smudge
Up the Albion!
Got a French guy here who accused me of racism. Mind you, I did call him a cheese eating surrender monkey.
Unless you're a f@cking rainbow why would you want to be called coloured? It's not middle class guilt (I grew up in Whitehawk) it's black people's preference. I suspect if they went around calling us pinkys we would soon pipe up. As for the comment about John Barns, people saying he should play for Jamaica were probably intending to be racists, those saying the same about Sterling a probably doing so from a more enlightened perspective. Its really not that difficult to respect others and their wishes is it
I have chosen to move to Australia Bushy. Who am I allowed to support, I wouldn't want to be having a negative effect on social cohesion.
What about my children, who should they be supporting, Australia or England?
Are they allowed to support Brighton?
This is a middle class guilt minefield!!!!
i would like you to see where i am coming from here,there is mixed language all over the place about racism and it seems to me all it is doing is making an important issue pathetic playground politics concerning who dishes out or plays out the most racist or i am offended cards.
If the term coloured is now offensive(and i genuinlly didnt know that, i never got the memo) why is the foremost black civil rights group in the USA The NAACP,( the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) still permitted to exist in that name
I dont follow speach codes, if someone gets upset its their problem not mine.
you can always offend the professional offendees. iirc the big bruha over Sachsgate was after a repeat airing. someone had written about it in a newpaper and upon the repeat hundreds of compalints were made, versus none for the original. though i maybe confusing with another incident, apparently its not uncommon pattern.
Thanks for allowing me to have my say. Is that video shot outside the new Waitrose by your station?
I do have some sympathy for Mr Cumberbatch, especially as I was "guilty" of using exactly the same term a few years ago. I was in a dance class, used the word coloured in all innocence, and was genuinely shocked by the response of a black woman who made it clear that she did not find the term acceptable. For the record, I was born in 1968 and had no idea that the term was found offensive by some.
As the article seems to suggest, I guess my real crime is not having a number of close black friends (who would have put me right long before I WAS put right). Oh well; we live and learn.
I think you're expressing your own fears there rather than his.On the internet probably, in the real world it's just a matter of time...
People have always been offended, but no one used to give a shit that others were offended.How did it come to this that people seem to be offended left right and centre about absolutely everything.
A few decades ago!And when did "coloured" become offensive?
It's not changing constantly, I have no idea how you didn't know that people don't like being referred to as 'coloured'.I used it a couple of weeks ago on here because i thought using the word Black instead would be deemed offensive.
Seems i am back to front.Im not sure i can keep up with the constant changes as to what is or what is not racist or offensive anymore.
I think you're expressing your own fears there rather than his.
British people moving to Australia where the majority of people are still of british Isles descent, and it is culturally a fag paper away from the UK, is a straw man argument.
I would say that the longer I live here the more cultural differences I see. As a further point i would say that most people do not identify as being of British Isles decent. Which to me is important because I believe that what and where you identify with is more important than where you were born. A great man once said "It's not where you are from, its where your at"
However it is all a straw man argument, your allegiances to countries and by extension their sporting teams are about how you feel and what you identify with. National boundaries are contrived and in many ways meaningless. A good example of this is Andy Murray he represents us as a Brit, yet many dislike him because he is a Scot. As Brits we single out the Welsh, Northerners, Southerners, Home Counties Posh Knobs, Lowland Scots, Highland Scots, Suffolk Farmers, Norfolk Farmers (I could go on and on) The lines of cultural importance are a human construct and are drawn to suit our own ends.
The point I was trying to make to Bushy was that we shouldn't and needn't live by his hardline stuck in stone cultural rules about how we identify with ourselves. to my mind his kind of thinking is incredible damaging to his beloved social cohesion. Imagine trying to assimilate with someone with such inflexible views.
Another example of how views have changed: When Jamaican-born John Barnes was playing for England anybody who said he wasn't English and he should be playing for Jamaica was a knuckle-dragging racist. Now someone who says Jamaican-born Raheem Sterling isn't English and he should be playing for Jamaica is someone who is concerned that we are we're denuding poorer countries of their talent. Downside of immigration y'know.
It's not changing constantly, I have no idea how you didn't know that people don't like being referred to as 'coloured'.
On the internet probably, in the real world it's just a matter of time...
It may do in some places, but general racist comments are far more commonplace in the US. You hear things here on the street that would immediately lead to an arrest in the UK.
Some of the stuff New York taxi drivers come out with is genuinely shocking.
Fair enough. It's being mentioned in the media quite a lot, and you notice how black people refer to themselves as black, rather than coloured.oh well,i didnt know( as others have also said)
Since you now know, why are you still saying 'colour'? Do you mean 'nearly all my black friends' or 'nearly all my non white friends'?nearly all my people of colour friends and acquaintances