we talking at cross purposes here? I'm not talking about immigrants. I'm talking about their children.

Japan certainly has a reputation for racism, deserved or otherwise. At some points in its history it was one of the most xenophobic cultures on the face of the planet. Consider the Edo period. I have no idea if any of this still plays out today but I do know that there is a xenophobic right wing fringe that exerts political pressure beyond its numbers over issues like war memorials etc. There are also figures like Mishima in recent history.

Edit: And yes, the Japanese have been racist toward Koreans.

Monster Bonce

#93
Quote from: Golgo13 on 06/08/2007, 08:39 AMWhat about Greece and the rest of the balkans fear of turks, what failures brought that on?
Thousands of years of history? What about the French?

Nevertheless, the German situation is distinct.

Good article on Turkey and the EU:
Taking it out on Turkey
The tortured discussion about the Turks joining the EU is a product of crises in the West more than the East.
http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/0000000CAD8A. htm

Golgo13

Be more specific though, the entire population of the balkans and some areas up unto romania and such, all managed to fail?  Im really just curious to hear a western europeans viewpoint on this thats all.

Monster Bonce

#95
No, and I know nothing about the situation re Turks in the Balkans. Nor have I claimed to. You're putting words in my mouth talking about the Balkans and failure. My point was about the failures of the modern German state, not any Balkan state or its people. I was offering the German situation as an example of how to not handle immigration.

Germany's problem, however, is rooted in Germany using Turkish guest workers to do things on the cheap while failing to integrate the Turkish population properly into German life. This stuff is well-documented. It has nothing to do with Turkey and everything to do with Germany.

Golgo13

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/08/2007, 09:01 AMNo, and I know nothing about the situation re Turks in the Balkans. Nor have I claimed to.

Germany's problem, however, is rooted in Germany using Turkish guest workers to do things on the cheap while failing to integrate the Turkish population properly into German life. This stuff is well-documented. It has nothing to do with Turkey and everything to do with Germany.
I think its more a failure of understanding the principals of human nature.  If you have a culture that you love, that belongs to you, you are less likely to give up that culture no matter where you live.  If you have no culture, don't think your culture is worth much, or think that your culture is in fact "Multicultural" than you are going to be more open to the idea of integration.  Turks as a whole never integrated with anyone they came in contact with,  but now western europeans think they will integrate them, regardless of what the history shows.

Seldane

So how about that PC Engine, eh? A fine piece of hardware to be sure. :)
Quote from: Seldane on 04/21/2007, 07:28 PMDVDs are for suckers. Illegally pirated and stolen videos all the way. No menus. No "DO NOT PIRATE THIS!" screens. No fuss. Only perfection. I honestly only pirate movies because that "don't pirate this" screen annoys me. :wink:
IMG
Indeed, it's AV time. Check out: IMG! Sir, the door was open.

Golgo13

Hahaha, yeah I guess you dont want to think about that up there in sweden eh?

Nazi NecroPhile

Quote from: jmwalsh on 06/08/2007, 06:13 AMPS Irishness is not an ethnicity, it's a nationality.
Try looking up a definition for ethnicity.  Ethnicity is a social construct of people who share similar cultural traits (language, dress, religion, etc.) as well as common ancestry.  How does this not apply to being Irish?

The Netherlands are f'n great.  It's easily the best place on earth to stick you finger in some dykes.
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