And thanks for backing up my point to JuanP that if the Falkland Islanders want to stay British, and continue to be Falklander Islanders, they have decided where they want to live.
Maybe they haven't. Those people who aren't clear in their mind whether it's more important for them to live in a territory controlled by Great Britain, or in the Falkland Islands, maybe haven't made a decision yet on where they want to live. It depends on whether the Falkland Islands continue to be controlled by Great Britain or not. The same as it happened with Brexit: some people living in the UK had to decide whether they would rather live in the EU or the UK, when before, they didn't have to make that decision because they could be living in both.
Not sure that's xenphobia as much as two different species of humans altogether, rather than run of the mill Western European/African bias, or North American/Mexican/Central/South American bias.
I'd love to know how you decide that a difference between two groups of humans amounts to a different species.
Funny how no one seems to figure this out BEFORE honestly examining their chances in advance, and just skipping all the death and destruction and surrendering early.
I think the essential problem is that people often don't know how they will react to a situation they have never encountered before personally. They may try their best to understand by paying attention to other people that were in similar situations, but imagining something is a different thing from living it first-hand. When I've read about the subject, it's clear that in countries before a war most people have a completely incorrect idea of what war could be like.
Well, I'm guessing that a marketing campaign for foreigners to pretend the name of the Falkland Islands aren't what the occupants and national identity call it is better than nothing?
My choice of name doesn't have to do with the Argentinian preference, it has to do with my personal preference. I'm a native Spanish speaker, and that's why I have a preference for English speakers to be aware of the Spanish-speaking world angle.