All right, no one's killing folk today, on account of our very tight schedule.

Mal ,'Trash'


Spike's Bitches 38: Well, This Is Just...Neat.  

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


Hil R. - Nov 04, 2007 9:05:08 pm PST #2551 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Several of my friends are *more* religious than their parents were. I can see why they wanted to marry Jews. But yeah, I guess I find it confusing that someone who hasn't been to temple or celebrated a seder in years feels compelled to marry a Jew.

Religious observance isn't really a terribly good indication of cultural identification. I know plenty of people who aren't observant at all, but they certain identify as Jewish and want their kids and grandkids and so on to, too. (Actually, from the early 1900s through the 1950s, that would have described a pretty big portion of the Jews in NYC -- from the socialists who held Yom Kippur balls through the people who were just not religious but knew that they were Jewish in the same way that their neighbors were Irish or Italian.)


Laga - Nov 04, 2007 9:21:20 pm PST #2552 of 10002
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

Aww Brian and Stewie are at the Art Institute of Chicago. But that Picasso isn't in the same room with that Seurat anymore. Oh duh they're doing Ferris Beuller.


omnis_audis - Nov 04, 2007 9:29:22 pm PST #2553 of 10002
omnis, pursue. That's an order from a shy woman who can use M-16. - Shir

the long awaited cat video. Hopefully it's worth the long wait. [link]


Laga - Nov 04, 2007 9:43:28 pm PST #2554 of 10002
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

yah dat was good.


omnis_audis - Nov 04, 2007 9:56:26 pm PST #2555 of 10002
omnis, pursue. That's an order from a shy woman who can use M-16. - Shir

whew


Fay - Nov 04, 2007 10:14:11 pm PST #2556 of 10002
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

The girl I like told me she can't see me any more. A fine ending to a day that consisted of nothing but being very hung-over.

Well, bugger.


Liese S. - Nov 04, 2007 10:44:52 pm PST #2557 of 10002
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

It's an interesting conversation because cultural identity and religious affiliation are separate for me. My parents would have been much happier if I'd married a nice Japanese boy (I told them I'd have been happy to marry a nice Japanese boy, but I'd never met a Japanese boy who wasn't my cousin, what with the whole growing up in small-town Ohio and all.) but that was strictly cultural identity, and not religious (my mom grew up Buddhist, but my dad grew up Christian).

But I won't pretend that it hasn't figured in our current conversation about whether or not to have kids. My sister has lovely half-Japanese half-Caucasian kids. Who were raised in Africa and speak French and Toma. Who knows what their cultural identity is. If we do have kids, it will be strange to me because they will have a completely different experience with their ethnic background and cultural identity than I did, and I'm not altogether sure what the best method guiding them in that area would be.


Hil R. - Nov 04, 2007 11:00:24 pm PST #2558 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Why am I earwormed with "The Battle of New Orleans"?

I think that, especially growing up around NYC, Judaism as both religion and cultural identity doesn't seem weird to me at all. I once totally confused someone at college who asked me about the ethnic makeup of the town where I grew up, and I replied something like, "Well, of the kids in school, I'd say about 25% Irish, 30% Italian, maybe 10% other sorts of Catholics, 25% WASP, 5% Jewish, and most of the rest Asian." Apparently most of the rest of the country would classify that as "About 95% white," but that was definitely how we all thought about it.


Hil R. - Nov 04, 2007 11:04:31 pm PST #2559 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Jars - Nov 04, 2007 11:17:35 pm PST #2560 of 10002

Apparently most of the rest of the country would classify that as "About 95% white," but that was definitely how we all thought about it.

I always find it weird when people (generally from America, I've found) call themselves 'Irish' or Italian'. To me, it's like, but no, you're American. Boy claims he's Italian, whereas I think that seeing as how I've actually been to Italy, I'm more Italian than he is. Back in America, I'm sure he stil identifies as Italian, but once he's abroad, his Americaness is more dominant, I guess.

I think maybe part of it is difference in how we use language. Like I know people born in Ireland, whose parents are foreign, but they'll call themselves Irish, and say that their parents are from Russia or Gambia or wherever, rather than calling themselves Russian or Gambian.