Social Thoughts on "Heritage" Americans/Canadians?

Of course it is, but as soon as he owns up to it I'll go ahead and debunk the Lost Cause myth as not at all culturally significant and merely a rhetorical means to preserve white supremacy in the US.
Roger that. However, I realize I must add a minor correction to my post. Earlier, he was quite explicit about it, actually. He used the term "southern coded civilian gun ownership" and a search for that is what led me to that NIH study in the first place.
 
Roger that. However, I realize I must add a minor correction to my post. Earlier, he was quite explicit about it, actually. He used the term "southern coded civilian gun ownership" and a search for that is what led me to that NIH study in the first place.

Owning a gun isnt a f*ckin culture anymore than owning a hammer is.
 
Answering a question with a question. You can substantiate your own claim. What efforts are you seeing to erase Southern food, music, speech, or any other indication of culture?
It would be hard to deny that there is a strong homogenization push in the culture for the last like 15 years. Certainly southern is the most commonly shat on identity within journalism and pop culture in general. So speech fits in there.
 
Of course it is, but as soon as he owns up to it I'll go ahead and debunk the Lost Cause myth as not at all culturally significant and merely a rhetorical means to preserve white supremacy in the US.
Own up to what exactly? Please break it down how you would go there based on my posts.

I think people who are so obsessed with racial/national supremacy are dealing with debilitating mental illness.

A citizen is a citizen. There is no hierarchy. It's a yes or no check in the box.

Seek help
So how many people watching the world cup you think are ill?
 
Own up to what exactly? Please break it down how you would go there based on my posts.


So how many people watching the world cup you think are ill?

You have yet to clarify what you mean by "Southern Culture." You keep implying it would be erased without substantisting what "it" is.
 
My terms?

Search any big mainstream newspaper database for the term southern culture. Not my terms. Everyone's.

Bruh, you made a claim, I simply requested that you clarify your claim to substantiate which aspect of Southern Culture you think is being targeted for elimination. You've been so elusive since then it would make Floyd Mayweather jealous.
 
Bruh, you made a claim, I simply requested that you clarify your claim to substantiate which aspect of Southern Culture you think is being targeted for elimination. You've been so elusive since then it would make Floyd Mayweather jealous.
I don't think the people doing it think of it that way, but accents, gun ownership...

Do i even need to go on?
 
So you're just not going to make any effort to clarify a general term you used to signal an alarm except two equally broad generalized terms that still dont specify cultural aspects of a region/people.

Fair enough.
 
So you're just not going to make any effort to clarify a general term you used to signal an alarm except two equally broad generalized terms that still dont specify cultural aspects of a region/people.

Fair enough.
No effort needed.<thisgonbegood>
 
I recently watched a fascinating segment on the concept of "Heritage Americans" - a term used to to describe people who trace their roots to the founding generations or descend from cultures that are predominantly white and Christian (the "original" settlers of the United States).

In a nutshell, if you weren't white and Christian, you could never truly be American (or Canadian). There was a funny section of the video that described social medias response to Kash Patel when he wished people "Happy Diwali". People told him to go back to India and worship his sand gods, despite the fact that Kash was born and raised in the United States.

I have encountered something similar (although not with a racist intent). When people ask me where I am from, it is never good enough to say "Canada". The follow up question is always "Where are you really from (lineage)?", despite the fact that I was born in Toronto. I am also acutely aware that I will always belong as an "Other" in Canada - I used to do a lot of research in rural northern communities, and I was always viewed differently because of my skin color. Not necessarily in a bad way, but it felt like there was a performative aspect to prove that I was "one of the good ones", because I spoke like them and shared similar values/interests.

I was curious to get people's thoughts on how they feel about the concept of "Heritage American". Is a Buddhist Chinese guy from San Francisco as American as an anglo-white church goer from Nebraska?
If you say Canada today, they mistake it for little India.
 
I’m a white Christian that was not born in Canada, I love my country of birth but I’m a firm believer in assimilation into the country one lives in.
 
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