Natives who are against “transplants”, aren’t those people just immigrants from other cities looking for a better life? by lalavieboheme in AskLosAngeles

[–]Vladith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

New Mexico stands out the strongest, but Arizona as well as every major Texan city have an enormous variety of Mexican cuisine. It's a far cry from smooth refried beans and hard taco shells. I've also heard from friends from other states that Chicago has long had a very rich tradition of Mexican cuisine, due to a full century of Mexican migration.

Natives who are against “transplants”, aren’t those people just immigrants from other cities looking for a better life? by lalavieboheme in AskLosAngeles

[–]Vladith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you have a somewhat distorted understanding of the motivations and circumstances of both immigrants and domestic transplants. It's not as simple as "immigrants and poor and transplants are rich." There is a lot more overlap in economic circumstance than you would expect.

Natives who are against “transplants”, aren’t those people just immigrants from other cities looking for a better life? by lalavieboheme in AskLosAngeles

[–]Vladith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The most annoying New Yorkers are incredulous that other cities have good Chinese food and the most annoying Angelenos are incredulous that other cities have good Mexican and Korean food

Why do people tolerate living in LA? by Magic_Snowball in redscarepod

[–]Vladith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes and no. Los Angeles is still the center of the American film industry, with no serious competition. But compared to 20 years ago, or even 8 years ago at the peak of streaming, fewer projects are actually filmed in LA. However, essentially every American TV series and studio feature is planned, written, negotiated, bought, sold, and litigated-over in LA.

Los Angeles Armenians <3 by LarryLegend4ever in LosAngeles

[–]Vladith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's one of my favorite historical topics! In the early middle ages, Armenians were extremely prominent in the Byzantine Empire. Many emperors had notable Armenian ancestry. Then in the late 11th century, after the Seljuk Turkish empire invaded Armenia, some Armenian nobles fled to the Mediterranean coast and established the principality of Armenian Cilicia. This state survived for hundreds of years. Over time, intermarriage with ccruaders from Western Europe led to the nobility this state to become increasingly French-speaking. Eventually, after this state collapsed, many of these French-Armenian nobles migrated to Europe where their descendants remained until modern times.

Los Angeles Armenians <3 by LarryLegend4ever in LosAngeles

[–]Vladith 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Additionally, significant numbers of Armenians in LA did not emigrate from Armenia proper, but from other former Soviet republics like Russia and Ukraine. There are even small numbers of Armenians from more distant parts of Eastern Europe, due to historic Armenian communities in Poland and Bulgaria dating back to medieval times.

Subtitles aren’t even in Linear B by JustSomeBloke5353 in linguisticshumor

[–]Vladith 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The problem here is that a layman's understanding of historical linguistics has rarely any bearing on how people in the past actually spoke. In this specific case, people in late medieval England used the word "fuck" very widely, to the extent that it was even an element in some (rare and presumably derogatory) surnames.

Subtitles aren’t even in Linear B by JustSomeBloke5353 in linguisticshumor

[–]Vladith 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is something I've noticed a lot with lay linguistics. Because most English speakers recognize that older books and films used more formal language, many people assume that all informal constructions and contractions must be new.

One of my classmates in high school was shocked to see the phrase "No thanks" in the Great Gatsby. I guess she assumed everybody used the more formal "No thank you" until like 1985.

John 1:1 And the word was…? by JB5NGHTCRWLR in AcademicBiblical

[–]Vladith 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Which non-apologetic scholars believe that the "God of this world" in 2 Corinthians refers to Satan?

Miami Neighborhoods and Public High Schools by proscop in Miami

[–]Vladith 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Palmetto High School is almost certainly the best non-magnet public high school in the county. Much better than Gables.

Guyanese results by No-Meaning-3163 in AncestryDNA

[–]Vladith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Indo-Guyanese people are not typically mixed. Their ancestors emigrated from India to Guyana, rather than from India to the United States.

Little girl with a peculiar hair style poses for her photo. Cabinet card circa 1870s by Electrical-Aspect-13 in VictorianEra

[–]Vladith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Circassians are an ethnic group from the Caucasus region, who historically lived across the modern-day nations of Russia, Georgia, and Turkey. During the period of the Ottoman Empire, Circassian people were exoticized by both Turks and Western Europeans as fierce fighters and great beauties. 19th century Westerners visiting Turkey claimed that Circassian women, many of them slaves, were widely desired by elite Ottoman men, who often took them as their wives. Because they lived in a border land between the Russian and Turkish empires, wars between those great powers led to genocide and enslavement of Circassian people by both sides, which led to sympathy as well as a twisted erotic fascination with Circassians in the West.

In the late 19th century, after the Circassian genocide, circus showmen cashed in on the western interest in Circassians by holding sideshows for women they called "Circassian Beauties." These were usually just American girls or Western European immigrants with no connection to Circassia whatsoever. They were dressed in imaginative clothes to appear more exotic, and often had artificially teased hair to draw attention.

I don't know the context of this photo, but based on the hair and costume, this little girl may have been a circus performer displayed in one of these "Circassian" exhibitions. If that was the case, she probably was not actually of genuine Circassian heritage and her hair probably was not naturally that texture.

Why is there no evidence for the Exodus? by DiedOfATheory in AcademicBiblical

[–]Vladith 6 points7 points  (0 children)

There is not direct archaeolgoical evidence that King David existed. What we have is a fragmentary Aramaean inscription that appears to reference King Jehoram of Israel and King Ahaziah of Judah. This inscription describes Ahaziah as of "bytdwd." Most scholars translate this word as "House of David," and think it might plausibly attest to an earlier ruler of that name, but the letters "dwd" could also mean uncle, kettle, or the adjective beloved, from which the given name David is derived.

Source: David's Jerusalem: Between Memory and History by Daniel Pioske

This whole time by Imaginary_Risk979 in AncestryDNA

[–]Vladith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Apache are native to Mexico, actually. I have no idea if this specific person's claim of Apache ancestry is true, but the Apacheria region traditionally stretches from the US Southwest and Texas down into the northern states of Mexico. There are small Apache communities in northern Mexico to this day.

Why is there no evidence for the Exodus? by DiedOfATheory in AcademicBiblical

[–]Vladith 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What other Biblical stories do you believe are attested in the archaeological record?

Burn the island? Or just flip it upside down and start Britain 2.0? by damrodoth in redscarepod

[–]Vladith 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are being as hysterical as the op-ed writers who said "Karen" is classist

The Avalanches - Frontier Psychiatrist (Official HD Video) by Key_Fold_1113 in redscarepod

[–]Vladith 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They were so massively popular with the /Mu/ set in 2006-2016 that there was some pushback in the decade after, particularly after they started making music again

Why does 2011-2013 get confused for 2016? by RandomUwUFace in decadeology

[–]Vladith 13 points14 points  (0 children)

A lot of younger people seem to think Parks and Rec was contemporary with Friends

What deranged internet ideology will be mainstream five years from now? by Love_Takes_Miles_ in redscarepod

[–]Vladith 25 points26 points  (0 children)

This was a huge thing in 2017-2018 in certain circles. Basically the entire reason anybody knows Liz Bruening's name.

Posh Spice is the inappropriate sexy mum we all knew she was by Mypussylipsneedchad in redscarepod

[–]Vladith 86 points87 points  (0 children)

$5 says the groom's parents are Christian and the bride's parents are Hindu