• Shinhoshi@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      Funny seeing you here! Can you explain the “Usonian” thing?

      I get it refers to the US, but not past that…

      • Soviet Snake@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        Well, I’m a Latinamerican, and we kind of hate people from the US are called American, but that term is kind of shitty since everyone in the Americas are American, so they are appropriating of something it’s not only theirs. In Spanish that word doesn’t even exist, we use “Estadounidense” which translates to something as “Statesian”, but in my opinion it’s not that good of a term. In Esperanto there’s the word “Usono” which means the same, so I adapted it more to an English style “Usonian”. There’s a really good song by Residente, who previously was part of Calle 13, that talks about this, and he did it as a response to Childish Gambino’s “This is America”. Its English subtitles are pretty decent, so you can listen to it that way. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GK87AKIPyZY

        • Shinhoshi@infosec.pub
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          1 year ago

          Thanks for the explanation! I agree that it would be nice to have a word for estadounidense in English too.

          Also, can you explain “encabronao” at 0:45 in the video? Why wouldn’t it be “encabronado”?

          I liked the song, thanks for sharing it!

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As far as I know, it’s a Frank Lloyd Wright thing about radical decentralization/individualism.

        Most sources on the web are unhelpful because they only talk about it as applied to architecture, but he had a bunch of ideas about urban planning (or rather, anti-urban planning) that are much less well known and get drowned out in the noise.

        Here’s one half-decent article I’ve managed to find about it

        The TL;DR is that Wright liked the idea of basically replacing cities with endless suburbia/Jeffersonian hobby farms interspersed with small towns, such that everything would be self-contained/self-sufficient. Or something like that, anyway. (In hindsight, the legacy of Wright’s idea is that American society took the “spread everything out” part without the “and get rid of cities” part and invented disastrous suburban sprawl.)

        Anyway, I think it’s being used here to allude to the idea of failing to provide sufficient Federal funding for infrastructure because of misguided individualism, maybe?