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"Don't call me colored.

Autumnleaf

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Do I look like a (blankin) rainbow to you? I am black. If you have to address me by my race call me black. Don't call me African American either. I was not born in Africa. I am not African."

When I was in the Marines a White guy from West Virginia made the mistake of calling our Black room mate colored. They had a rough start but they became good friends once the colored situation was laid to rest.
 

Autumnleaf

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How do you even get away with these threads? I can't say "boo" without having my threads/posts edited or deleted, and you say the most outlandish stuff...:confused:

I don't try to be outlandish. Its just stuff I've lived through. That said, I'll probably never be a moderator here. But I bet I have many more minority friends than most of the people who complain about me.

I don't think I've ever read any of your stuff that seemed inappropriate.
 
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jayem

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Is your buddy also offended by the NAACP?

I grew up in the south in the 50s, and it was much more polite to refer to blacks as "colored people" than to use a lot of other terms. But times change.

If the term "black" is ok, why is Negro not used anymore? That was the accepted, formal word back in the day. It just means "black" in Spanish. I guess because it was associated with an offensive vulagrism.
 
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Autumnleaf

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Is your buddy also offended by the NAACP?

I grew up in the south in the 50s, and it was much more polite to refer to blacks as "colored people" than to use a lot of other terms. But times change.

If the term "black" is ok, why is Negro not used anymore? That was the accepted, formal word back in the day. It just means "black" in Spanish. I guess because it was associated with an offensive vulagrism.

I don't know. We were all around 18 years old back in 1994. It was interesting watching these two guys come to an understanding. There was not animosity, just lots of misunderstandings.
 
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Autumnleaf

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I find the number and vairety of minorities you are suddenly aquanted with to be staggering

Between my time in the Marines, working at a low wage restaruant job, and working in the inner city of where I live for several years. Its pretty high.

Of course I was raised in white suburbia. I guess I faced my share of growing pains in this area.
 
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Etsi

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Funny you brought this thread up. As a child, many of the children I was around were either "white" or asian/pacific islander. We moved back to the states and the town was half white and half black. I thought white people were mean (even though people saw me as white, I identify as a TCK) and I didn't know how to refer to my black friends' colouring at first. So I went through the same line up of terms and received pretty much the same feed back from my best friend "I'm black, not negro, not coloured, not African American...black, honey, just black". She was very kind and understand that I was stumbling around and couldn't hardly find my own two feet from the culture shock I was going through.
 
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DaisyDay

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This guy was real life hillbilly. Can I say that word here without having to look over my shoulder?
Probably; it doesn't seem to carry such pejorative connotations as it once did.

It's also considered ok by people who really ought to know better to refer to people as "trailer trash" (or any kind of trash, for that matter). I don't get that.
 
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JackKerouac

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I dunno...I live in Kentucky and I feel mortally wounded by his use of that word. It has created in me a bitterness and resentment that is already gnawing at my stomach to the point where I can taste the bile in my mouth.

Anybody got a Tic-Tac?
 
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Beanieboy

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Do I look like a (blankin) rainbow to you? I am black. If you have to address me by my race call me black. Don't call me African American either. I was not born in Africa. I am not African."

When I was in the Marines a White guy from West Virginia made the mistake of calling our Black room mate colored. They had a rough start but they became good friends once the colored situation was laid to rest.

Ok. You are black.
Other people prefer the title "African-American" similar to the way that white people who are American will say, "I'm Irish", when they mean that they are American, from Irish decent, or Irish-American. How dare they run to the streets, proclaiming, "Kiss me! I'm Irish!" They are American.

Yet, I don't have a problem with that.

Other black people prefer to be called, "A person of color."

I have no problem with the term you wish to use, and I will use whichever term you choose out of respect.

I would want others to do the same for me, and so, I do unto others...

However, "Colored boy" is something I would expect from someone from the South that still flies the Confederate flag and uses the term to be derogatory. The last time I heard someone use it was when All in the Family was on.
 
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Mling

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In any minority--racial, religious, sexual, health-related, or whatever--you're going to find people who like to play the "gotcha," game. AKA, the "guess what I'm thinking," game.

Basically, they identify themselves as one thing--and that could be *anything* which may or may not be obvious when you look at them, or from the bits of information they reveal about themselves--and then, if you happen to guess the wrong thing about them, they jump all over you and get really offended, and generally prey on people's discomfort at offending one of 'them.'

It's a ridiculous and predatory game of emotional manipulation, and it isn't worth any respect.

Sure, people can have their own unique identities, or certain words might just rub them the wrong way--that's totally fine. But the compassionate and reasonable response, when that becomes an issue, is "Oh, I really don't like being called X. If you need to identify me, could you use Y instead? Thanks."

Acting like everybody should read your mind and already know your preferences is just childish.

(PS: I have my own non-obvious preferences for identity. I hate the word "lesbian." I don't like the sound of it and I don't like the stereotypical image I get in my head when I hear it. If somebody calls me a lesbian, though, I either don't say anything, or say, "I don't really click with that word--I prefer 'gay.' ")
 
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Etsi

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However, "Colored boy" is something I would expect from someone from the South that still flies the Confederate flag and uses the term to be derogatory.
Very offensive. I found more racism in the midwest (and sometimes north) than I ever did in the south. I was born in the south and still have family there, tyvm.
 
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plmarquette

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you can call me ray
or you can call me jay
or you can call me r-jay
or you can call me r-j-johnson jr.
but ya doesn't have to call me johnson....

how about mister smith, jones, etc....

how about we leave ethnicity out of it altogether....

how about...many folks don't know any better, and are striving to say "correct" thing

how about....maybe we all need to grow up and just get over ourselves...
 
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