• thesporkeffect@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    As always - if you’re saying a word is comparable to the n-word, and you are able to use your word in public as a non-black person, it’s not like the n-word

    • TheEntity@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Frankly that’s something I do not understand. Why this single specific word? We have dozens of terrible offensive words. Why this specific one is considered so bad we cannot even talk about it directly, even when merely discussing it? I would think discussing it and not directing it at someone would be pretty reasonable. As with every single other word.

        • TheEntity@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Probably no, not in this specific form, that being said I don’t want to compare one tragedy to another. There are lots of disgusting parts of the human history, and that’s certainly one of them.

          • JoeBigelow@lemmy.ca
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            1 month ago

            The only equivalent I can think of starts with k and is a slur for Jewish people, and it’s much less commonly heard.

            • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Ironically enough, that word was coined by Jewish people who had been in the US for generations to describe newly-arrived Jews from Eastern Europe. Still offensive but somewhat different from the n-word.

              • Nutteman@lemmy.world
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                1 month ago

                We killed them and displaced the rest so damn fast that we forgot all the major slurs for them

              • Juniper (she/her) 🫐@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 month ago

                “Savages”, "Redskins”, “Squaw”, and so on.

                Some news headlines even refer to the second one as “the R-word”:

                CNN: The terrible R-word that football needed to lose

                Politico: The R-Word Is Even Worse Than You Think

                These are extremely harmful words with hundreds of years of genocide behind them. I imagine the only reason they aren’t censored like the N-word is is because Native Americans make up a proportionally smaller population due to the effectiveness of the genocide, and because the reservation system is in contrast to racial integration as with American black people in so much as it limits interactions between them and racist whites who would overuse a dehumanizing phrase to the same extent.

        • orphiebaby@lemm.ee
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          23 days ago

          And things even worse than slavery towards them. And that a lot of racists who would likely shoot black people still use that word on purpose. And that there’s still a lot of those people.

      • Klear@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        Non-American here. I also didn’t get this, thinking it’s just puritanical bullshit. Some Americans seem obsessed with auto-censorship.

        Anyway, I finally understood while watching Django Unchained. It’s an extremely dehumanising word, meant to separate people (who have rights) from things which do not. It’s a tool to be able to do this distinction and then do unspeakable evil to specific people because they don’t count as people and so it’s alright.

        Now remember that slavery was ended* only relatively recently, segregation was a thing during the lifetimes of many people and this mindset of black people not being even human is still prevalent…

        The word is meant to be always used in hostility and it’s still being used like that today. That’s why you want to steer clear of it.

        • BluJay320
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          1 month ago

          I think a lot of the conflict around the word is centered on the fact that many black people use it (obviously without the hard r) in casual reference to other people, often even people that aren’t black. It’s essentially become equivalent to “dude” or “brother”. So some people don’t see how it’s wrong to use it in that context even if you aren’t black.

          I’m not saying I agree, mind you. I’m just making an observation

        • loudwhisper@infosec.pub
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          1 month ago

          Django Unchained

          Isn’t it ironic that a movie with so many uses of that word helped you understand that word better?

          To me it seems a very good reason to believe that people shouldn’t be afraid of the syntax of the word, but definitely oppose the use when the semantic is the despicable one.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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          1 month ago

          In my opinion, the intellectually disabled too. Unfortunately, many people make all kinds of excuses why that word, which has been used to bully the disabled for decades, is an acceptable one.

    • Otkaz@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Wasn’t really all that long ago when non-black people very commonly used that word in public and probably still so in certain communities. Having said that, obese is a medical term and I don’t think it compares in anyway to the n-word.

      • GiantChickDicks@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        Absolutely. I moved from urban Southeastern Wisconsin to the upper peninsula of Michigan in a rural area. I love visiting that spot, and I got a job offer five years ago while on vacation. I snatched the opportunity to move to my favorite place and uprooted my life in under two months. I didn’t last two years before coming back.

        The amount of times I got into verbal altercations with strangers and acquaintances over their use of racial slurs, most often the N-word, made me become a homebody. I was a bartender, though, so you can’t exactly hide.

        That’s not to say I haven’t heard it in public all throughout Wisconsin. The difference was how comfortable people felt using these words and sharing openly racist views and stories like they were bragging about it. It felt like an area where people breathed a sigh of relief and took their hoods off. I couldn’t stomach staying in a place where certain friends of mine couldn’t comfortably visit.

        Still, all that is nothing compared to what I saw and heard living in Tennessee. It’s sad and frightening how many communities are like this.

        • MutilationWave@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Definitely did not. I grew up in West Virginia and idiot rednecks used it before and after the OJ trial. Decent people did not before or after.

          I mean like way before they did, but they weren’t decent then.

    • TheV2@programming.dev
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      1 month ago

      She, as an obese person herself, proposed that “obese” is equivalent to the n-word. She didn’t censor her word the same way a black person doesn’t have to censor the n-word. That’s not a contradiction. It would be, if she wasn’t obese.

      Not that I care about the actual point, just wanted to talk about the logic. My bad, if my assumption that she is obese, is wrong.