Black People Are Easily Offended?

Discussion in 'Stereotypes and Myths' started by Resurrected Fear, Apr 22, 2013.

  1. life5577

    life5577 New Member

    Offended

    I think everyone is uptight these days. I mean everyone as in every race. Society has changed and the generations here and now all have a different mind set then back in the day. I do not think it is fair to say one race in particular....this is just my opinion

    [​IMG]
     
  2. FRESH

    FRESH New Member


    Indeed sirs, as well as Gfunk and myself.

    lol
     
  3. Bug

    Bug Well-Known Member

    You think so do you precious?

    Just because I highlight whats wrong, doesn't mean I'm offended.

    Feeling offended is reserved for perverts giving you a free show

    [​IMG]
     
  4. medullaslashin

    medullaslashin Well-Known Member

    Naaaaaaaah. Helll no, black people are NOT easily offended.

    If media wants you to THINK black people are easily offended, they'll give voice and airtime to ONE crackpot, and of course all the gullible viewers (including the black ones) will swell up thinking black people are easily offended, childish, and coddled.

    Why can't people see that shit? Media is POWERFUL and there are minds behind it. There are people out there who want to control how you think about the racial paradigm, because it is a great weapon to manipulate and divide people.

    One of the ongoing themes is that black people are too sensitive, and it allows racists to get away with real murder.

    If anything, black people are pretty damn thick-skinned (maybe even thick-headed, considering some of the underhanded shit media gets away with, like convincing the world that we're all down-low, criminals, coddled, hiv-infested, lazy, affirmative-actioned, etc. etc. - a lot of which goes right over black people's heads....)

    Most black people just keep their eyes on the prize and their personal daily struggle, as the media trots out some fool who's pissed off because someone used the word "niggardly"... And of course that fool represents all black people to the viewers looking for any excuse to justify their pet grudge and acts of spite against black people.

    :butthead:
     
  5. 4north1side2

    4north1side2 Well-Known Member

    Thread just blew past your head
     
  6. medullaslashin

    medullaslashin Well-Known Member

    how so?
     
  7. GFunk

    GFunk Well-Known Member

    Not me.
     
  8. IntoTheQCD

    IntoTheQCD Member

    I agree that the majority of black people are fairly defensive.

    I think it's feasible, not sure about justifiable.
     
  9. pettyofficerj

    pettyofficerj New Member

    id say yes

    how many times have you seen someone post about someone calling them 'articulate' and being offended

    anyone who calls someone articulate is merely complimenting them..

    yet when that someone is black, it becomes upsetting

    call anyone else articulate and theyd be proud
     
  10. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    that's the thing I don't hear it used for anyone else outside of small children. Its expected with other adults but not us.
    How often are Asians complimented with being smart? Theyre expected to be.
     
  11. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

    You should take that up with the Cali school Board then, who demanded and were granted to teach 'Ebonics' to their students...because frankly, that doesn't help.
     
  12. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Damn girl you got a time machine in your crib? Lol that was the early 90s, but that is an example of the different standards placed on blacks so that be grateful when someone compliments me on my diction and articulation is pure bullshit.
     
  13. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

    Nope, not just the 90's...

    in 2005 as well -

    "San Bernardino County (CA) schools to teach Ebonics

    Here we go again.

    A batch of lazy educators who aren't willing to teach students proper English are dumbing down the curriculum by teaching urban street slang as if it were some kind of "language" as opposed to the vernacular it truly is.

    "Ebonics" is not a language. It's a form of slang. I don't see professors trying to justify hacker geek-speak or online shorthand as their own separate language!

    When I grew up, teachers would demand that we, as students, speak in proper English. We certainly used slang with our friends on the playground and outside the classroom, but not in class. And we never would dare to use it in front of our parents or grandparents.

    The politically correct-feel good mindset that has permeated our society allows a "dumbing down" of all aspects of life in order to placate those who refuse to take responsibility and work for what needs to be done..."


    More: http://mhking.mu.nu/archives/105212.php
     
  14. pettyofficerj

    pettyofficerj New Member

    that is highly debatable

    from what i gather, if anything ebonics could be a dialect of english, just like mandarin is a dialect of chinese

    the reason people look down on it, is because it's mostly used by blacks and there's this belief that blacks simply arent intelligent or whatever

    fact of the matter is that language has not always been an accurate depictor of intelligence, more so than it depicts social class
     
  15. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Hebrew was once the language of the slaves
     
  16. pettyofficerj

    pettyofficerj New Member

  17. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    I agree with you. Never looked at it from that perspective. Like I said during the time of the Egyptian rule Hebrew was the language of the slaves. Now Jews are well respected even though they are hated.
     
  18. pettyofficerj

    pettyofficerj New Member

    id assume they were more respected than blacks

    lol

    tbh jews are still 'white'

    skin color goes a long way
     
  19. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

    No kidding ^ but it seems the School Board seem to think these kids are BORN to speak only this way...


    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oakland_Ebonics_controversy

    Seriously, why not just pile on another thing to make it more difficult to get a future job.

    Ebonics is NOT a language. It's a dialect. English is a language, Ebonics is a spin off of it, so to speak. Did you not read the part where they said its fine to speak it amongst ourselves with friends and family, etc but not to be TAUGHT as English language IN school.' I thoroughly agree.

    Even my parents, who also spoke broken dialects, were taught the National Language of their countries of birth.
     
  20. medullaslashin

    medullaslashin Well-Known Member

    Black people aren't too sensitive. Media just trots out the ones who get offended at the wrong things as a way of dismissing genuine anti-black racism.
     

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