Originally posted by: DearQT
Wait until the economy goes really bad and there is an impending war, then your neighbor who smiled to you and made so-called jokes about your accent will suddenly show his true colors. Wait until that moment when stereotypes will be more than just words but actions. Wait until that moment when you'll be the first rounded up by people who uttered those words that you just shrugged off. Image is extremely important because it reflects the state of mind of your countrymen. Italians and Blacks have a much longer and incomparable history, with violence inflicted upon them and injustice done, in this country than Indians have and ever will. Take a similar situation to the West Indies (i.e., Indians with an old history in that region), and I doubt that Indians just shrug things off. Look at the tension in the parliament of Trinidad and Tobago. Racial tension, mind you that results in physical confontation sometimes. Indians are just as active and sensitive in that region. Oh, let's even look at another example: Do Indians in Indian just dismiss whatever the other tribes or castes think of them? People's perceptions in spite of how much they pretend or claim it to be a joke has every bit of truth implanted in their hearts. It is better to be safe than sorry. Desensitizing or changing people's belief system gradually is more effective than ignoring it until last minute when they decide to round you up.... I think it's a big mistake to make such generalization about each ethnic group. Every situation is contingent upon climate, history, experience and [past] interaction of all ethnic groups.
Originally posted by: classy
I am not a politcally correct person. I believe it has destroyed our nation to be honest. Some stereotypes do border on factual type stuff and many are funny. It is nothing but a typical racist that would complain about jokes in movie or in a standup comic show. And you know really fuels my rage sometime, especially when I read the some of the dumb comments here, in the end whether you like it or not we have to get along. Because whether your Louis Farrakhan or Matthew Hale if your American no other country wants you. I believe in sports and comedy there is bridge the crosses race lines that I think is just sweet. Its a joke when I hear of a white person who has one bad experience with a black person and judges all blacks accordingly. If you can't laugh at stuff along racial lines you got problems. There is a difference at laughing at ghetto type stuff and being a racist. Same as there is a difference between making jokes about the white culture and standing there quoting Farrakhan. I got my white nephew who is always busting some black joke but its a joke nothing more or less. Joking can break down a lot of barriers.
Oh, excuse me ... thanks for letting me know about your limited awareness of something younger than slavery. I guess you aren't aware of the Civil Rights movement not too long before you were born. I think many of those from that era are still alive. Or I guess you aren't aware of the internment camps too.... Oh, as if your parents' experiences in life doesn't affect your growth, relationship, and experience; as if your grand-parents' experiences didn't affect your parent's growth, relationship, and experience; and as if your great grand-parents' experiences didn't affect your grand-parents' growth, relationship and experience....Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: DearQT
[No, I'm simply saying that dismissing history and experience is a grave mistake. And there lies the error of comparing one people with a different experience or none to another people with a long history and experience. Jokes are fine but only with context. Making jokes to someone with whom memory lives of events surrounding the jokes and involving you is very hurtful. If someone, especially close to the perpetrator, makes a joke about some ex of yours with whom you built a complex relationship, pain, happiness, and everything else, would you be happy if it triggers bad memories and experience? It has nothing to do with being PC. I think people need to stop this silly lazy argument of classifying everything as PC. There's something in between the lines that goes beyond PC.
Whites have no such memory of minorities having persecuted them. Indians have no such memory within the boundaries of the United States, but they do outside the boundaries. And if you go to those Indians with memories of persecution, they'll have every bit of sensitivity just as Blacks and Italians do.
You are acting WAYYY too sensitive. Being born in 1975, I'm not old enough to remember any slavery. Neither is anybody else in here. They're only sensitive from what their community tells them to believe. And in that case, it's their community's fault for hypersensitizing them.
Like I said, people need to stop acting like a delicate flower and grow a thicker skin. Stop crying about everything.
Originally posted by: MaxDSP
We're portrayed that way in the media, but in real life, I more often hear Indians associated with good jobs like being businessmen/women, IT professionals, doctors, etc than I do about 7-11 owners or cab drivers.
Originally posted by: JoeKingwtf are you smoking? There is no such thing as a good stereotype. Name one please.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: ming2020
I'm sensitive only if the joke was made by those outside my own ethnicity.
Now if you'll excuse me, I need to get back to my secret underground oppression rally.
Originally posted by: RyanSengara
Originally posted by: hevnsnt
Originally posted by: HomerJS
If black people couldn't take a joke, Chris Rock would not be so popular.
Sorry if this comes off wrong, but it seems to me that black people can only take a joke as long as it comes from another black person.
Lets see a white comedian go up there and use all kinds of vulgar slang in reference to other races..
Call Al Sharpton, we would have a KKK member.
Just like the same way if an asian comedia made fun of white people he'd be called a rascis or improperly stereotypical.
It's okay if stuff comes out of the mouth of someone thats off the same race.
Oh, I'll be the first to admit that I have my fears and prejudices too. However, that's where history and experience comes in too. Ethnic stereotypes have proven to be very hurtful, physically harmful and detrimental to a group of people. For those who have been victims of stereotypes put into action, I think that they have every right to be sensitive and object to so-called jokes rooted in stereotypes. However, for those who have been stereotyped but not victims of physical harm and harsh laws, they should just be vigilant. Take the jokes and laugh but be watchful....Originally posted by: Phoenix86
Originally posted by: MaxDSP
We're portrayed that way in the media, but in real life, I more often hear Indians associated with good jobs like being businessmen/women, IT professionals, doctors, etc than I do about 7-11 owners or cab drivers.
Wouldn't owning a cab (many are owner-operators) or owning a 7-11 make them a business owner?
I don't think that's looked down on quite as much as you think. There is a difference between being a clerk and an owner.
Originally posted by: JoeKingwtf are you smoking? There is no such thing as a good stereotype. Name one please.
Indians are smart (many engineers and Dr. as noted in this thread).
Indians are business owners.
Hispanics work hard.
Hispanics are Catholic.
Want more?
Stereotypes are NOT inherently bad. You do it every day in your life wether you admit it or not. It's simply recogonizing what you see around you and classifying it.
Originally posted by: DearQT
Stop acting all tough because frankly you probably aren't any tougher than I. Being sensitive is nothing physical. It's something emotional and psychological, and until you could lift yourself up to the position of power of your counterpoint (i.e., beyond economical, mental and physical intimidation), you are likely to remain sensitive. I'm not saying that it cannot be achieved. I'm just saying that much as it took time to inflict that pain, it will take time to get over it.
Originally posted by: purbeast0
however i have seen BET's Comic View and seen white people on there whom make racial jokes about whites, blacks, and hispanics. and the audience also laughst at them. the prodominant audience of that show is blacks.
now if you take robin williams and put him on comic view, his jokes would not get laughs because of hte target audience. same goes for switching the BET white/hispanic comedian and putting him in robin williams shoes. they would get no laughs and called a racist.
its all about the audience IMO (sometimes, not always).
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: DearQT
Stop acting all tough because frankly you probably aren't any tougher than I. Being sensitive is nothing physical. It's something emotional and psychological, and until you could lift yourself up to the position of power of your counterpoint (i.e., beyond economical, mental and physical intimidation), you are likely to remain sensitive. I'm not saying that it cannot be achieved. I'm just saying that much as it took time to inflict that pain, it will take time to get over it.
I think a better explanation is that some people are just pu$$ies and will probably always remain pu$$ies. They could be 7' 400lbs of solid muscle but they're still the runt in their mind. Their inferiority complex will never go away and they'll always be a delicate pansy and take offense at what they see as an affront them, ie everything.
Grow a spine. Stop trying to justify your hypersensitivity. Nobody will care about your pet causes as much as you do, so you might as well get used to it. You can either sit there and try to explain to everyone why you're a limp-wristed emotional wreck, or you can grow a thicker skin and learn how to shrug off what people will inevitably dish out to you.
Originally posted by: DearQT
Isasir, I didn't see where you qualified the source of the joke. However, if you're just talking about the media, then I guess we could deal with it--provided the average American isn't as dumb/ignorant as it appears sometimes taking every word of the media as gospel truth.
Originally posted by: isasir
You know what tho', I'll be honest. If I'm walking down the street late at night, and three big black men are walking towards me, I'll likely be on my guard a bit, concerned over my personal safety. If I'm at an airport, and I see three Arab men getting on my flight, I'll likely make a mental note of this (and this is factoring in that they're the same skin color I am). I don't think there's anything TOO wrong with that, since people have a right to take precautions. However, if these same individuals see that I'm a bit wary, and decide to have some fun and pretend they're about to attack me, or whatnot, even if it's a joke, you can bet that will make me view that ethnicity a bit more negatively that I did 10 seconds prior.
My point is, I think I think it's one thing to put forth a question like "Would you date a girl that dated a black man", but it doesn't help if someone black starts jumping into the conversation crying racism, when the discussion up til that point is civilized, and I think it does more harm than good.
Hope that made sense.![]()
Originally posted by: dragonballgtz
People are to uptight now a days. They try to act like a grown up all the time without having any fun. If people did not take jokes like this seriously the world would be a better place.
Originally posted by: xospec1alk
^^ its ignorant people that promote stereotypes.
Originally posted by: J0hnny
But to answer the thread on why are certain ethnicities more sensitive about ethnic jokes than others?
There is actually only one real answer, and I'm surprised no one has mentioned this and the average intelligence on this board is fairly high.
The answer is POLITICAL CLOUT.
Most people have never even heard of the term "clout".
Racial groups with the most clout make the most noise and aren't particularly more "sensitive" than others. Asian groups today are becoming more proactive in government because they want clout and with clout, things are done. Making noise in the media is one method.
Originally posted by: isasir
Originally posted by: J0hnny
But to answer the thread on why are certain ethnicities more sensitive about ethnic jokes than others?
There is actually only one real answer, and I'm surprised no one has mentioned this and the average intelligence on this board is fairly high.
The answer is POLITICAL CLOUT.
Most people have never even heard of the term "clout".
Racial groups with the most clout make the most noise and aren't particularly more "sensitive" than others. Asian groups today are becoming more proactive in government because they want clout and with clout, things are done. Making noise in the media is one method.
FYI, I clearly brought this up in my original post:
"I'm just wondering about theories why some groups on a whole seem more sensitive. One reason I figure is that, all communities have these people that of course have issues with these negative stereotypes. However, some just are better at getting media coverage for it."
Does that mean that my intelligence is fairly high... and I'll get some poon from a chick soon?![]()