- Whether some parts of the Caribbean identify more with North America than South America - The status of protectorates that "belong" to one country but are located in a different region (ie, do we 'trade' Guam for St. Pierre?)
Puerto Rico was the only significant question I was aware of, since its population is greater than that of all the other debatable islands combined. France will never ever consent to putting DOM and TOM anywhere but Europe, so most of these questions are moot. I don't think we care whether the anglophone Caribbean is in NA or LAC, it's fine either way. (I have a mild preference for NA, since that increases the chance that we can take junkets there.) With respect to Eric's note, it is my impression that in the 21st century, the members of the linguistic groups he mentioned are pretty competent in English, French, or Spanish, so while it may be an interesting political point, it's hard to see how it presents any impediment to ICANN getting its work done. Perhaps Darlene can say whether her neighbors find it a problem that we only do English and French, not Inuktitut. Regards, John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly