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For shame Brillo. |
Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.
I would like to think as this is a festive celebration it could be seen thus. |
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It's like 'I'm fighting for them, for me." Yet they don't realise this; it's an escape mechanism. |
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I would also say that if it is the case, and people's heavy emotional involvement with "offense" is in part down to projection, then surely that must apply both ways? There are people who get very emotionally wound up and certainly very angry on the flips idea of this, too... I guess in this case you could say "outraged on behalf of the festival organisers". It's sort of the same thing; the specifics of the case don't involve them in any way at all unless they are actually from that area or involved, and yet some people are incensed at the idea of it being "affected by PC" etc... So, might there be a similar element of projection there? People aren't actually annoyed by criticisms of the Zulu carnival, they might be projecting their own feelings of having their own expression shut down or invalidated, and be projecting it onto an event / event organisers that have nothing to do with them... Making it exactly the same "fighting for them for me" escape mechanism? |
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1) He initially didn't have an issue but hadn't given it much thought, and when certain aspects were pointed out he became genuinely less comfortable with them. 2) He didn't have a personal issue with it even after hearing other people's concerns, but the fact that other people WERE concerned was enough to make him change his statement for PR reasons. Either way I honestly am not convinced that the opinion of any one person, Zulu or not, can be considered gospel in any situation. It's sort of meaningless whether he finds it OK or not... He's one person, and the idea that he speaks for an entire group just by virtue of being a member of that group is quite flawed. It doesn't indicate anything at all about the opinions of other members of that group. I mean look at this forum / even this thread. There are a number of us Pale Stale Males here but it would obviously be nonsense to try to assume that all share the same opinion, when there are as many variations as members. Of course, I'm not calling you a pale stale male Cherie. A pale well-febrezed female. :hee: |
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Yeah I agree we do seem very hung up in this guy and his changeable opinion, Of course he doesn't speak for all Zulus anymore than I speak on behalf of the Irish nation, it's just a snapshot of opinion that the paper has run with to make a story, and it has served us very well here on TiBB, it's kept us wittering away for pages :laugh: |
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as far as i can gather the odd person thinking you are being racist is not illegal or indeed any reason not to do something
in fact their opinion is not really any of my business? |
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same way I would not cut in a queue in a shop etc |
Its like the word "p aki"
when I was young that was the name of the local shop "the p akis " or "the p aki* shop" but over the years the word "p aki" was used in a negative way and became associated with bad feeling (and to lump all asians as one) so became a word not to be used Conversely the word "chinky" was and is to a degree used for a Chinese takeaway and now people are like "ooh you cant say that but it was never used in a negative way due probably to numbers and visibility of Chinese people (in Scotland in this example) I think people just link the 2 words together "p aki, chinky" but in my mind they have very different etymology So in reference to the question that word to describe a Pakistani became unacceptable due to just that, the majority decrying it so and interestingly the swear filter agrees with me :hee: |
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The suggestion that we are human echo chambers or only interested in what happens in our own circle of trust is a very insular , modern and in the main media driven concept. I would go as far as to say if you can't express a full range of human emotions for the plight of suffering strangers, then that in itself is indicative of some defective thought and reasoning process. Do you consider that only those regard themselves marginalised have a reason to care, and if not they don't? |
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All I got from your post is 'Oh why can't things be like they were in the 70s and casual racism be acceptable? Bring back Bernard Manning!!' |
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Which is something I have some sympathy for, having lived in England for a while. Scotch whiskey? Fine. Scotch pie? No problem. Though I will argue that this is simply "a pie" with no prefix needed :laugh:. But when people called ME "Scotch" or "The Scotch guy" it did make me genuinely pissed off :umm2:. So it's not the word, it's the usage. |
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It is all about the usage rather than the words themselves. That's the nature of language and particularly English. Its not what you say, it's how you say it. That's why I think it's wrong to ban words outright. It diminishes our means to express ourselves. There has to be a more refined method of determining whats right and whats wrong, because those wishing to be derogatory will continually latch on to new terms to get their point across, they wont be stopped, and we just end up with fewer words in our vocabulary.
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I don't recognise that one is any more or less offensive than the other personally. |
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