Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can we not "trail of tears" derail
NP but people keep bring up the n word
Anonymous wrote:Can we not "trail of tears" derail
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gypsy just means a traveling people or a wanderer.
I have seem the Roma gypsies in DC metro stations with the fake babies and all. I also saw a lot of problems with them in Italy and France when I lived there (homelessness, leaving trash everywhere and stealing).
How dare you those were not fake babies they were drugged babies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gypsy just means a traveling people or a wanderer.
I have seem the Roma gypsies in DC metro stations with the fake babies and all. I also saw a lot of problems with them in Italy and France when I lived there (homelessness, leaving trash everywhere and stealing).
How dare you those were not fake babies they were drugged babies
Anonymous wrote:Gypsy just means a traveling people or a wanderer.
I have seem the Roma gypsies in DC metro stations with the fake babies and all. I also saw a lot of problems with them in Italy and France when I lived there (homelessness, leaving trash everywhere and stealing).
Anonymous wrote:That's why we just call them Tinkers
Anonymous wrote:There is actually a TV show in England called "my Big Fat Gypsy Wedding" -- and that is a highly regulated tv market -- so no, nowhere remotely close to the "n" word, even in Europe. (And England does have gypsies/travelers who face discrimination etc)
That said, Michelle Obama said "gypped" a while back -- that's been considered offensive for a while now.
Anonymous wrote:
Not everyone thinks it is offensive, even among the Roma. Kinda more like Redskins than the N word, when you get right down to it.
My cousin married a Roma. This. She even calls herself gypsy from time to time.
I think that's different. AAs's use of the "n" word is acceptable but doesn't mean non-AAs use the "n" word.
Not everyone thinks it is offensive, even among the Roma. Kinda more like Redskins than the N word, when you get right down to it.
My cousin married a Roma. This. She even calls herself gypsy from time to time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The word gypsy isn't used exclusively to refer to the Roma. It has many commonly accepted uses in the English language.
+1
Not everyone thinks it is offensive, even among the Roma. Kinda more like Redskins than the N word, when you get right down to it.[/quote
My cousin married a Roma. This. She even calls herself gypsy from time to time.
Is it time for the "marginalized communities can self-identify and re-claim words as they wish" conversation again? Just because a member of a marginalized community uses a certain word does not mean it is not a slur.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe not in North America. But in Europe it is definitely on the same level as the N word is here. And frankly, who are you to decide what's more offensive to respective minority?
this exactly.
So tired of others helpfully dictating to me the ranking order of offensiveness. If you are the son of two sharecroppers, by definition you have no experience with being the son of 4 grandparents who were made to walk the Trail of Tears at gunpoint. Stuff it