Sideroxylon
Featherless biped
Won't someone think of the strawmen?
Sure someone will imagine them.
Won't someone think of the strawmen?
People here grew up with Coon Cheese. There’s a packet in our refrigerator.
.....
It's not nonsensical. We can argue about it until the cows come home, but a bunch of white people being offended on behalf of black people doesn't really speak to me.
There is (or used to be) a candy called Licorice Babies.
https://www.carolscandycorner.com/licoricebabies.html
As recently as the 1960s, they were commercially marketed and sold as "N(word) Babies." Times change.
Nor does black people being offended on behalf of black people "speak to you," since you've discounted them as mere anecdotes.
I am baffled by the idea that you believe that speaking out against racially insensitive comments that are not directed at you personally are somehow unnecessary, unappreciated, or worthless. In point of fact it is quite valuable that people directly unaffected take a principled stand against such racial insults.
Oh come on everyone knows it's because KFC breed a special race of mutant poultry with extra drumsticks and the FDA wouldn't let them call it "chicken" anymore.
every time I hear of that urban legend.I feel guilty for being white because I've had unearned privileges from that.
Well, you created this thread, so why did this whole thing about name changes trigger you so much?![]()
Many years ago in Fort Wayne we had long-serving and well-respected mayor named Harry BaalsWP, whose name was pronounced like "hairy balls." There was a minor controversy a while back because there was a movement to name the new city hall after him, but that was nixed by the city government, for obvious reasons. Today his descendants still use the same spelling, but they pronounce their name like "bales."
Thanks for that bit of history unknown to me.
Riding in the front of the slippery slope toboggan. An employer has asked that I go through many of their security policy/procedure documents replacing the terms "whitelist/blacklist" "white hat/black hat"
Wish they would find a better term for "Penetration Test"
Kinda surprised the name lasted so long. I get it that it's named after the creator/founder but still. Is not "coon" a racial insult in the US? In the UK it's a pretty well established racial slur.
I am white. I wouldn't by the product because I find the name offensive. My assumption is my spouse would dislike and/or be offended.
My spouse is black. I just asked if she would like me to buy that product. The look I got was one that said I was in danger of spousal wrath while she responded "No."
"Why not?"
"What's wrong with you? The name."
I wonder if this satisfies you?
I get your argument. And what you're stating I often see it expressed in groups on the ends of political spectrum (left and right) and it reeks of imperialism and paternalism.
I just posed your question to her. She thought a few seconds before saying that no, it's still a problem.Just for curiosity sake, does her initial response change if you tell her that the founder of the company's last name was Coon, and it was named after him?
No.But isn't the Ozzy word 'coon' an aboriginal word to begin with?
No.One of our great wine regions is Coonawarra. Could be next up.
I just posed your question to her. She thought a few seconds before saying that no, it's still a problem.
No.
It has always been a racial epithet inherited from the British.
No.
“Coonawarra” is widely accepted as Bindjali Aboriginal word meaning 'wild honeysuckle'.
Australia has sporadically conducted campaigns to replace racially offensive place names, but stories resulting in names such as AfricanAmericanmans Bay are highly exaggerated.
It's my impression that the slur is mostly used in the US, but I could be wrong.
In the current global market of ideas it's also easy for someone in one country to claim to be offended at something in another country.
No, you've shown a single data point.
It's not nonsensical. We can argue about it until the cows come home, but a bunch of white people being offended on behalf of black people doesn't really speak to me. Remember the Redskins nonsense? Turns out most NAs didn't care about it.
To defend the Brits (as a non-white Brit), it seems unlikely that this originated from Brits. As I understand it the term is originally a shortened form of Raccoon, a native animal from North America that is not found in Europe. Almost certainly this must be an American import. I cannot remember if it was used in Tom sawyer or Huck Finn, it may have come to the UK and Australia with US troops in WW2?