"Earle Horton" <anglocapitalista@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:4533b4d2$0$19688$88260bb3@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> The Germans have a cannon capable of propelling a watermelon 139 meters.
> I
> saw it on ProSiebenSat1.Welt. I don't have any idea of your "watermelon
> photo-ripping nut" reference.
>
> In the United States we have the right to vote for, or against, any kind
> of
> law that strikes our fancy. We have courts to throw out the most
> outrageous
> offerings, and we don't have to worry about provincial European ideas of
> "polical correctness", as you do in Spain. On the other hand, we have
the
> freedom to interfere in the internal politics of any other nation, by
what
> Teddy Roosevelt called the "big stick" argument. If there is a problem
> with
> our big stick, we suggest that you reassemble your former empire and get
> one
> of your own.
>
> Eres estrilador, y interpretas todo como ataque personal. La verdad es
> que
> no nos im****táis un pepino. Ese asunto de la rusa, la sandía y los
> derechos
> de las personas que no sepan ni inglés ni español podría ser lo que se
> representa. ¿Quién sabe? Ese artículo menosprecia a todas las lenguas
> habladas en América salvo el inglés, el castellano, el ****tugués y el
> francés. El autor muestra la misma intolerancia al revés que la rusa.
Es
> nada más que hipocresía y desdén de origen europeo. "A case in point:
The
> Haitian Creole is one of those concoctions. Creole is a language for the
> illiterate, designed by people who apparently had a good intention in
> their
> mind (for that of the "road to hell is paved with good intentions"), to
> help
> the illiterate population of Haiti learn how to read and write."
>
> In the Basque Country and in other autonomous regions of Spain they have
> street and city signs in two languages, and the locals often deface the
> Spanish version, to encourage use of the local place names. How does
that
> make you feel?
Me encantan esos letreros en vascuence que dicen = Karga y deskarga.
GURRIATEMBERG


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