HumanCockroach wrote:Are you serious. I notice you went ahead and SKIPPED what I we referring to ( the actual you know... POST about claims I never made).
As for the acting like a child. You certainly backed that up, didn't you? Bravo.
HumanCockroach wrote:The "child" statement was in regards to name calling, nothing more. I thought that was understood, was it not somehow?
I don't care if they change the Damn thing. I just differ on whether or not it can be viewed as offensive. I agree that it is indeed a slur, but don't feel it's a "big deal". I just differ in the idea that even if a small percentage of people are offended by a slur, than maybe that slur shouldn't be slapped on shirts, hats and paraphernalia as well as promoted and defended.
burrrton wrote:Stumbled across this reading the news this morning and thought it worth bumping an old thread for:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/ne ... story.html
I won't call it dispositive, but it backs up earlier polling (poll?) so is an interesting data point to consider.
The money quote:
“The big picture is that [the poll’s finding] is totally opposite from my experience since the 1960s of where native peoples are today. And I know that from having a huge extended family in Oklahoma, in Nevada, in various states and across tribal lines. I know it from working with people who evaluate this kind of thing in their home communities.”
In other words, she feels her anecdotes trump the data, however valid. Surprise!
If only 9% of NA's feel that the term Redskins is offensive, what would you guess the percentage of those that feel the term Missionaries is offensive?
This is political correctness run amok.
burrrton wrote:Yep. But it's the "men are fine in the ladies rooms" thing broke the back of this camel, I'm afraid. Overestimating your hand isn't limited to the far left nuts, but this one's on them, I'm afraid.
I'm with the right wing nuts on nicknames and with the bed wetting liberals on unisex restrooms.
I don't line up behind an issue simply because the position is considered to be liberal or conservative. Each issue stands on it's own merits. Not that I'm accusing you of doing the opposite.
Children are being bullied by the NFL?
burrrton wrote:Not sure why I have to keep repeating this: the push is for boys and men to be able to use the girls' and women's bathrooms, locker rooms, and any other 'sex specific' facility. They want to force you to go along with the delusion that merely *saying* you're a woman actually makes you a woman, chromosomes and genitalia be damned.
I know you're not accusing me, but I don't line up lock-step with either side, either. I think this is just a case where you're not actually familiar with what's being argued, by which I mean no offense, only that you and Bob are both arguing positions ("I don't mind pooping in front of people, but showers are different", "unisex bathrooms are fine with me", etc) no one is taking.
burrrton wrote:No (children aren't being bullied by the NFL), but "think of the children" is what you retreat to when you're running out of arguments.
HumanCockroach wrote:Well the great news is based on a completely unverifiable pool done by a newspaper only between 540,000+ are offended by the name ( only 10%) of course that is only the Native Americans that are verified, could be more.
One by
But hey, what's half a million people?
HumanCockroach wrote:LOL a higher percentage per your guys poll find the name offensive than numerous other demographics that have protection against the use of slurs but it isn't enough of an amount to do away with the name of a football team? OK. Got it.
HumanCockroach wrote:LOL a higher percentage per your guys poll find the name offensive than numerous other demographics that have protection against the use of slurs but it isn't enough of an amount to do away with the name of a football team? OK. Got it.
HumanCockroach wrote:Good Lord RD there is more demographics than simply black people. I'm not really interested in hand feeding you all of them. Start with homosexuals and work from there....
burrrton wrote:What RD said is a good point to consider, too: you couldn't get 90% of respondents in this pampered country to agree freaking *communism* should be viewed negatively- why is this poll result not welcomed as something demonstrating we can move on to worrying about actual problems instead of dwelling on these scab-picking issues that don't matter an iota?
Enough people find it offensive, so change it and move on.
Enough people find it offensive, so change it and move on.
burrrton wrote:Is that easier than going with "Most people *don't* find it offensive, so get over it and move on"?
c_hawkbob wrote:Option one will put an end to it, option two will keep it an issue forever.
c_hawkbob wrote:Option one would put an end to it....
You're attempting to draw a parallel that doesn't exist.
HumanCockroach wrote:Again who exactly was complaining about missionaries or pioneers? Based on your link, they decided to change their name of their own accord. You're attempting to draw a parallel that doesn't exist.
It's a different situation, but it's the same attitude that led to both efforts: finding offense (or "inappropriateness") in virtually everything
HumanCockroach wrote:In what way? In one instance you have a university polling it's own alumni, students and faculty on the other side you have a team with a name that is a racial slur ( whether you want to agree with it or not). The two situations are completely different and certainly not a parallel. Schools and teams change their names for various reasons, whether it be because it's a crappy mascot like the Missionary's or a mascot that the owner feels doesn't sell enough paraphernalia, or one that they feel promotes violence ( Bullets) or simply a team that has moved.
All name changes don't occur because of the political correctness you are attempting to attribute this to.
Honestly, it seems to me this has a hell of a lot more to do with people adamantly opposed to a politically correct argumen than any type of actual belief that the name Redskins isn't a racial slur. Hence the "line drawn" comment earlier.
A term that has been used as a slur, whether it "started" out that way or not, shouldn't be marketed and lauded. It has nothing to do with political correctness, it has to do with common decency.
Just like I would say the same about the Salem Fags ( a cigarette). It is something that has been used to negatively used to describe a demographic of American citizens, and doesn't belong being slapped on hats, jerseys and banners. It really isn't that difficult to grasp.
on the other side you have a team with a name that is a racial slur ( whether you want to agree with it or not).
The two situations are completely different and certainly not a parallel.
It really isn't that difficult to grasp.
“If even a couple people feel it’s offensive, then I think the name should be changed,” he said.
For those of you that believe it's OK to use a term that some feel is offensive, if you were on a team or at a party where some of the people (who the term is directed at) felt what you were saying was offensive, and others didn't, would you still use the term?
Just curious as I don't understand this desire to continue to insult someone - when alternatives are so easily found.
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