“I hate money. I hate having to think about it. I hate having to use it to measure what’s valuable. I hate that amassing it is a measure of a person’s worth. I hate that some human beings’ inability to gather enough of it means they should be thrown away. I hate the way it dominates all our lives, the way it dominates society. The thing I hate the most about money is that it isn’t neutral when it should be. Other people hate money too. They hate having to organize every part of their lives around it. They hate having everything they require to survive (food, shelter, clothing, medicine) being held ransom to it. They hate their children’s futures being held at gunpoint by it. They hate the constant, prickling fear of living pay check to pay check. They hate the indignity of low wages for honest work (if they’re even paid at all anymore). They hate money and how it’s used to control and demean them and coerce their participation in the injustices being perpetrated against them. They hate feeling enslaved.”
— Kitanya Harrison
Language is the foundation of civilization. It is the glue that holds a people together. It is the first weapon drawn in a conflict.
Arrival (2016) dir. Denis Villeneuve
arrival -
happiness is listening to a song in your target language and understanding more and more words over time
This video for the linguistic privilege of the Anglophones was very interesting to me. He doesn't say that if you go for a week to Greece you must learn the language (although some phrases would be nice). He doesn't say that having a common language between different nations is bad.
But he is talking about native English speakers who are able to stay in foreign countries for a long time and still don't learn the language because the locals around them can accommodate them by speaking English. These long-term visitors who are native English speakers (sometimes spouses and business partners) are not willing to learn the basics to survive in this country because they expect that someone around will know their language.
While this expectation might seem reasonable, it burdens the non English speakers to learn the language to the point we are considered unprofessional and unskilled if we don't speak English very well - in our own country!
Story time:
I was meeting with a large group of online friends for drinks and doing our collective hobby together and there was an Anglophone in the group. She had been staying in the country for 10 years, she was under 30 years old (you can definitely learn the language at that age) and couldn't communicate with us, making a dozen Greeks speak English to accommodate her.
Naturally, we didn't manage for long to center our conversations around her language when we could communicate better in ours. Still, the attitude of this woman and people like her still baffles me. If any of us were to go to her country for a month we would be automatically required to know English otherwise we would be ridiculed. We would certainly not survive a decade without learning the local language.
Amy Adams as Dr Louise Banks in Arrival (2016), dir. Denis Villeneuve
“If you could see your whole life from start to finish, would you change things?”
Thanks for letting me do this super fun logogram from the movie Arrival. A movie I didnt watch then because I thought friendly aliens were lame lolol.
😂 Boy was I missing out 😂 gotta love sciencey films 😂 https://instagr.am/p/CMbXrTasPxA/
Latin grammar is a social construct. The Romans honestly just made that shit up as they went along.
Inspiration for a future linguist and literature professor
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