Played with Kaylee. Sun came out, and I walked on my feet and heard with my ears. I ate the bits, the bits stayed down, and I work. I function like I'm a girl. I hate it because I know it'll go away. The sun goes dark and chaos has come again. Bits. Fluids. What am I?!

River ,'War Stories'


Spike's Bitches 27: I'm Embarrassed for Our Kind.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


amych - Dec 07, 2005 11:32:16 am PST #8418 of 10003
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I think the P part is just as ethnic as the WAS.

(edit: x-post with Tep. Odd.)


Stephanie - Dec 07, 2005 11:32:39 am PST #8419 of 10003
Trust my rage

To me, ethnicity isn't something you chose. It's what you *are*.

eta: That was in ref to Step]. Thank Ellie for the weird spacing=.


brenda m - Dec 07, 2005 11:36:30 am PST #8420 of 10003
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

I'd call the AS ethnic, except that I think anything distinctively AS is hundreds of years lost. It's something new now that's not really expressed by those words. And really what it's getting at is more (ancestrally) European non-Latin non-Catholics. Which doesn't exactly trip off the tongue.


Gris - Dec 07, 2005 11:40:21 am PST #8421 of 10003
Hey. New board.

Do colored lights represent anything?

That people got bored by white ones. I mean, the lights themselves are descended from putting actual candles on the tree in various pagan rituals, so saying the white = purity is kind of a grasping-for-straws symbolism anyway. Doesn't change the fact that I've always associated them in my mind.

Personally, I also think white lights are much prettier, especially in limited amounts. But that's just a personal opinion.

As for the Judaism comparison - from what I can tell, this is actually a fairly legitimate comparison. In the Jewish spectrum, you have first the strong religious believers (of various levels of practice, of course), then you have the equivalent of Christmas-and-Easter believers (only, of course, it's Rosh Hashanah, Passover, and, in America at least, Hannukah/Jewsmas instead) who won't say they don't believe the religion, but it's primary significance comes in the occasional cultural celebration. Next you have those who were raised with some level of religiousness, but have rejected the religion part or never believed it strongly, but might still spin a dreidel, eat some latkes, make matzah ball soup - these are the equivalent of cultural Christians who still celebrate Christmas. Finally, you have purely secular Jews who actually scorn celebrating Jewish holidays and whatnot, but nonetheless were generally raised with a Jewish perspective, of sorts. They certainly, generally, are less likely to fully celebrate Christmas than a purely secular non-Jew, and they will still be more likely to use the occasional yiddish. No matter how hard they reject the religion, their cultural backdrop is, often, still Jewish. My hardcore atheist friend who loves Christmas is the Christian-side equivalent of this, with her long-term Western/Christian background providing that bit of cultural backdrop.


Emily - Dec 07, 2005 11:41:03 am PST #8422 of 10003
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

So more a Western European thing? See, WWEP doesn't really roll off the tongue.


brenda m - Dec 07, 2005 11:42:22 am PST #8423 of 10003
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Western as distinct from Southern European, anyway.


Gris - Dec 07, 2005 11:44:33 am PST #8424 of 10003
Hey. New board.

See, I think "culturally Christian" is an ethnicity. It is something I am rather than something I choose. So if we take the 'P' of WASP to be "part of that unique cultural environment defined by a large majority protestant population," then it's totally ethnic.

I think I'm still a WASP despite not being a Protestant, you know?


amych - Dec 07, 2005 11:46:01 am PST #8425 of 10003
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

(Gris says what I was getting at without sounding snappy about it.) (This day has GOT to end one of these weeks.)


Jessica - Dec 07, 2005 11:46:54 am PST #8426 of 10003
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

As for the Judaism comparison - from what I can tell, this is actually a fairly legitimate comparison. In the Jewish spectrum, you have first the strong religious believers (of various levels of practice, of course), then you have the equivalent of Christmas-and-Easter believers (only, of course, it's Rosh Hashanah, Passover, and, in America at least, Hannukah/Jewsmas instead) who won't say they don't believe the religion, but it's primary significance comes in the occasional cultural celebration. Next you have those who were raised with some level of religiousness, but have rejected the religion part or never believed it strongly, but might still spin a dreidel, eat some latkes, make matzah ball soup - these are the equivalent of cultural Christians who still celebrate Christmas. Finally, you have purely secular Jews who actually scorn celebrating Jewish holidays and whatnot, but nonetheless were generally raised with a Jewish perspective, of sorts. They certainly, generally, are less likely to fully celebrate Christmas than a purely secular non-Jew, and they will still be more likely to use the occasional yiddish. No matter how hard they reject the religion, their cultural backdrop is, often, still Jewish. My hardcore atheist friend who loves Christmas is the Christian-side equivalent of this, with her long-term Western/Christian background providing that bit of cultural backdrop.

It's telling that, as specific a list as this is, not one person in my (mostly) Jewish family is described here.

Generalizations are hard.


Gris - Dec 07, 2005 11:48:31 am PST #8427 of 10003
Hey. New board.

Oh, I know. To be fair, I'm not sure too many people in the Christian world are really described there either. My main point was just that, um, okay I'm not really sure what my main point was actually.

Maybe that everything is more confusing than it ought to be.