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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (284774)4/20/2006 4:01:00 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572594
 
Re: If multiculturalism means permitting the slaughter of thousands of sheep or allowing people to shoot bullets into the sky, taking out innocent people as the bullets come back to earth, then you are right.....

Huh?! Excuse me but your freedom to "shoot bullets into the sky" is part and parcel of your American monoculture! Or are you insinuating that the Second Amendment was a rider that trigger-happy Latinos just slapped on the US Constitution????

Students Win NRA's Second Amendment Essay Contest

The NRA Civil Rights Defense Fund (NRACRDF) recently announced the winners of its 2005 annual essay contest for students in the United States, celebrating the Second Amendment as an integral part of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

The theme for the essay was "The Second Amendment to the Constitution: Why it is important to our nation." The contest was open to all students enrolled in an elementary, junior high or high school during the 2005-2006 academic year who had not previously received a prize. Essays were judged on originality, scholarship and presentation.

Essays were judged in two categories: Senior (grades 10-12) and Junior (grades nine and below), with separate prizes awarded to the winners in each category. First prizes were $1,000 in U.S. Savings Bonds; second prizes, $600 in Savings Bonds; third prizes, $200 in Savings Bonds; and honorable mention, $100 in Savings Bonds. In the Senior category, first place went to Nicole Seabolt of Baltimore, MD, while Ryan Dunham-Bender of Delta Junction, AK, won first place in the Junior category. A complete list of winners follows.

"It is a key part of our mission to help ensure that future generations of Americans know and understand the role of our firearms heritage in our Constitutional tradition," said former Congressman Harold Volkmer, Chairman of the NRA Civil Rights Defense Fund. "We were especially glad to have received more entries this year than in any other and the grading was very tough with many excellent submissions," he added.
[...]

nra.org



To: tejek who wrote (284774)4/20/2006 4:26:54 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572594
 
Re: .....the French were very successful in their "frenchifying" of Brussels. Even with the kind of structures in Grand Place which clearly have a Dutch architectural influence, I never would have guessed that the city's origin was Dutch.

Let me return the compliment: Americans were likewise very successful in their "americanizing" of New Orleans. Think of Brussels as a Flemish New Orleans of sorts....

New Orleans: History

[...]

French Settlers Leave Their Mark

The first Europeans known to travel past the site of New Orleans were followers of Hernando Cortez, a Spanish soldier of fortune who died on the banks of the Mississippi River in 1543. One hundred forty years later French explorer Robert Cavelier de La Salle, led an expedition from Canada that traced the Mississippi, called "Father of Waters," as far as the Gulf of Mexico, and boldly claimed all land between the Alleghenies and Rockies for his sovereign, France's Louis XIV. La Salle was assassinated before he could direct the building of a settlement in the land he called "Louisiane." In 1718 Jean Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville, a founder of outposts in what are now Biloxi, Mississippi, and Mobile, Alabama, placed a cross at a point where the Mississippi curved near Lake Pontchartrain to mark the site for a new settlement. The proposed town was named for the Duc d'Orléans, who was governing France during Louis XV's childhood.

To establish a population in the new settlement, France sent prisoners, slaves, and bonded servants. An unscrupulous speculator, John Law, beguiled the Duc d'Orléans into giving him a 25-year charter to exploit the new territory and managed to lure a few Europeans across the seas with tales of nearby gold. The men who arrived found only a village of cyprus huts and criminals surrounded by swamp, disease, and hostile Native American tribes. Under threat of a revolt, France then sent "wives" for the colonists: about ninety women from Paris jails, a wild group chaperoned by Ursuline nuns until they were married. Later, poor girls of good reputation were also recruited to bring the settlement a core of respectability, but by then the ribald side of New Orleans's lifestyle had been established. Swamp conditions were hard on its inhabitants, yet the settlement grew into a French crown colony and soon served as territorial capital.

Origins of Creoles and Cajuns

In 1762 New Orleans citizens suddenly found themselves subjects of Charles III of Spain; France's Louis XV had paid a debt to his Spanish cousin by giving away Louisiana. The thoroughly French colony drove out the Spanish commissioner sent to govern them. In the summer of 1763, 22 Spanish warships and 3,000 troops arrived to restore order and install another governor, this time without provoking open opposition. Descendants of these early French-Spanish colonial times are known as Creoles. French-speaking families also began emigrating from Canada's maritime region, Acadia—now Nova Scotia and New Brunswick—to flee British occupation. Referred to as Acadians, and eventually Cajuns, they found sanctuary in New Orleans and in the bayous of the wide Mississippi Delta not far from the city.

In 1788 and 1794 devastating fires destroyed most of the buildings in New Orleans's French Quarter, or Vieux Carré (Old Square); these were replaced by structures of a decidedly Spanish nature. About the same time a process for making granulated sugar made sugar cane an important cash crop in a market soon dominated by cotton. When Spain transferred Louisiana back to France in 1803, U.S. President Thomas Jefferson adroitly bought the territory for $15 million. New Orleans was incorporated two years later. The city was unsuccessfully attacked by British forces during the War of 1812; that same year the first steamboat arrived from Natchez, and Louisiana became a state. The years following the Louisiana Purchase saw rapid development and swift growth in the city's slave and free population. United States and foreign interests invested in the expanding port and immigration increased.

City Boasts Multicultural Neighborhoods

Americans settling in nearby Faubourg Ste. Marie, the present business district, developed a suburb very different in nature from the old French Quarter. Other individualistic neighborhoods developed, including the Irish Channel, a rowdy waterfront area; Bucktown, a one-street fishing village on the shore of Lake Pontchartrain in Jefferson Parish; and the wealthy residential Garden District.

The city's prosperity depended heavily on slave labor, however, and economic threats to this trade made New Orleans intensely pro-Confederate in the Civil War. After the war, reconstruction in New Orleans was hampered by rivalry between ethnic and economic factions, yet eventually, the city emerged as a railroad and shipping center. New Orleans survived a yellow fever and cholera outbreak in 1853 in which nearly 11,000 people died; a malaria outbreak in 1871; a yellow fever outbreak in 1878 in which more than 4,000 people died; a severe hurricane in 1915; and an influenza epidemic in 1918 in which 35,000 people died statewide.

Jazz, considered the unique American music idiom, developed in New Orleans at the beginning of the twentieth century while the city continued to celebrate its cultural origins with the phenomenally successful Mardi Gras and world-renowned cuisine. Tourists began to flock to the city to experience its heralded celebrations and unique neighborhoods. While crime troubled the city in later years of the twentieth century—a blight the city has continued to fight against—New Orleans fiercely protects its legendary heritage. Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century buildings nestle in the shadow of sleek modern towers, convention centers, and shopping facilities, part of the mix of business, history, and good times that characterizes the city's charm.

At the beginning of the twenty-first century, a downtown rebirth was on the minds of city planners. "The Downtown Revival!," a multi-million dollar project that includes a long list of improvements to New Orleans' entire downtown area, is aimed at restoring the downtown and Canal Street for the millions of tourists that flock to the city each year. Today's New Orleans is a successful blend of southern historical charm and modern tourist mecca.

Historical Information: Musee Conti, 917 Conti Street, New Orleans, LA 70112; telephone (504)525-2605; (800)233-5405

city-data.com

Cajun
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[...]

The Acadians were scattered throughout the eastern seaboard (where some became slaves in British colonies), the Caribbean, and Europe. Families were split and put on different ships with different destinations. Many ended up in French-colonized Louisiana, mainly in the American South. France ceded the colony to Spain in 1762 just before Acadians began settling in Louisiana. The interim French officials provided land and supplies. The Spanish governor, Galvez, later proved to be hospitable, permitting the Acadians to continue to speak their language, practice Roman Catholicism—which was also the official religion of Spain—and otherwise pursue their livelihoods with minimal interference. Some families and individuals did travel north through the Louisiana territory to set up homes as far north as Wisconsin.

The Cajuns who settled in southern Louisiana originally did so in the area just west of what is now New Orleans, mainly along the Mississippi River. Later, they were moved by the Spanish colonial government to areas west and southwest of New Orleans where they shared the swamps and prairies with the Attakapa and Chitimacha Native American tribes. There they remained somewhat secluded until the early 1900s.

During the early part of the 20th century, attempts were made to suppress Cajun culture by measures such as forbidding the use of French in schools. Attitudes changed after World War II, during which Cajuns often served as French interpreters for American forces in France. These experiences have helped change attitudes as the century progressed.
[...]
en.wikipedia.org