Showing posts with label place. Show all posts
Showing posts with label place. Show all posts

Saturday, December 18, 2021

Told ya so....

I

Back in 2010 I published a post called Tea for Two about the Tea Party and affiliated groups such as the Oath Keepers.  I ended with a warning that we should be prepared for some "wild and woolly" times akin to Italy's "Years of Lead".  The anni di piombo refers to the 1970's, when political violence between left and right-wing extremists was tearing Italy apart.

At the time, people castigated me for being alarmist and completely off-base.  I would present the mob violence of January 6th as validation of my prediction.  And today, WaPo has two articles/editorials about civil conflict in the USA.  One is about a CIA analyst who applied her criteria for countries susceptible to civil war.  She, and other NGO's, claim the US is a lot closer to a civil war than many of us would like to believe.  Her job is to track and predict these things, so I'd assume her book How Civil Wars Start is probably an alarming read.

In a second editorial, three retired US generals warn that the military must prepare itself for civil war.  They are not just referring to dealing with mob violence like we saw in January, but the possibility that Trump-supporting governors might refuse to obey the President; they cite the commander of the Oklahoma civil guard refusing to obey Biden's order that all soldiers must be vaccinated, arguing his Commander in Chief is not the President but the Governor of Oklahoma.

I don't know if he is correct or not, but these generals are genuinely concerned that some military units could choose to support Trump or a Trumpian figure if Trump is defeated in 2024.  They evoke not only the possibility of civil insurrection, but of military units obeying different orders and recognizing opposing authorities.  Civil war, in other words.

Maybe their fear is unwarranted, but given the number of vets and even active-duty personnel who participated in January 6th, I think we should heed their advice....

II

I've written quite a few posts about the removal of Confederate memorials, changing flags, and even city seals.  In The Politics of Removal I mentioned an agency whose job is to review place names and, when appropriate update them.  I think we can all agree "N-word Creek" is no longer a viable official name.  At the time I learned that the word "squaw" is not a word we should use, either, as the meaning is not merely "wife" or "woman" as the old Westerns have it. It's actually quite vulgar and offensive.  So I found this WaPo article interesting.  It talks about changing the names and how a replacement isn't always so straightforward.  Sometimes a Native American name is considered, but as the article observes, different tribes don't always agree on which word.  And of course White people are often reluctant to countenance any change at all.

This process isn't limited to the US.  In France a town called La Mort aux Juifs was changed in 2015, now split between the hamlets of Les Croisilles and La Dogetterie.  Similar requests were made in 1992 and 2014.  The reason is clear.  The French translation can be translated as "The death of the Jews" but also "Death to the the Jews". 

Similarly, in Spain a place once named Castrillo Motajudíos ("Jew hill camp") in 1035 was changed to Castrillo Matajudíos ("Jew-killer camp") in 1627.  In 2015 the town voted to change it again, to Castrillo Mota de Judíos, something like "The hill camp of the Jews" which sounds better than "Jew hill!"

Yet we'll always have Santiago Matamoros:  Saint James the Moor Slayer....

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Platzangst

Platzangst is a German word, combining "platz" for "place" with "angst" for "fear" -- literally, "place fear."

It's a delicious word for us at LoS, with our obsessions over place and meaning. "Place fear" in English sounds like a reference to a haunting--a specific place that is feared or that generates fear--but Platzangst is more generalized. Plaztangst originally fell along the line of agoraphobia, and it has curiously grown even broader in usage, now encompasing claustrophobia as well. Somehow, though, agoraphobia and claustrophobia are both probably even more specific than Platzangst. There are many place fears that are not quite named in English: some people suffer panic attacks when passing others on sidewalks; others cannot cross an empty road; and then there are those who grow uneasy, increasingly uneasy, if they sense something near their head just out of the line of sight unless they are wearing a hat or touching their foreheads. This list of place fears is only limited by the number of people on Earth. Platzangst captures all of these and more--much better than any term I know in English.

I wonder, though, what is the opposite of Platzangst--what is the word for Place Love? I don't mean "place love" as in, "Hey I really dig this place! What a great view! Feels like home! I love it here!"

I mean dirty love--pure raunch. I mean a person who gets off on "place"--perhaps open or closed, or perhaps something even more specifically situated in space. I'm sure that there are plenty of claustrophiles--are there also agroraphiles? What sort of culture would require such words?