• it/its

Kun ihmiskunta lopulta lakkaa olemasta, 200 vuoden jälkeen ilmakuvasta ei voi nähdä sen edes koskaan olleen olemassa. Tämä on lohdullista.



nex3
@nex3

do you think people in The Hague feel weird about their city becoming a byword for the International Criminal Court? like I bet a lot of people deserve to go The Hague not because of war crimes but because they would enjoy the *quick search* Indo festival or *checks wikitravel* the oldest forested area in the Netherlands, the Haagse Bos


0xabad1dea
@0xabad1dea

people in Den Haag mostly don’t think about that and get confused when others from abroad don’t realize that it is A Town where People Live. source: I live near the Hague and have gone there specifically to get bubble tea


mrhands
@mrhands

What's even more interesting about The Hague is that it's where the Dutch government lives. That's right, unlike almost every other country on Earth, our government is not seated in its capital! We even put the Prime Minister in a building lovingly called "The Little Tower."


0xabad1dea
@0xabad1dea

to repost something I said on mastodon a year ago:

Dutch person: the capital of the Netherlands is Amsterdam
American: so that’s where the government is?
Dutch: no
American: where the embassies are?
Dutch: no
American: where the king lives?
Dutch: no
American: then how is it the capital?
Dutch: I don’t understand the question

Dutch: well it’s big, like New York!
American: NEW YORK ISN’T EVEN THE CAPITAL OF NEW YORK


surasshu
@surasshu

semi-relatively, it has taken me a good long while of being out of the Netherlands to "forget" that gouda is a place and just accept it as a cheese only


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in reply to @nex3's post:

as someone who lives pretty near there (like about 30km; i've cycled there before): i don't think the people there really know about that usage that much. it's not a thing in Dutch, and while Dutch people tend to speak decent English, in my experience they're not all that aware of anything English-language outside of the mainstream; this is probably too niche and online for most people.

in Dutch the name of the city is a byword for 'national government' because that's where our parliament etc. is, so i imagine they're kind of used to it anyway.

the forest is nice but honestly dutch forests are all kind of unimpressive; even more so to someone from north america, i imagine. they're basically just parks. i haven't been to the indo festival but i imagine it's cool.

for nerds i would probably also recommend revelation space, a relatively old and well-organized dutch hackerspace. it's technically not within the city limits, but it might as well be. it's all one big conurbation anyway

this might be apocryphal but also the whole thing about how the US has a plan to storm the hague if a us solider is ever put on trial there; how does it feel for one’s specific city, not country, but city, to have a known invasion plan for it

tbh until minutes ago i thought the city was just called hague and 'the hague' was a shortening of 'the hague international criminal court' or something. putting the definite article in the name of your city is such a big swing it feels like this is what they always wanted

edit: i'm being informed about los angeles and las vegas and suddenly feeling very silly that i never thought about those names for more than a couple seconds

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