Anonymous wrote:I don't think it's 'highly likely' that she heard Hispanic. Presumably, being a Hispanic child, she has heard the word 'Hispanic' and can tell the difference between that and 'spic'.
I wouldn't give the benefit of the doubt - in no universe does that guy not know that 'spic' is offensive. I'd allow the friend to come to my house and that's it. If the mom asked, I'd flat out tell her. I don't think it's worth a confrontation unless she brings it up.
Highly likely? Man, some people will contort themselves into a pretzel to avoid seeing racism.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeesh, that's definitely troubling.
Is the parent an educated professional who knowingly used the term and is just an a hole? Or is it possible the parent uses slang indiscriminately and was just making a big ignorant faux pas in the way that another poster hinted at with "Gee, isn't it cool that Larla has a friend who is a spic!"
If the former, ABORT friendship.
If the later, I'd just wait until I see the friendly mom and say "Hey, I think maybe my daughter heard the word "spic" at your house, which we hear sometimes, but it isn't really nice and we never want her called that, so we'd prefer if people don't say it around her. Cool?"
^^ PP here. Also, highly likely the parent said "hispanic" and your kid heard it wrong. Especially if "hispanic" isn't a super familiar word, the slur is simpler and easier to remember?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I did not give the actual word because it doesn't matter, and I was hoping you would just trust me that it was offensive and not "oh, he was just being folksy and cute." According to my child, she met the dad, who said "I didn't know you were a spic." I'm not asking for a debate about whether or not people who use that word are racists, I'm asking for advice about whether or not to approach a parent used a known offensive term to my child.
Anonymous wrote:Yeesh, that's definitely troubling.
Is the parent an educated professional who knowingly used the term and is just an a hole? Or is it possible the parent uses slang indiscriminately and was just making a big ignorant faux pas in the way that another poster hinted at with "Gee, isn't it cool that Larla has a friend who is a spic!"
If the former, ABORT friendship.
If the later, I'd just wait until I see the friendly mom and say "Hey, I think maybe my daughter heard the word "spic" at your house, which we hear sometimes, but it isn't really nice and we never want her called that, so we'd prefer if people don't say it around her. Cool?"
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I did not give the actual word because it doesn't matter, and I was hoping you would just trust me that it was offensive and not "oh, he was just being folksy and cute." According to my child, she met the dad, who said "I didn't know you were a spic." I'm not asking for a debate about whether or not people who use that word are racists, I'm asking for advice about whether or not to approach a parent used a known offensive term to my child.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I did not give the actual word because it doesn't matter, and I was hoping you would just trust me that it was offensive and not "oh, he was just being folksy and cute." According to my child, she met the dad, who said "I didn't know you were a spic." I'm not asking for a debate about whether or not people who use that word are racists, I'm asking for advice about whether or not to approach a parent used a known offensive term to my child.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I did not give the actual word because it doesn't matter, and I was hoping you would just trust me that it was offensive and not "oh, he was just being folksy and cute." According to my child, she met the dad, who said "I didn't know you were a spic." I'm not asking for a debate about whether or not people who use that word are racists, I'm asking for advice about whether or not to approach a parent used a known offensive term to my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I did not give the actual word because it doesn't matter, and I was hoping you would just trust me that it was offensive and not "oh, he was just being folksy and cute." According to my child, she met the dad, who said "I didn't know you were a spic." I'm not asking for a debate about whether or not people who use that word are racists, I'm asking for advice about whether or not to approach a parent used a known offensive term to my child.
Yeah I would be PISSED if this were my kid. She wouldn't be going back there and I would let the mom know exactly why next time I saw her in person.