Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So my Highland Lass costume was culturally insensitive? My neighbor's Leiderhosen as a halloween costume was culturally insensitive? What if it was a Highland Lass Zombie?
Do you have a connection with Scottish culture, on days that are not Halloween? Then you can wear a Highland Lass costume. Does your neighbor have a connection with German culture, on days that are not Halloween? Then your neighbor can wear Lederhosen as a costume. See how that works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone's heritage or culture should not be used as a Halloween "costume".
co-signed. Because there's nothing at all racist about this: http://www.chasing-fireflies.com/mens-native-american-costume/productinfo/42068/ or this: http://www.chasing-fireflies.com/mens-indian-brave-costume/productinfo/32740/ or the fact that the costume you mentioned pops up when you seach "geisha": http://www.chasing-fireflies.com/red-kimono-princess-costume/productinfo/34987/ I'd avoid that catalog on principle...
You could dress up as any muthafuckin' mythical made up whatever you want, and you pick "caricature of another person's culture" for your kid's costume?
C'mon.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No that's not how it works. People wear Eddie Murphy costumes as Akeem with the tam and vest. Ever see his movie Coming to America? How many guys have worn Braveheart? Should those with Scots ancestors tell their friends of Asian or AA descent they can't go as part of the Braveheart group?
Yes, they should, actually.
I don't understand why "you shouldn't dress up as somebody else's culture for Halloween" is so hard to understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone's heritage or culture should not be used as a Halloween "costume".
co-signed. Because there's nothing at all racist about this: http://www.chasing-fireflies.com/mens-native-american-costume/productinfo/42068/ or this: http://www.chasing-fireflies.com/mens-indian-brave-costume/productinfo/32740/ or the fact that the costume you mentioned pops up when you seach "geisha": http://www.chasing-fireflies.com/red-kimono-princess-costume/productinfo/34987/ I'd avoid that catalog on principle...
You could dress up as any muthafuckin' mythical made up whatever you want, and you pick "caricature of another person's culture" for your kid's costume?
C'mon.
Anonymous wrote:HOw about the burka chick
Anonymous wrote:
No that's not how it works. People wear Eddie Murphy costumes as Akeem with the tam and vest. Ever see his movie Coming to America? How many guys have worn Braveheart? Should those with Scots ancestors tell their friends of Asian or AA descent they can't go as part of the Braveheart group?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone's heritage or culture should not be used as a Halloween "costume".
Why?
Because its disrespectful.
How's that disrespectful? Is a cowboy costume disrespectful?
Cowboy isn't a heritage or a culture.