Log In
Create Account
SlickerTalk
Search Archives
The Leaderboard
The FAQ
Login
Create Account
Search
Dr. S. Talk
TT/ST Wiki
How Well Do You Know ...
RSS Feed
Hosting by DigitalOcean
Support ST on Ko-Fi
Links Only
50 Results
100 Results
250 Results
500 Results
1000 Results
5000 Results
2 Weeks
2 Months
6 Months
1 Year
2 Years
5 Years
All Time
Live
Down to Post
Backboards:
Live
________________
1: Dec 13, 12:54
2: Dec 13, 08:30
3: Dec 13, 05:28
4: Dec 12, 13:06
5: Dec 12, 08:55
6: Dec 11, 23:59
7: Dec 11, 14:43
8: Dec 11, 11:29
9: Dec 11, 07:59
10: Dec 10, 18:15
11: Dec 10, 12:28
12: Dec 10, 09:30
13: Dec 10, 05:59
14: Dec 9, 17:07
15: Dec 9, 13:47
16: Dec 9, 10:33
17: Dec 9, 07:33
18: Dec 8, 17:50
19: Dec 8, 10:32
20: Dec 8, 06:23
Posts: 152
Tbf, I've stuff similar to this before re: poutine -- (link)
Posted by
Reagen
May 29 '17, 09:16
(No message)
For people that think this is silly - imagine if New York started taking credit for BBQ
(news.nationalpost.com)
Responses:
I like the idea of supporting its status as Québécois cuisine, but mostly just within Canada.
-
Beryllium
May 29, 09:59
3
Canada is very regional though. And just like we take care to understand the differences between, say, Californians from Mid-Westerners, we should
-
Roger More
May 29, 10:22
1
And it's further complicated by the language barrier and specific marginalizing that's occured. -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:28
Denmark's got the bomb? -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:15
I still think its silly. Also, your analogy is way off. -- (edited)
-
ty97
May 29, 09:31
36
One aspect of it you're missing is the Quebec/Rest of Canada conflict that goes back centuries
-
Reagen
May 29, 09:49
34
I'm not missing it, I'm aware of it. Quebec is still part of Canada, though, regardless of whether all of them want to be or not.
-
ty97
May 29, 09:51
33
To wit: -- (link)
-
Reagen
May 29, 09:55
[Backboard]
12
The article you posted is NOT about Alberta saying they are poutine capital. For the third time, you are making the wrong analogies. -- nm*
-
ty97
May 29, 09:56
11
Within that thread there's RM pointing out that Toronto is trying to claim it. -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 09:57
9
One of the more laughable articles about poutine in Toronto -- (link)
-
Roger More
May 29, 10:19
And that's a different issue, and that's a problem. But I'm responding to the article you posted
-
ty97
May 29, 09:58
7
Which in this circumstance is one and the same in terms of how Quebec relates to it. -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:00
6
okay, but Quebec being stupid about this issue isn't my fault. -- nm
-
ty97
May 29, 10:01
5
Imagine England claiming haggis. -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:05
4
Excuse me while I bang my head against the wall. Imagine *THE UK* claiming haggis is what you mean. -- nm
-
ty97
May 29, 10:06
3
Nope. I understand the point you're trying to make but it doesn't apply. -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:08
2
Of course it does. You're faking false/flawed analogies. -- nm
-
ty97
May 29, 10:08
1
You're misunderstanding the relationship.
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:11
(and of course my post you pulled out was in jest to boot) -- nm
-
ty97
May 29, 09:57
It doesn't have anything to do with separatism either.
-
Reagen
May 29, 09:53
19
I don't see how Canada overall adopting a dish from a province is saying Canada has first dibs on it.
-
ty97
May 29, 09:55
18
It's dismissive of Quebec. -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 09:58
17
Adopting regional food is dismissive?
-
ty97
May 29, 09:59
16
Claiming it as Canadian over Quebecois is in this case
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:03
10
I guess I don't see the choice here. Why can't it be both? I mean, hell, it has always been both by definition.
-
ty97
May 29, 10:05
9
That's *precisely* the thing that pisses off Quebeckers. -- nm*
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:08
8
Which is ridiculous. -- nm
-
ty97
May 29, 10:09
7
TBC: I get they have their unique culture. They celebrate and they should. But it's a basic fact that they are part of Canada.
-
ty97
May 29, 10:10
6
If Quebec had more recognition on its own, it would be less of an issue. -- nm
-
Roger More
May 29, 10:15
4
Can you elaborate? (Not sure what you meant by this)
-
ty97
May 29, 10:19
3
OK, more. IMO Quebec isn't very well understood either within Canada or outside Canada.
-
Roger More
May 29, 11:34
1
And their feelings about immigrants are all over the map, especially ones that land in Quebec -- nm
-
zork
May 29, 11:37
In general. More later -- nm
-
Roger More
May 29, 10:27
Quebec is officially recognized as a nation within Canada, FWIW
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:14
It can be, yes. It can go the other way, too (cuisine adoption can actually bastardize the origin).
-
Beryllium
May 29, 10:01
4
You can still get authentic Mexican food in Mexico, authentic Chinese food in China.
-
ty97
May 29, 10:04
3
Of note: the guy in the article says "go nuts with what you want to add to it". -- nm
-
Reagen
May 29, 10:06
2
Listen, anyone ever puts spaghetti sauce on poutine, and I'm taking up arms. -- nm
-
ty97
May 29, 10:20
1
(Actually, they do that already - it's called poutine italienne and has been a standard on casse-croute menus for decades) -- nm
-
Roger More
May 29, 11:35
We don't need poutine kudos, we have Nanaimo bars. -- nm
-
Beryllium
May 29, 09:40
Post a message
top
Replies are disabled on threads older than 7 days.