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I think Greg is speaking from cultural conditioning. There is a great deal of tortured and misshapen arguments and notions in the US. Starting from thinking that it's cool to use gallons instead of liters, miles instead of kilometers, and that everybody in the Universe speaks English (Star Trek). Same old argument, what's real? The truth is that a millennium starts on the first year (that's why it's written with a number one), not on "year zero," as there was no "year zero." The "Seventies" are not the seventh decade-- they're the eighth decade. The Nineteenth Century ended in December 1900, and the Twentieth Century in December 2000-- see the connection (19, 1900-- 20, 2000)? To say that 2000 is not as cool as 1999 is like thinking that it's OK to have strange aliens in Star Trek talking English like they grew up in Kansas. From the outside this looks really uncool. And I'm a good outsider, I can tell you that unanimously. | -----Original Message----- | From: G716 [mailto:g716@hotmail.com] | Sent: Wednesday 24 November 1999 2:36 PM | To: Loopers-Delight@annihilist.com | Subject: OT: begin of millenium. | | | > The 21st century begins January 1st 2001. | | I've always like this philosophy. Too bad I didn't know about | it until this | year, otherwise I would've enjoyed being in my 20's while I was | still 30! | It's 31, 41, 51, etc. that we all get to dread from this point forward. | | I love it! | Greg | | (yeah, yeah, I've heard all the arguments about starting at | "1". It's just | so boring and mundane. Who'll celebrate 2001 with as much excitement as | 2000? Just the Kubrick fans I suppose. And no one wants to hear a song | line like "Two throusand zero one party over oops out-a time. | Gonna party | like it's 2000.... ". It's the chronological equivalent to calling some | guitar bridges "tremelos".) | | |