Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it's more classist.
All the baby mamas I know are poor white women.
What about that fathers?
Also white guys who never graduated high school. In fact, they are my relatives. Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:You can make anything racist if you think about it long enough or spin it that way.
Did you know that hip hip horray! is antisemitic? It's a derivative of "hep, hep" which was a rally cry to attack Jews.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it's more classist.
All the baby mamas I know are poor white women.
What about that fathers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say depends on who is using it and the context. I notice that it’s only used for black people and often with a negative connotation.
I see it in medical contexts where it is factual, not racist or with a negative connotation.
What medical context do you frequently see “baby mama”, as in a person with whom someone has had a child but is not married to? Please note that it is not the same as “baby’s mother”.
Sorry, I actually meant baby daddy. From doctors and nurses - I suppose they also use baby mama but that's usually doesn't need to be said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tom Brady's first child was with an actress. She is the mother of his child.
Richard Sherman (black football player). He has a baby mama even though he married her later.
It is another instance of who says it and how it is intended. Tina Fey and Amy Poehler had a movie called Baby Mama. It was supposed to be Hah-larious because, you know, they are so white and quirky and professional, and Baby Mama's are usually in reference to a Black woman (assumed to be the opposite of these characteristics).
Come to think of it, most of their humor was just this schtick of white people saying or doing things that (they think) are stereotypically black. It's just so funny because they are white and would NEVER be like that.
It's another instance of co-opting a phrase to make fun of a culture.
According to the Internet, Richard Sherman had a baby with someone while was and still married to someone else.
https://blacksportsonline.com/2022/05/richard-shermans-baby-momma-reina-westberg-claims-his-wife-ashley-moss-approved-and-encouraged-their-affair/
That doesn't square with your version.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s more classist and makes the person seem trashy (both the speaker and the “baby mama” being referenced).
Nope. Not classist at all. Purely racist. Myself and other upper class black friends have had the term used on us. We are all well educated and aren’t at all giving off a trashy vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tom Brady's first child was with an actress. She is the mother of his child.
Richard Sherman (black football player). He has a baby mama even though he married her later.
It is another instance of who says it and how it is intended. Tina Fey and Amy Poehler had a movie called Baby Mama. It was supposed to be Hah-larious because, you know, they are so white and quirky and professional, and Baby Mama's are usually in reference to a Black woman (assumed to be the opposite of these characteristics).
Come to think of it, most of their humor was just this schtick of white people saying or doing things that (they think) are stereotypically black. It's just so funny because they are white and would NEVER be like that.
It's another instance of co-opting a phrase to make fun of a culture.
According to the Internet, Richard Sherman had a baby with someone while was and still married to someone else.
https://blacksportsonline.com/2022/05/richard-shermans-baby-momma-reina-westberg-claims-his-wife-ashley-moss-approved-and-encouraged-their-affair/
That doesn't square with your version.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say depends on who is using it and the context. I notice that it’s only used for black people and often with a negative connotation.
I see it in medical contexts where it is factual, not racist or with a negative connotation.
What medical context do you frequently see “baby mama”, as in a person with whom someone has had a child but is not married to? Please note that it is not the same as “baby’s mother”.
Sorry, I actually meant baby daddy. From doctors and nurses - I suppose they also use baby mama but that's usually doesn't need to be said.