Message from @Goose
Discord ID: 517436419644588045
it actually turned out pretty good
honestly better than some of the turkeys I've had at Thanksgiving parties as a kid
i think we should start the tradition of eating turkey and ham at Christmas instead of goose...
way ahead of you
I didn't even know that was a tradition
^
@Goose I thought ham or fish was x-mas tradition. never heard of eating goose before
on x-mas or otherwise
huh I never heard fish
fish?...
@Jacob @Deleted User it comes from southern italian traditions
I wonder how far ethnic traditions go
@ThisIsChris tell that to my grandfather
@Goose handsome
That goose looks great though. I wonder what goose tastes like
@ThisIsChris he's the goose you heartless scoundrel!
LA becoming even more Mexican.
Like, can you tell where someone's great great grandparents came from based on what Christmas food they eat? I would imagine most children grow up to copy their parents since they don't know any different.
https://mtstandard.com/opinion/editorial/montana-view-racist-messaging-requires-action-in-response/article_5afc45ca-d6cf-5907-a517-933f861e051b.html
This article here say's this
"We'd take this opportunity to remind folks that every day on this page, The Billings Gazette Editorial Board, the letter writers and guest columnists sign their names to their beliefs. It's time these anonymous thugs do the same."
But I can't seem to find an author to this article?
@Jacob I'd imagine that's largely true, even for just what regular meals parents make
@Jacob interesting thought.
i'm ~60% french, grew up with creole (not creole of color) quisine, yet i've always preferred german good
@Lawrence of Eurabia the comment section is open on that article, if you have a moment you should get in there and bring that up.
@Valaska I'm about to do just that
That's interesting. Some children of immigrants are very disinterested in their parents' culture and just want to be American. Do you think they still end up making food that matches their ethnic identity just out of habit? @ThisIsChris
@Goose I'm Slavic and I love Slavic food. It makes me wonder if there's a genetic component to food preferences.
They don't want just names to faces, they want us unemployed & targeted for physical assault... And it doesn't stop there
@Jacob I think so, because eating tends to be done in the home so it's more sheltered from outside cultural influences
@William Russell
>acting retarded to own conservatards and prove minorirites are just as smart
I'm going to get in there when I get home
Does the phenomenon where you’re talking to someone and adopt their accent have a name?
"Assimilation" @William Russell
I see whites talking blacker when talking to blacks
@William Russell "Code Switching"
Or with an odd made up Latino accent when speaking English to illegals it doesn’t seem intentional
Well there you go thanks @ThisIsChris
@William Russell I've done that when talking to my grandparents in English. Didn't even realize I was doing it until after I had done it.
yw!
@ThisIsChris That makes sense. My parents never really made food that matched up with our ethnic identity. It was kind of a special occasion thing. Usually we'd just eat pretty standard white people food that you'd find in any country, like rotisserie chicken and mashed potatoes. Later on my dad started making a lot of Indian food.
I'm actually kind of trying to re-learn to make the food my ancestors made