Evan, Get yourself straight any way you can, the exclusion of Mexico from North America ensures that Anglophones, and perhaps the token Francophone (singular), will be preferentially selected every time ICANN attempts to meet a regional diversity goal. This leaves 50 million residents of the United States and Canada, only represented through a second European language. I pointed out the fact that the Greenland Home Rule government, while a dependency of the Danish State, is an Indigenous government of the Americas. This drew a confused response from Darlene Thompson who apparently confuses governments, like the one she works for, with immigrant non-European languages. The geographic region issue is about iso3166 states, not languages, and the exclusion of Mexico from "North America" is as irrational as putting Greenland or Quebec in "Europe". I pointed out the fact that migration has changed the largest indigenous language in the US from Dine (Navajo) to Nahuatl, Mixtex and Zapotec, approximating the unified Ojib-Crees in Canada as a group, and separating Indigenous migrants along the hyper-militarized US frontier is as absurd as Canada's refusal to abide by the Jay Treaty (1794), allowing free passage of Indians between the US and Canada. This drew the surprising 21st-century-Indians-speak-English response from John Levine, utterly missing the importance of language and cultural de-assimilation to assimilated Indians, and the reality that Indian migrants from Indian communities in Mexico retain locality in North America, due to the ease of first-language and shared values. I don't know what to do with mention-Indians-get-Hindi. I don't know what to do with mention-migration-get-English-only either. I do know that today Jefferson Keel, Chickasaw Nation, delivered the State of Indian Nations address, and today is a really lame ass day to subordinate Indian interests to non-Indian interests, for something as ephemeral as the ITU boogie man, or Anglo self-preference. I understand most of NARALO is Anglophone, and Anglophones have their issues with non-Anglophones, but where I grew up Spanish was as common as English and was Mexico until the middle of the 19th century. My pointing out that Indians are structurally overlooked by ICANN's North American centric structure hasn't changed that a wit in ten years. Mexican Indians are Indians. It doesn't do Indians in the Americas a wit of good to ignore the largest population of Indians in the Americas north of Panama, or ignore the largest population of Indians speaking Indian languages in the United States. Eric