• AnIndefiniteArticle
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    -333 days ago

    It’s not a joke, it’s a criticism of nazi heritage during a time when nazi imagery is resurfacing.

    This is nazi imagery that never left the surface.

    I agree it’s not funny.

    • @Terces
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      223 days ago

      Nazi imagery? What? What the hell are you talking about?

      The name comes from the French spelling of Ariadne, a Greek mythical character.

      • AnIndefiniteArticle
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        -263 days ago

        Rocketry has an undeniably nazi past.

        Naming Europe’s largest rocket program since the nazis any variation of “Aryan” is nazi imagery.

          • @[email protected]
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            18
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            3 days ago

            If you’re an American and have no clue about European Languages or culture it makes sense I guess

          • AnIndefiniteArticle
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            -143 days ago

            The I and the Y serve the same phonetic function.

            Then they slapped on an “e” to make it feminine. Standard French grammar.

            It’s still racist even if it’s feminine.

            • Skua
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              113 days ago

              Here’s French wikipedia calling the mythological figure “Ariane” with no D https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariane_(mythologie)

              “Aryan” in French is “aryenne”, it has a different vowel

              France had plenty of pre-WWII rocket scientists, like:

              • Yves Le Prieur, who developed anti-balloon rockets in WWI
              • Robert Esnault-Pelterie, who pioneered the use of joystick controls and founded an award for advances in space travel
              • Louis Damblanc, who built the first ever multi-stage rocket

              What France did not have was a counterpart to Operation Paperclip like Britain and the Soviet Union did

              And lastly, the guy that picked the name was a devoted supporter of Charles de Gaulle

              This criticism does not hold up any scrutiny whatsoever

            • macniel
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              103 days ago

              No it really doesn’t.

              Aryan (/ˈɛəriən/)

              Vs

              Ariane (/ɑːriˈɑːnə/)

              How does the I and y serve the same phonetic function?

              And now it’s not just Nazi but racist as well? Get out of here.