Oh, and Kelsie, it's pronounced "zebra" not "zeebra"

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TullyBascombe wrote:Hey, I know, why don't we put the future of "English" to a vote, with a choice between American usage and English usage?
The voters would include 300 million Americans, 60 million British, 30 million Canadians, 20 million Australians and 4 million New Zealanders.
Stay tuned to see if it manages to survive attempts to root out the very traits you see as its strengths. Our church just managed to avoid being "taken over" at the end of last year.kjackson83 wrote:* ...the Anglican Church: This is my church. I am a bad Anglican (in the United States: Episcopalian), but an Anglican nonetheless. I've had a complicated existence, religiously and spiritually-speaking, but have found a home in the Church of England. Like the British as a whole, the Anglican Church's greatest strength is its tolerance and openness to differing opinions. We don't name many of our churches for the patron saint of questioners and doubters (St Thomas) for nothing...
The Communion will survive: Gafcon and ECUSA have stuff to hash out, but the Communion will survive, and although the Church of England proper has seen better times, it will weather this latest storm as well. Have faith.TullyBascombe wrote:Stay tuned to see if it manages to survive attempts to root out the very traits you see as its strengths. Our church just managed to avoid being "taken over" at the end of last year.kjackson83 wrote:* ...the Anglican Church: This is my church. I am a bad Anglican (in the United States: Episcopalian), but an Anglican nonetheless. I've had a complicated existence, religiously and spiritually-speaking, but have found a home in the Church of England. Like the British as a whole, the Anglican Church's greatest strength is its tolerance and openness to differing opinions. We don't name many of our churches for the patron saint of questioners and doubters (St Thomas) for nothing...
It stands for "Grand Old Party," a nickname for the Republican Party of the United States...without delving deeply into American politics (a many-tentacled, omnipresent monster, that), the relevancy here is that the Republican Party is (of the two parties in the US) big on American patriotism, which includes a degree of hostility towards almost anything that smacks of "anti-Americanism." Yours truly has been quite literally screamed at by friends and even family about being "anti-American" for, among other things, flying the Union flag, using British English (spelling-wise) and proposing that the British do a list of things better than the US....Jude Andrew wrote:kjackson83 wrote:GOPhuh?
Only 18% of Americans claim Spanish or another language as their primary language, so that leaves 250 million to vote for "American" English. Furthermore I'd point out that only 59% of Canadians, 78% of Australians and 85% of New Zealanders count English as their first language. For that matter 1/4 of Wales counts their ancestral tongue, not English, as their primary language.kjackson83 wrote:TullyBascombe wrote:Hey, I know, why don't we put the future of "English" to a vote, with a choice between American usage and English usage?
The voters would include 300 million Americans, 60 million British, 30 million Canadians, 20 million Australians and 4 million New Zealanders.![]()
lovely, Tully: Uncle Sam and the GOP are proud of you. Although, I might point out that proportionally, MORE of those "other people" speak English than of your 300 million Americans, a commanding minority of whom don't speak English at all, or only in txt msg 4mat.