Anonymous wrote:It’s a little like the N word. White people don’t get to use it, even to refer to themselves.
I’m Asian and my best friend is Afro-Latina. We are both second generation and fondly refer to friends and relatives as FOBby. You used the phrase awkwardly because it was inauthentic (you know he’s not marginalized in any way) and that’s what the DMV lady was picking up on. I know several white immigrants from England and Canada, and they never make jokes about being FOBs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an immigrant but have been here for over a decade. I was finally able to bring my dad over and I took him to dmv to get his state ID. I was talking to the lady who was handing out the tickets and she asked if he ever had an ID from any state before, to which I said no, he is fresh off the boat.
For context we are both white. I thought it was ok to say it since 1) it’s directed at a white man and as a joke and 2) there’s a show by that name.
I would never use it towards any Asian person or any non white person for that matter, or even anyone who isn’t my close friend honestly.
The lady casually told me it wasn’t a good phrase (we were being a bit chatty with her). She wasn’t Asian but wasn’t white either (not sure if it matters).
So my question is: should I stop using the phrase completely? Even if it’s about my dad who is white?
You are a clueless moron
Anonymous wrote:This is interesting to see different perspectives. I have a friend whose parents are Albanian immigrants and she regularly uses FOB while describing them/their actions. While I would never utilize it to describe someone, I have always interpreted her tone as loving exasperation and assumed most who utilized were first gen and were using the term as more of an endearment.
Anonymous wrote:People in 2024 have gone insane with telling other people - even total strangers - what they are allowed to say and what they are NOT ALLOWED TO SAY!
And if you don’t obey other people’s “word rules,” they will judge you and hate you (even though they believe they “don’t judge” and they “don’t hate.”).
Anonymous wrote:I am an immigrant but have been here for over a decade. I was finally able to bring my dad over and I took him to dmv to get his state ID. I was talking to the lady who was handing out the tickets and she asked if he ever had an ID from any state before, to which I said no, he is fresh off the boat.
For context we are both white. I thought it was ok to say it since 1) it’s directed at a white man and as a joke and 2) there’s a show by that name.
I would never use it towards any Asian person or any non white person for that matter, or even anyone who isn’t my close friend honestly.
The lady casually told me it wasn’t a good phrase (we were being a bit chatty with her). She wasn’t Asian but wasn’t white either (not sure if it matters).
So my question is: should I stop using the phrase completely? Even if it’s about my dad who is white?
Anonymous wrote:People in 2024 have gone insane with telling other people - even total strangers - what they are allowed to say and what they are NOT ALLOWED TO SAY!
And if you don’t obey other people’s “word rules,” they will judge you and hate you (even though they believe they “don’t judge” and they “don’t hate.”).
Anonymous wrote:I am fifty-five & Asian.
Growing up, I heard that term (especially in my teenage yrs!) as derogatory toward people of color so just to hear that phrase now, no matter who it is directed to…..just stings + brings back bad memories. 🤨
Though I realize this is only my personal experience.