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Reply to "Uno and Black Culture"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I'm White and we played it a ton growing up, especially when cousins got together at my grandparents' house. We also played Hearts a lot. Thank you for bringing up good memories! I didn't know this was considered to be connected especially to Black culture. Looking forward to hearing more. [/quote] That’s like saying you made pasta who knew it was connected to Italian culture.[/quote] I just thought it was a game people liked to play. You can walk into any Target and pick up a deck. What is your issue? [/quote] Same with pasta. Your post literally says “it’s not a black thing because I’m white and I play it, and my who’re friends play it, and it’s at Target.” You are trying to deny there is some cultural relevance.[/quote] DP. Maybe you are trying to deny its cultural relevance to other races? UNO is widely played by lots of people not majority black people. Just because Black people play it too doesn’t make it Black Peoples Game. Other games may better fit that category because majority Black people play them. It’s not all or nothing. :roll: [/quote] That’s like saying pasta is not an Italian thing because everybody eats pasta and it was invented in Asia. [/quote]
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