Ron,

Your lengthy posting reinforces my point.  There are so many assumptions in 
your message that I feel discouraged as i am writing these few lines.  It 
suffice to say that your ideas affirms a single view of what constitutes to be 
an Argentine and a tango dancer. Such ideas seems to come from an outsider's 
view and reflect a position of dominance (it does not matter if you have been 
to Argentine a 1,000 times..  your ideas are still filtered by your 
experiences). 


The most dangerous part of your behavior is that you really do seems convinced 
that your construct of what count as being Argentine and a dancer is the 
"right" one and can be so simply reduced to a few lines in an email.

Amaury

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tango Society of 
Central Illinois
Sent: Tuesday, December 09, 2008 3:02 PM
To: tango-l
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Tango the Religion

On Mon, Dec 8, 2008 at 4:59 PM, David Thorn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I too have puzzled over this religious fervor.  If one looks for example at 
> Lindy Hop, another
> street dance with no ruling body, it passed through the "style wars" (Savoy 
> vs. Hollywood vs. West
> Coast Swing vs. ..) in a matter of several years.


A 'milonga' is a place or event where tango social dancing occurs. The
origin of the tango and the milonga are in Buenos Aires. The terms
derive their meaning from the culture of their origin. Within the



      
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