"mixed"
I have a friend who finds that very offensive. she says that you refer to dogs as "mixed". people are "bi-racial". *shrug* once again it comes down to what offends some people doesn't affect others.
Spike ,'Sleeper'
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls and The Inside), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
"mixed"
I have a friend who finds that very offensive. she says that you refer to dogs as "mixed". people are "bi-racial". *shrug* once again it comes down to what offends some people doesn't affect others.
Is it a mixed-breed thing to her, then?
It was suggested to me once that the word "race" should be replaced with "breed."
Accuracy aside, the idea of telling a bunch of people who'd been bred like livestock that they should start identifying with the word breed.
Good luck not getting beat up.
i'm not really sure. i would assume so though.
Good luck not getting beat up.
Amen to that. At least "race," for all its negative connotations, is generally only applied to human beings as opposed to pets and livestock.
You are NOT being oversensitive, dammit.
Thanks, TB. I probably should have mentioned they stopped, but they had no comprehension of why it was a big deal to me.
They aren't your friends. Real friends would know your boundaries. You are not being oversensitive when you ask them to stop. I have this problem with the n-word. Some people have attempted to take it back, and use it often. I don't like it, even when said by other black people, and I don't like being referred to by it, even when I _know_ that the person doing it is doing so in a "positive" manner.
They no longer are. Time, distance and a certain lack of understanding split us apart. My closest friends understood immediately.
Vortex is me, except replace the n-word with any of the Italo-centric ones mentioned above. I don't care that it's your right to use them because you're Italian-American, it's still degrading. No matter how much anyone's trying to "take it back."
When it comes down to checking a box, I almost always choose other and write in "Mediterranean/Italian." Though I am part English/Irish, the Italian half doesn't fit "Caucasian." There are a number of illnesses and genetic disorders that people of Mediterranean descent are prone to get/have that other ethnicities aren't.
This kind of stuff makes me see red: [link] I found this after a bit of googling. It's not humorous in the least. It's one thing to poke fun and comment on the human condition; it's another to do something like this. Good-natured, my ample ass.
I say "bi-racial" for Asian/Caucasian. If I had kids, they would be bi-racial. It's an interesting thing, that drop of white blood. I'm as Japanese as Japenese gets, down the geneology line, so far as we know (although, really, where is that reddish hair coming from, then?) but people always assume that I'm part, because of the whole midwestern cornfed accent and attitudes. Four generations, people, what do you expect?
It's odd that it is treated so differently from black/white, though.
Hey, Kat, do you consider haoli/haole to be a derogatory term?
I'm as Japanese as Japenese gets, down the geneology line, so far as we know (although, really, where is that reddish hair coming from, then?)
The gene that determines redness of hair (MC1R) is separate from the genes that determine darkness of hair. Japanese and Korean people have a higher prevalence of the red version of MCR1 than most other Asian populations, although is still present in only a small percentage of the population, just as in Europeans. Because Japanese and Korean people have the dark versions of the other hair color genes the redness isn't as obvious as it is in northern Europeans. But it's always been there.
What's the normally occurring incidence of that gene in black folk, Rick?
Hey, Kat, do you consider haoli/haole to be a derogatory term?
It was meant to be derogatory, I think. I mean haole equates, in the usage I've been exposed to most often, as touristy, ignorant, not understanding.
There's also something interestingly matter-of-fact about the Hawaiian need to categorize people's backgrounds. I can remember introductions to people sounding like, "Oh, Heidi? She's hapa: German, Mexican, Japanese."
That's fascinating, Rick.