Exactly. It's not like she was trying to be racist. If I note that someone is "black," it certainly doesn't mean I hate the race. I'm just identifying who the person was.KalessinDB wrote:And yet, here's where we are. Sigh.Hobie-wan wrote:Yeah, that's no good. If I went into a store primarily staffed by people of a different racial flavor than me and left something behind, I'd totally expect them to say "The white guy in the green shirt left his keys behind if he comes back" or whatever. It is more descriptive than just "The guy in the green shirt" and as long as it was used as a clarifying descriptor, not in a disparaging tone I don't care.kidfresh wrote:Because you've been asking for it;
"The black dude left his credit card behind." That was the context.
I work at a 911 center. When asking people for descriptions of suspects (be they in robberies, assaults, or even missing person cases), you'd be amazed at how many people flat out refuse to answer when we ask "Is he black, white, or hispanic?"... like, I'm not asking you to tell me his heritage, I'm just asking, if a cop drives by the dude on the street, what would he look like at a glance?
But no, people outright refuse to answer. Sometimes about their kids who are missing! Isn't that special.
I read a while ago that some guy who worked at a Papa Johns called an asian woman "Lady Chinky Eyes" on her receipt. I get that. That's very obviously racist. "The black guy" isn't.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/0 ... 91434.html
