Rep. Eli Crane used the derogatory phrase in describing his proposed amendment to a military bill. Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty asked that his words be stricken from the record.

  • @NounsAndWords@lemmy.world
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    1281 year ago

    “My amendment has nothing to do with whether or not colored people or Black people or anybody can serve,” said Crane, who is in his first term. “It has nothing to do with any of that stuff.”

    I’m gonna give him the benefit of the doubt and say he’s just a normal idiot racist who has a hard time thinking on the spot and got mixed up between “black people,” “people of color,” and trying really hard not to say the n-word as he would in his usual crowds.

    • @jscummy@sh.itjust.works
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      451 year ago

      Are we really going to act like “people of color” and “colored people” are wildly different terms that could never be confused? He listed “black people” separately so I’d have to guess he meant to say people of color and mixed up the terms

      Not saying he’s not racist for other reasons, but this is gotcha journalism

        • @lemming007@lemmy.world
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          131 year ago

          Just wait 10-20 years. It seems what’s acceptable to say changes all the time.

          20 years ago “queer” was offensive.

          • Of course. Society is constantly changing, as is the composition and education of society. And as a result, language changes. This is the same philosophy I take with someone’s preferred pronouns – it costs me nothing to use the right words. So long as unintentional mistakes are overlooked, and I’ve never seen someone get angry about unintentionally misgendering, I’m totally fine with it.

            It comes down to this. If someone is uncomfortable with something you’ve done, and it’s something as simple as word choice, why not accommodate them? Why not let them be comfortable at no cost to you? The exact same principle goes for what’s acceptable and what isn’t.

            It really isn’t that much work for someone to say “gay person” or “LGBTQ people” instead of queer. Changing your terminology every 20 years isn’t rocket science. Look at it this way, if Eminem can censor himself and apologize for saying f*g, I think the rest of us can make the effort too.

            (Eminem’s thoughts are actually really interesting here. He points out he doesn’t mean it as a slur at all, and that while he was growing up it was a general insult in rap, not constantly used as a slur. All the same, he’s still used it less and less over the years. )

            • @Reliant1087@lemmy.world
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              41 year ago

              Honestly the problem is actually getting a chance. I’m not American and English is not my first language either.

              I had people get very angry with media from my home country for characters in a movie wearing black coloured makeup and was called racist for trying to tell them that blackface is not a thing in our culture and you can’t judge foreign media based on your own cultural norms.

              I’m dyslexic and make a word salad almost all the time, without even being aware of it most of the time. Would people honestly give me a chance if I accidentally mix up the order of people and colored? It seems like they wouldn’t, given my interactions.

          • @Laticauda@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yes, that is the nature of language. We don’t speak like Shakespeare anymore either, imagine that. Queer people was offensive 20 years ago because it was mostly used as a slur then by bigots. It’s not as offensive now because queer people reclaimed it and it is mostly used by them to refer to themselves. They have generally expressed that they are more comfortable with it because of that. “Coloured people” is still used mostly by racists, while “people of colour” is commonly used by non-white people to refer to themselves. In each example an important factor is how the group being referred to feels about a particular term. Most black people have made it pretty clear that they don’t like being called “coloured people”, especially not by white conservatives, but they generally don’t mind the term “people of colour”. So if you have to use one or the other, the one that you know they don’t like is probably not the safe bet.

        • @jscummy@sh.itjust.works
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          21 year ago

          I’d absolutely agree, but I don’t think that was his intention. As a politician, he should know better. This seems like another senator tried to score some political points on accidentally using the wrong term though, instead of actually arguing policy

          • @Snapz@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            You don’t think that was his intention, huh? Based on what?

            “As a politician he should know better” - now, more than ever, “politician” doesn’t speak to any basic standard met or level of qualification. A person who isn’t a racist doesn’t use that phrase today casually because they understand the negative connotation.

          • @BURN@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            It was the “correct” term for POC towards the end of slavery and through the Jim Crowe era. Bathrooms, Pool, Water Fountains, etc. were often labeled “Whites” and “Coloreds”. Segregation is a major part of history most of this country tries to forget, and absolutely doesn’t broadcast.

      • @Kleinbonum@feddit.de
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        181 year ago

        Are we really going to act like “people of color” and “colored people” are wildly different terms that could never be confused?

        In a vacuum, those are similar terms.

        In the real world, one is a term used in Apartheid South Africa and in Jim Crow America that has huge racist and white supremacists connotations, while the other one is the preferred term used by the community to refer to themselves.