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this post was submitted on 30 Dec 2023
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BecomeMe
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I'll use spoiler tags to reduce visual clutter for other posters.
comparing old claim vs. new claim
Here's your old claim: "This is exactly what is already happening with Scots and American English". This was uttered as a reply to "I don’t think that some sort of “international English” would be a threat to the local varieties that you mentioned".As such, in the context you were initially saying the same as American English is a threat to Scots, and any sort of «international English» dialect would be the same.
Now here's your new claim: "I was specifically referring to Scots words and phrases disappearing from use and even British English words being replaced with americanisms [SIC]." You're shifting the claim from a "general threat" to "words and phrases", and "Scots" to "Scots and even British English". As such, yes, you are shifting the goalposts. (Not that it matters as I debunked both the old and new claims.)
So what you're saying here is that you're functionally illiterate?
Seriously. Learn to read dammit. I'll even help you out.
Spoonfeeding time
Prevent SSB from displacing other varieties from the equation, and Scots survives; perhaps adopting one or two American words, but that's no biggie, vocab comes and go. Remove American media from the equation, and Scots still meets a sticky end because it's still being cannibalised by other British varieties.
As such, no, American media is not even an indirect threat in this case. It might be to AAVE or Appalachian, dunno; but not to Scots.
The threat is from whatever is whatever "a Brit" is expected to speak when being "a proper Brit"; formerly RP, nowadays SSB. It's ultimately that meme of "national identity", not global matters.
I was not putting words in your mouth. I was highlighting that this is an implication of what you said. What I was contemplating, back then, was that Anglos might do something like this:
further reasoning
Two different cans of worms; in one you're looking for the implications of what another person said, in another you're making shit up.
But let's play with the later a tiiiiny bit. If I were to do the later, here's how it would sound like:
"You're blaming American media because you don't really care about Scots; Scots is just a convenient sacrificial lamb for you nationalists to find some overseas threat to your Reich and its Reichsprache [heil ~~the queen~~ the king!]. That nationalism is also the reason why you're treating American English and British English as if they were dialects, as you nationalists hate when people notice internal variation of your languages. «Noooo! We're an united Folksreich! One British English, One British People!».
...I'm not doing it though. I do have grounds to call you illiterate, disingenuous, or even potentially an irrational, as you're clearly unable to follow a simple reasoning. However, I don't have the ones to call you a nationalist. But it should give you an idea of what I originally meant by putting words onto the others' mouths. Side note: in that quote you're diverting the focus and distorting what someone else said. Should I take it as a sign that the concept of intellectual honesty is a bit too complex for you?
No, that is not an argumentum ad hominem. If you want to call out fallacies, at least learn to identify them, otherwise you'll vomit stupid shit like this.
why this is not ad hominem
An ad hominem here would be "your claim is incorrect because you are a layman". That is not even remotely close to what I did; instead I wrote a big wall of text, with reasoning and sourced data showing that your claim is incorrect. There's argumentation there, not just a "u layman than u're arguement is invalid lol lmao".I'm highlighting that you're a layman and listing those three points to show why "as a native" is not a valid way to strengthen your own claim. It's shitty reasoning; I could've said instead that it's a combo of appeal to authority and anecdotal evidence (it is, both), but simply calling out fallacies is less useful for people reading this than saying why they're bad.
Here comes the cherry on the cake:
Let's pretend for a moment that your claims weren't completely bollocks, and that you aren't totally scapegoating American media for what's a shitty phenomenon that would happen even without it. No, let's pretend that it's incontestable truth.
Even then, you still consistently failed to use this to back up your original claim, that boils down to a hypothetical "international English" being a threat towards Scots.
If anyone reading this wants to defend the claims that the muppet above is backing up, be my guest, and I'll be happy to reply you, as long as you have basic reading comprehension and aren't disingenuous (unlike the poster above). However, I'm not going to bother further with him.
You seem to have become rather upset. As you began by decrying the behavior of native English speakers online, I'm disappointed to see that you yourself are now resorting to insults. I'm going to disengage until you can discuss this matter calmly and rationally, at which point I'd be delighted to revisit the topic.