English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

20 answers

What?

2007-06-30 11:00:06 · answer #1 · answered by Ronald S 2 · 2 1

Scotland is a seperate country than Ireland which is also a seperate country and both are seperate from Britian(England)/ but the three countries are packaged together as United Kingdom.
Quebec is a large population group that have French as their first language(as in the early days when the world was being discovered by Columbus and others....England and France both lay claim to the discovery of Canada. Most of the french speaking population is in Quebec and they are trying to get a "distinct" society recognition to be treated differently than the rest of Canada, yet use the same money and other stuff while in the boundary of Canada.
After all the US was discovered first by the spaniards (columbus came from spain)
Aztlan has ties to Mexico not to the USA
Euzkadi is similiar in nature to the Canadian situation, though I am not so aware of Basque nationalists and the story there.

2007-06-30 18:12:17 · answer #2 · answered by ButwhatdoIno? 6 · 1 1

No, because Aztlan isn't and never was an actual nation; it's a mythical construct used to justify calls for racist warfare and criminal activity. There is no defined area of 'Aztlan' with a culture, history, or language that distinguishes it from the rest of the nation. If the ancestors of the Aztecs ever did live in what is now the US southwest (which is possible but doubtful), they left over 5000 years ago to be supplanted by other Native peoples and later modern sovereign nations. If anyone wanted to resettle, they could have moved back and become US citizens in 1848 (yes, really, go read the treaty). Now they'll have to follow the same immigration laws as anyone else.

Scotland and Ireland have been defined, sovereign nations within fairly recent history (in theory Ireland still is). Neither has been 're-settled' by returning expatriates, or those claiming their ancestors used to live there. Quebec was never a sovereign nation, nor was it 're-settled' after the creation of Canada by people who claim they used to live there.

Sorry, but your analogy doesn't hold up. What point were you trying to get at?

2007-06-30 18:01:45 · answer #3 · answered by dukefenton 7 · 4 1

Sorry, but your question makes no sense. Scotland is a Nation which at present is part of the U.K. There is no such a place as Catholic Ireland, or any other country for that matter. A Country/Nation may have a Majority of one Faith or None, but that relates to the people not the Country. A Country. Province, City, etc, cannot of itself have a Faith, or Policy etc. Ireland, ROI. is an Independent Nation. N.I. at present is part of the U.K.

2007-06-30 18:49:44 · answer #4 · answered by The Questioner 5 · 3 0

No, Because Aztlan is the armpit of creation. Scotland, ireland, quebec and euzkadi are all nice places to visit

2007-06-30 17:56:52 · answer #5 · answered by hardwoodrods 6 · 3 0

This concept of Aztlan is quite different as is Quebec

Euskadi is the oldest ethnical group known in Europe. They have for sure a 5000 years uninterrupted culture and probably even much older. Euskadi is already "a Nation freely associated with Spain". Their language is well preserved and the province is economically one of the most dynamic.

Quebec is a province in a federal system and enjoys specific lingustic rights. This despite the facts they are themselves "quite recent immigrants" as are the anglo-saxons in Canada.

I have not seen anybody from "Aztlan" focusing on taking care of their native culture and ancestral language yet. Not that I have anything against but I did not know about Aztec language in the US.

As for Spanish, it is like English a language and culture of immigrants, therefore very different from the ancestral cultures of the "old world" (Asia+Europe+Africa)

2007-06-30 17:59:26 · answer #6 · answered by NLBNLB 6 · 2 1

no ..and have heard of Ireland but not a catholic Ireland though a lot of Irish are catholic and Aztlan
never heard of or Euzkadi is it some kind of cult or myth maybe

2007-07-01 10:32:03 · answer #7 · answered by bobonumpty 6 · 0 1

Well...NO, Aztlan is a creation of the mind of radical Mexicans that have nothing else to do. See, Irish and Basque have the balls to fight the U.K. and Spain respectively, but Mexican don't have it to fight USA, that's why, according to the "Mexican-dreamers" they are re-taking North America little by little. It's just because they know they have nothing to go on in any other way.......LOL........dreaming is for free!

2007-06-30 19:12:48 · answer #8 · answered by Millie 7 · 2 2

Well that depends on what you understand by the relation for example of Euskadi to Spain. I`ve already answered one question on this topic tonight and there seems to be a lot of ignorance about the Basque situation.
And I don`t see a particular relationship between Scotland and Catholic Ireland.
Maybe you should be more specific in your question?????

2007-06-30 17:57:00 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 3

Aztlan is hypocrisy, with their claims to Comanche, Apache, Navajo, Ute, Hopi, Zuni, ETC., ETC., territory, and then carrying on about "stolen" territory.

2007-06-30 19:37:42 · answer #10 · answered by Gray Wanderer 7 · 1 0

There is no such thing as Aztlan

2007-06-30 18:04:19 · answer #11 · answered by lordkelvin 7 · 2 0

fedest.com, questions and answers