Wrong thread for that discussion or one on Palin, although I’m pretty sure there is a multi-page older thread in the Pit that I started long ago. Do some reading.
I agree. So why did you bring it up and why were you not admonished for doing so by a moderator? What’s your name calling re those two people have to do with Eskimos?
Crap. I wrote that post, then realized it was continuing the bullshit and went to send a note to the mods about the rather tenacious derailment. I think I hit submit out of rote habit.
Ok folks, enough with the political dig and other jabs. If you can’t keep it civil, then take it to The Pit. In here, keep it in the confines of “don’t be a jerk”. Consider this the warning before the Warnings.
I have not seen a parka being made. My Aunt used to make them and I saw her preparing to make one. Lots of material everwhere, it looked like a hobby store and animal exploded.
So…I can’t say my answer is 100% correct.
Much like coats of today parkas are layered and windproof. The can be heavy for weather that isn’t really cold, over dressing for weather. But when it’s cold they are awesome.
The insides are modern materials because they are easier to get.
Or I can say after the parkas are finished they are left outside and kissed by the Northern Lights and blessed by the Northern Winds.
Sorry for missing this. Personally I prefer cooler temps than many people I’ve met outside the region. I prefer the house temp to be about 68.
In New Mexico in the winter I would wear cargo shorts, t-shirt, overshirt, hat and sandals. In the morning with the temps about 20 I wouldn’t be totally comfortable but it wasn’t bad to me. I dressed that way because when the temps came up in the afternoon, temps 40-60, I felt ‘just capital’. (Sorry, I always wanted to use that line somewhere.)
If it was windy I would upgrade to pants and shoes. During the few days of wind and cold I have a columbia jacket with removable liner. I still have it in Alaska and it’s my primary jacket.
I do believe I am less tolerant of heat. Hot tubs and I don’t get along for very long. I can function in the heat but I have to remember to keep hydrated.
I talked with my cousin, who is gay and from the region, and he says that there is some discrimination from people. Nothing open or hostile but it is there and his circle of friends is that he can ignore them. He said that after he came out he was surprised by the number of people who came to him for help in coming out.
So while I don’t see it if there are people who are afraid to come out I would assume that there is enough to make some people uncomfortable.
Are the Wiki pages on the subject inaccurate? The page for Eskimo includes the Aleut, and the page for the Aleut people refers to tribes. Or in that case, are you saying that “Aleutian” is not a proper term to use for the Aleut people rather than that they don’t have tribes? I may have been reading that part of your statement wrong.
Aleuts aren’t considered Eskimos, although their languages are in the same Eskimo-Aleut language family. That just means they’re as close as, say, German and French.
Aleuts may have tribes, but Aleut ethnicity itself is not a tribe.
Generally I’ve never heard a native Alaskan refer to their “tribe”. People generally refer to their family, or home village, or that they’re Inupiaq or Yupik, but nothing beyond that.
In the lower 48 lots of indians refer to their tribe, but eskimos were never organized that way.
Speaking of food, what are prices like in Alaska compared to the more northerly parts of Canada? Since there are roads and cities, obviously shipping costs and price gouging due to captive customer bases won’t be as big a problem, but do the more isolated communities find groceries significantly more expensive than the national average?
For examples, this page compares various food prices between different northern communities and also compares Nunavut prices with Canadian averages.