IMHO, this was a term that was all but dead in mainstream society until certain members of the black community brought it back to life by injecting it into current media and making it part of their culture all over again…
I’ve said for years that this is one of the mysteries I just can not fathom :dubious:
I just love this little feud we have between the two of us. You take every opportunity to post a snide and inflammatory response to everything that I write (in this case, an attempt to add a little levity to the thread.) I’ve been posting here for more than four years, and not once has there been an instance of another poster deliberately feuding with me the way you have been doing. I think it was some debate over the Second Amendment where we first clashed, and ever since, you’ve just been kicking me whenever possible. Oh, I just love it! I love every moment of it! I hope you stick around here and never leave. Never, ever leave.
I sincerely appreciate any atempts at levity around here. Of course, one might consider that in the middle of an emotional topic, discussing just how emotional that topic is, some attempts would work better than others. That is not a Delaney work I’ve gotten to, yet, so I am not sure of the exact context, but you might want to refrain from similar submissions, here, in the future.
You’re absolutely right about that. The infamous Stormfront message board, where I was gang-banged in their special forum for complainers and non-bigots, forbids the use of racial pejoratives, like “nigger”. It also forbids the discussion of religion, since that can foster division. But the code words are there. They’re subtle now. Like, “Holy cow, our president is a black”. A black? That’s like saying he is a tall. Or she is a short. The hell.
I remember there were people who thought there would be subtle racial attacks against Obama during the campaign. I predicted there would not be any. Because they were unnecessary. The people who wouldn’t vote for a black candidate didn’t need to a rumor campaign to find out that Obama was black. (I assuming the handful of blind racists in the country got the word at some point.) So Obama’s opponents could afford to take the high road and never mention race. They didn’t have to pander to the racist vote because they had it in the bag.
That isn’t quite true. Many young white kids use the word in the same fashion as blacks do, eg “You my nigga!”. It isn’t meant opprobriously, it’s addressed to whites and blacks alike and it has nothing to do with racism.
The name-caller would be criticized a great deal, but no, I don’t think people would riot.
People got pretty worked up over that verdict in the first place, so this may not be a good comparison to Random White Person using the word “on national TV.”
No, but he used racial insults, and that’s the closest example I could think of.
Good thing I cited other examples, then.
I’ve got doubts about your ability to assess racism in others, since you’ve made several ridiculous assertions in here already, but you’re discarding Sharpton and Jackson only because they disprove your argument. You said black people don’t care about calling each other “nigger,” I provided cites showing that’s not so. You also said if one black person called another black person “nigger” on TV, he wouldn’t be criticized. Again, my cites show that isn’t true.
Because nobody responded to my first post, I’ll reiterate; I’m not buying that
as mentioned by the OP. Do other people have experiences with offense and anger over using the word when quoting someone, discussing history, or whatever? Is this just a case of an oversensitive politician, like the guy who resigned for saying niggardly?
Really? So Spike Lee goes on Larry King and calls Obama a nigger – everyone’s cool with it?
And please, I’m sure Quentin Tarantino managed to slip a few n-words into his latest, even if it is set during WWII. Let us know when the rioting starts.
One person claimed to reporters that Sharpton had said those words. The reporters themselves did not overhear Sharpton say it. Frankly, I don’t think it sounds like Sharpton at all.
How can you possibly know what all of their motives are? Someone needs to teach all of them a little bit about decorum.
It’s not just African-Americans who find the word offensive.
A young black friend of mine objected to use of the word niggardly. She knew that it had a different word origin, but she felt that people used it to taunt blacks all the same. So out of respect for her, I refrained from using it.
I’ve decided that that was a mistake on my part. Hating the concept is one thing. Finding the symbol of the concept offensive is another – and one that I agree with in this case. But resenting another symbol of something else because it is a look-alike and suspecting people’s motives in using it is really stretching things.
I don’t think it’s a stretch at all. We have people on this very board who said they would start going out of their way to use “niggardly” when that whole flapped happened. If someone dropped the word in casual conversation around me, I’m not going to lie: I’d be temped to raise an eyebrow too. When 99% of other everyone else would choose the word “cheap” or “stingy”, you do have to question why 1% would choose to communicate with an outdated term that rightly or wrongly has a bad reputation.
It’d be the same thing as if someone dropped the word “faggot” in casual conversation, when it would have been far more sensible and natural to say “a bunch of sticks”.
It reminds me of some debate we were having on the Dope and someone said something like, “Blacks have made it so we can’t say niggardly eleventyone!!11!” and someone else was all, “:dubious:” and the first poster said, “Well, would you go to a black neighborhood as a white person and drop the word niggardly?” And I think a lot of people’s response was that if you went up to a black person randomly and used that word, it would be kind of obvious you were baiting them or doing it to make some point. I guess it’s not really a word I’d think to use because “cheap” or “tight with the pocket strings” comes to mind way sooner than a word that I rarely hear used.
Spike Lee could walk up and down Penn Avenue with a obama is a nigger billboard strapped to his back and nothing would happen, but if a white man did it he would be shot.
I’m sure Tarantino will use it. And blacks will choose not to be offended by it, because they’re GREAT at choosing those times, but if Tarantino walked up and down Detroit screaming- niggers niggers everywhere he wouldnt last very long would he?