Diplomatic way to say "Excuse me, may I speak to a White person?"

How is it the fault of anyone else? If someone works in a job where they have to interact with the public, then they should be able to communicate effectively with that public.

I never know if people 'round here don’t get jokes, or if I’m the one who’s missing the joke.

Of course not! I would be going to another tutor and learning whatever language it is that *she *speaks!

Some of both. It happens to us all :slight_smile:

That would include you in a foreign country, ja?:slight_smile:

All I’m saying (“Is give peace chance” - sorry, things like that just pop into my head sometimes!) we need to put ourselves in their place and realize they are at least trying, and how much do you think they make as compared to our minimum wage?

And where did I write it was the “fault of anyone else”?

It just is that’s all, and even though it aggravates the shit out of us, we have to deal with it!

Q

I’m not sure what the joke is meant to be. Something that’s said in jest that’s racist isn’t less racist because its said in jest. Something that’s poorly phrased and racist isn’t less racist because it’s poorly phrased.

It wasn’t meant to be racist!

However it may have been understood or misunderstood.

End of story.

Q

I have no idea what you’re talking about. Someone said this:

And I responded with this:

Which was a joke. What are you claiming is racist here? What Cat said, or my response?

You’re right, it’s not their fault. It the fault of the cheap-ass company that chose to hire them.

But the end effect is the same: We consumers end up having to deal with them (and them with us). Having to call support means something is already wrong; we shouldn’t have to deal with incomprehensible accents on top of it all.

It has nothing to do with their Third World status (or lack thereof) or their race. It is their inability to do their job (communicate with customers to assist them) that pisses me off.

Hot Asian chicks. Who cares what language they speak! Giggity!

Well yes, of course! I would never get angry at a person if I couldn’t understand them. I would get frustrated and try to speak to someone else. I just resent the idea that if I can’t understand someone then it’s somehow based on racism or something that I am at fault for. (Please note, I am *not *saying that’s anything you’ve said, but I’ve gotten that impression from some other posts in this thread, and at other times when the topic is brought up.)

I found when doing a marathon series of problems with Dish Network that the South Asians didn’t understand my idiom and accent. I could understand them perfectly. I came from the Northwest corner of the Southeast.

I work in Sydney and had to call a company in Chicago on business. After around ten minutes on the phone I was still completely unable to penetrate the accent and asked to speak to someone else.

Who had an equally impenetrable accent, only with more resonance in their voice so it was even harder to understand.

My request to speak to someone with a different accent - I believe I used the phrase “do you have any Canadians there?” - was received poorly.

What did they sound like?

While working for (then USAir) in the early 90’s, I was based in Frankfurt, Germany as a customer service rep.

Part of my job was to help our German customers on the phone, being that I am bilingual.

Folks, do y’all realize how many different dialects (the worst one for me to understand was “Platt” (sp?)-that accent spoken near Düsseldorf/Mönchengladbach - and of course, Bavarian, my own native accent!:)) there are in Germany?

When we moved to the US, I kept the language of course, but resorted to speaking “Hoch-Deutsch” (literally translated as “high-German”, or that type of German spoken with no accent.)

My point?

The shoe was definetely on the other foot! It was MY job to understand them, not the other way around!

Thanks

Q

PS: And to our German friends: If I got any of the above wrong, feel free to correct me!:slight_smile:

A thick, urban-American accent. I was getting maybe a word in five.

For the record, I also had to watch the Wire with the subtitles on.

Well, it’s been 18 hours, looks like your little tell-on-you fell on deaf ears.

What are you? Twelve? Thirteen?

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You’ve had your fun. That’s enough.

Closed.

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