Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Simply southern is very popular in Georgia and Florida. I never got into it but I think it's fine. It's really hot here. T-shirts and shorts work better for this weather. Most of the women wearing these t-shirts are in college or recent graduates. I used to make fun of the t-shirts but who cares? Life is too short for this crap. Some of my closest friends wear theses t-shirts. It's a t-shirt..
Even when it sends a likely white supremacist message?
It doesn’t send that message to most of America who aren’t seeking to be offended by anything and everything
Anonymous wrote:First off, there's no SJW going on here. The original poster asked "...Am I wrong...?" SJWs don't ask if they're wrong. They crash into conversations and shout at everyone. This isn't SJW.
You don't have to dig to find meaning when you see 'SS' on a t-shirt. You aren't trying to be offended. You are simply asking "How in the world could a company have missed that?"
I know it's not intentional, but it IS pretty clueless. While you may not personally care about SS on a shirt, the fact is for the last 80 years Waffen-SS is really the only thing those letters have ever meant. And for every example you can show me of 'SS' being innocently used in some monogram, I can show you a crowd of people silently shaking their heads, realizing it's probably pointless to explain it.
Anonymous wrote:First off, there's no SJW going on here. The original poster asked "...Am I wrong...?" SJWs don't ask if they're wrong. They crash into conversations and shout at everyone. This isn't SJW.
You don't have to dig to find meaning when you see 'SS' on a t-shirt. You aren't trying to be offended. You are simply asking "How in the world could a company have missed that?"
I know it's not intentional, but it IS pretty clueless. While you may not personally care about SS on a shirt, the fact is for the last 80 years Waffen-SS is really the only thing those letters have ever meant. And for every example you can show me of 'SS' being innocently used in some monogram, I can show you a crowd of people silently shaking their heads, realizing it's probably pointless to explain it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG. That is TERRRIBLE.
SS
Yes, looks like a swazika
& then Add that to negative Southern stereotypes
Disgusting. Who would wear this offensive and cheap looking crap? Trashy.
Anonymous wrote:It honestly just looks like a monogram to me. Nothing nefarious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Simply southern is very popular in Georgia and Florida. I never got into it but I think it's fine. It's really hot here. T-shirts and shorts work better for this weather. Most of the women wearing these t-shirts are in college or recent graduates. I used to make fun of the t-shirts but who cares? Life is too short for this crap. Some of my closest friends wear theses t-shirts. It's a t-shirt..
Even when it sends a likely white supremacist message?
Anonymous wrote:OMG. That is TERRRIBLE.
SS
Yes, looks like a swazika
& then Add that to negative Southern stereotypes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Simply southern is very popular in Georgia and Florida. I never got into it but I think it's fine. It's really hot here. T-shirts and shorts work better for this weather. Most of the women wearing these t-shirts are in college or recent graduates. I used to make fun of the t-shirts but who cares? Life is too short for this crap. Some of my closest friends wear theses t-shirts. It's a t-shirt..
Even when it sends a likely white supremacist message?
It doesn’t send that message to most of America who aren’t seeking to be offended by anything and everything [/quo
I don't think it sends that message. I've met people less racist in Georgia wearing those tshirts then DC people. When I mentioned that my boyfriend is from India the DC people just gave me a shocked look. A few of them said nothing. In Georgia that did not happen but I was in grad school.