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Racism or misunderstanding?

People have names which is exactly why using a "descriptor" for them is problematic.

Everyone stopping splitting hairs about the descriptor used.
 
It was someone on the field in an official capacity. It wasn't a fan or a spectator, so I'm not seeing the difference.

Because they wouldn't have had a number or their name on their back.

I was responding to this
In American football, when an offense or penalty is called, the ref announces it by referencing the players jersey number.
 
I'm not sure if I'm ready to go down the "Now prove to me its reasonable that someone on one team should just be expected to know the actual names of the people on the opposing team" rabbit hole.
 
It was someone on the field in an official capacity. It wasn't a fan or a spectator, so I'm not seeing the difference.

One team from France, the other from Turkey, the officials from Romania.

I think it is reasonable to assume the officials may not have been familiar with the names of the coaching staff apart from maybe the head coach of each side.
From this picture it doesn't look like there were any other black members of the coaching staff.
 
I'm not sure if I'm ready to go down the "Now prove to me its reasonable that someone on one team should just be expected to know the actual names of the people on the opposing team" rabbit hole.

There are 46 potentially active players on each side at an NFL game. And they're wearing helmets a lot of the time. I wouldn't expect any official to learn them all. Which is why they have numbers.

Even the 16 or 17 players in an Association Football squad is going to be tricky. They have number too.
 
I don't know the norms and history and culture around racial description in the sport or countries involved.

But I would be surprised if BOTH teams reacted so strongly on the scene if there was nothing to it. They DO have all of that context and more. Any disingenuous motivation one team might have, you wouldn't expect it from both.
 
As I recall, it was the Romanian fourth official who was the person accused of saying something racist by referring to the "black player" as the one who should receive the yellow card, "black" in a Latin-origin language being some variant of "Negro", of course.

Massive overreaction, IMO. No more racist than any other physical descriptor to single out which one you mean in a group.

The usual suspects will predictably disagree.
 
The article is not overly clear, but I can see one instance where this might make a little bit of sense, although still insensitive as all hell.

Dozen or so guys in one area of the bench, dressed plus or minus in the same team colors. Only one is a black guy. If the ref is at some kind of distance, he might say 'the black one', meaning 'of that group of which the most unique characteristic to single him out at a distance is that he is black'.
 
I'm not sure if I'm ready to go down the "Now prove to me its reasonable that someone on one team should just be expected to know the actual names of the people on the opposing team" rabbit hole.

Did you read the OP? The person being identified as 'black' is a member of the coaching team. The two teams are from different countries (France and Turkey), and do not regularly play one another. The fourth official involved is from Romania. He might be expected to know most of the players by name, but it's a bit of stretch to expect him to know all the coaching teams.

As I've already said, I'm not forming an opinion without further information on whether what he said was racist, just pointing out that some of the alternative ways suggested here to identify which of two people he was referring to were not necessarily available to him.
 
If there are two blokes sitting side by side over there and you want to indicate one of them to the person you're talking to, it's fine to use a distinguishing characteristic: The tall one, the short one, the one with long hair or, indeed, the black one or the white one. I don't see that as an issue.

Of course, if you both know their names, that has to be easier. If they have numbers on their clothing then that's definitely going to be easier.

The moment you add an insult to the end of it, it becomes more tricky. You might get away with 'you lanky bastard' or 'you blonde haired git', but the moment you consider using a racial characteristic along with an insult you should really stop and think again and maybe come up with something less charged and more poetic.

I've always said it doesn't matter so much what you say as what you mean, which is why you can get away with calling your friends all sorts of things that would result in a punch up if you used them on strangers. One should not expect or receive such latitude with people who aren't close friends.

This, if aimed at a person you don't know I don't think it can be seen as banter or a joke.

Without an insult being added it could still be construed as insulting or racist depending on the tone of voice and the context in which it is used.
 
The article is not overly clear, but I can see one instance where this might make a little bit of sense, although still insensitive as all hell.

Dozen or so guys in one area of the bench, dressed plus or minus in the same team colors. Only one is a black guy. If the ref is at some kind of distance, he might say 'the black one', meaning 'of that group of which the most unique characteristic to single him out at a distance is that he is black'.


Yes, and if they're speaking in a language where the word for black is 'negro', as it is in Spanish, and, I think, a few other languages, then that could cause an issue.
 
The article is not overly clear, but I can see one instance where this might make a little bit of sense, although still insensitive as all hell.

Dozen or so guys in one area of the bench, dressed plus or minus in the same team colors. Only one is a black guy. If the ref is at some kind of distance, he might say 'the black one', meaning 'of that group of which the most unique characteristic to single him out at a distance is that he is black'.

That does sound like what happened, as far as I can follow the reports. More details here in some tweets after the incident. It does seem my earlier conjecture may be relevant, that he said 'black' in Romanian, which is 'negru', but what was heard was 'negro', but there is also the question of why was it necessary to specify he was black.

Pierre Webo after being sent off to the 4th official: “Why did you say n*gro, why did you say n*gro?”

— Get French Football News (@GFFN) December 8, 2020

Demba Ba immediately after: “You never say: “This white guy.” Why when you mention a black guy, you have to say this black guy.”

One of the officials responds that it is a miscommunication relating to “Romanian language.”

— Get French Football News (@GFFN) December 8, 2020
 
I don't know if it racism but an on-field official not just using the names of the players during a call and using a descriptive term is weird and I don't know why they would do it.

In NFL (American "football") games, the officials usually reference players by uniform number when announcing penalties. Given the typical ethnic mix of NFL teams, saying "the black one" wouldn't narrow it down much.
 
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Yes, and if they're speaking in a language where the word for black is 'negro', as it is in Spanish, and, I think, a few other languages, then that could cause an issue.

The ref's tweet explaining just that makes it soud like he thinks the issue is the word "negru", rather than the use of race and 'one' as an identifier, which I think is the offensive part. The ref seems not to get it.
 
The ref's tweet explaining just that makes it soud like he thinks the issue is the word "negru", rather than the use of race and 'one' as an identifier, which I think is the offensive part. The ref seems not to get it.


Do you think it's inherrently racist to identify someone whose name you don't know as 'the black one' or 'the white one' or 'the chinese one' when they're sat next to someone that clearly doesn't fit that description?

ETA:

This is the US Ryder cup team, 2012

https://img.rasset.ie/00067113-1600.jpg

If you're talking to someone who knows nothing at all about golf and golfers and you want to talk about Tiger Woods and they say, 'which one's he'? then, personally, I'd have no issue saying he was the black one before resorting to 'front row, third from the right' or similar.
 
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Do you think it's inherrently racist to identify someone whose name you don't know as 'the black one' or 'the white one' or 'the chinese one' when they're sat next to someone that clearly doesn't fit that description?

It can be, sure. Trying to put myself in that position, I might actually refer to someone at a distance as 'the black guy', in the same way I might say 'the tall guy'. You pick the trait that is uniquely identifiable at a distance to single him out. The problem is it is easily mixed up with the way a racist would refer to someone only by that trait, as if it is the only trait of note. Too easily confused, in this OP.
 
When people look at an incident such as this (a football team walking off form a game) and it revolves around an issue of 'racism', there is a tendency for people to see the POV of the official accused but not of the player/s who took offence. Hence, it becomes an 'over-reaction' by the player or being 'over sensitive'. There is always that denial element. For example, when Millwall players 'took the knee' there was a barrage of booing from their own fans. Most of the media were shocked. Millwall fans flocked the social media to claim they were not booing black people but because of BLM 'being a marxist organisation'. Even the DAILY MAIL carried this obvious falsehood by having dug up some individual/s who had registered a company or charity name as 'BLM UK Ltd' and describing themselves as socialist. The lengths people will go to to deny the reality of racist behaviour to give the racists the benefit of a doubt.

In the case of this official, the truth will come out but you can't refer to someone as 'the Black', 'the Jew', 'the Chinese' or whatever, and not expect a double take.
 
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When people look at an incident such as this (a football team walking off form a game) and it revolves around an issue of 'racism', there is a tendency for people to see the POV of the official accused but not of the player/s who took offence. Hence, it becomes an 'over-reaction' by the player or being 'over sensitive'. There is always that denial element. For example, when Millwall fans 'took the knee' there was a barrage of booing from their own fans. Most of the media were shocked. Millwall fans flocked the social media to claim they were not booing black people but because of BLM 'being a marxist organisation'. Even the DAILY MAIL carried this obvious falsehood by having dug up some individual/s who had registered a company or charity name as 'BLM UK Ltd' and describing themselves as socialist. The lengths people will go to to deny the reality of racist behaviour to give the racists the benefit of a doubt.

In the case of this official, the truth will come out but you can't refer to someone as 'the Black', 'the Jew', 'the Chinese' or whatever, and not expect a double take.

Really? See my picture of the US Ryder Cup team I posted above. How do you refer to Tigert Woods when trying to point him out to someone who knows nothing of golf?
 

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