Recruiting Forum Football Talk IV

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StoVol said:
Looks like a psunami is coming
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That's a tsunami composed mainly of urine. Very rare. The P is silent but deadly.
 
Why does everyone specify if a construction work is Mexican? If they are white or black, do we just say, construction workers? I’m sincerely curious, because people everywhere say it, and don’t get it.
Edit for context. The site will not let me quote anyone for some reason. This is for @SoilVol
Because if you say Mexican construction worker you know you're getting a good construction worker.
 
According to my new handy field guide, Plover is the family. Killdeer is one of 9 North American species in the Plover family. So a killdeer is a plover.

All of the other North American species in the Plover family have Plover in the species name (e.g. Piping Plover).
I have heard the term sandpiper also. Thank you.
 


“Tennessee, they’re the best,” the younger Iamaleava said following his latest trip to Tennessee the weekend of April 9, which allowed him to attend the Vols’ second spring scrimmage. “I love it. Tennessee feels like home.”

“You’ve got my brother here, so a lot of family already likes it as is,” the younger Iamaleava said of Tennessee. “Big upside to Tennessee, having my brother come here. … That’s what we’ve always talked about — going to the same school. "

“After he goes, I take over. That’s what we’ve always wanted, so I feel like that’s a big upside right there.”
 
I said it because I interacted with them and they were almost entirely non-English speaking - indicating they weren't born in America and probably had very little knowledge of native wildlife. Yet they saw the value in protecting a creature they knew nothing about, found peculiar and that, for all intents and purposes, affected their ability to do their job. Something many native people would dismiss/destroy/not care about because "its just a killdeer." So I found their efforts and interest both inspiring and notable considering their identities. The same identities (male, non-English-speaking Mexican) that I see a lot of people criticize, curse at, fear, and complain for being here.

I felt it was an important detail to the story and observation for those reasons.

(I don't want this to go off the rails into some political or opinion-laden string of discussions - i just wanted to add context).

Edit to add: There were non-Mexican workers and site directors that didn't care about the nest. It was specifically a handful of the Hispanic workers that were monitoring it, making sure it was marked, and helping direct equipment around it.
Could be off here, but my general sense is native and central, south american cultures have a greater affinity for nature, along with their elders.

I mean white folks love us some nature for camping and hiking and human activities and utility, but we'll happily wreck a mountainside in order to build some retirement homes we can stick our family elders in, all in the same breath.

Could be wrong or a poor generalization, but my sense meeting folks and in-laws from Central and South America. Maybe something gained from native cultures, as I'm also not sure the same can be said in Spain or Portugal itself.

Just one aspect I see as superior in those cultures...a step in the right direction that Americans could adopt and become better from as a result.
 
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