Anonymous wrote:In college we dressed up as cowboys and Indians for a Greek mixer. Also pilgrims and Indians another year.
We had theme parties often, not sure these would count as offensive:
Barbie and Ken
Nerds revenge
Stepford wives and business men
Great Gatsby
For what it’s worth I’m now 35.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay in your lane.
What’s so hard about that?
You do it when you bike and jog and drive, you know better than to tread on someone else’s path or impede someone else’s progress.
Why is it so difficult a concept to grasp on a night originally meant to ward of ghouls and demons that was flipped to something festive for kids?
When did it become Drunken Ignorant and Insensitive Adult Cultural Appropriation and Ethnic Mocking Day?
Stay in your lane it’s not that hard people.
Sorry, but "Stay in your lane" is bullshit. This is AMERICA. Do you know how many American things are culturally appropriated somewhere down the line? Is everyone supposed to live in a cultural silo?
I prefer "Don't be a jerk." If your costume is mocking or disrespecting someone's culture, don't use it. But "stay in your lane" implies that everything you wear, eat, dance, sing, or play has to be from your own culture, which is a terrible idea.
Agreed.
Furthermore, that approach fosters stereotypes.
I see no issue with kids dressing up like Disney princesses (regardless of race) or celebrities or historical figures (regardless of race). There’s no malicious intent.
Anonymous wrote:is this offensive?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay in your lane.
What’s so hard about that?
You do it when you bike and jog and drive, you know better than to tread on someone else’s path or impede someone else’s progress.
Why is it so difficult a concept to grasp on a night originally meant to ward of ghouls and demons that was flipped to something festive for kids?
When did it become Drunken Ignorant and Insensitive Adult Cultural Appropriation and Ethnic Mocking Day?
Stay in your lane it’s not that hard people.
Sorry, but "Stay in your lane" is bullshit. This is AMERICA. Do you know how many American things are culturally appropriated somewhere down the line? Is everyone supposed to live in a cultural silo?
I prefer "Don't be a jerk." If your costume is mocking or disrespecting someone's culture, don't use it. But "stay in your lane" implies that everything you wear, eat, dance, sing, or play has to be from your own culture, which is a terrible idea.
Anonymous wrote:Stay in your lane.
What’s so hard about that?
You do it when you bike and jog and drive, you know better than to tread on someone else’s path or impede someone else’s progress.
Why is it so difficult a concept to grasp on a night originally meant to ward of ghouls and demons that was flipped to something festive for kids?
When did it become Drunken Ignorant and Insensitive Adult Cultural Appropriation and Ethnic Mocking Day?
Stay in your lane it’s not that hard people.
Anonymous wrote:Stay in your lane.
What’s so hard about that?
You do it when you bike and jog and drive, you know better than to tread on someone else’s path or impede someone else’s progress.
Why is it so difficult a concept to grasp on a night originally meant to ward of ghouls and demons that was flipped to something festive for kids?
When did it become Drunken Ignorant and Insensitive Adult Cultural Appropriation and Ethnic Mocking Day?
Stay in your lane it’s not that hard people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone name a Halloween costume that is not offensive to some group somewhere? ? (I can’t).
My 3 year old was a dinosaur last year. The year before that she was Winnie the Pooh.
I can’t think of how those could be offensive?
Anonymous wrote:Went as Incredible Hulk once with Green paint and Green powder in hair. I now know Green Lives Matter and I am sorry I upset any green people
Anonymous wrote:I had an Afro wig for a seventies party. I wore it a few times. I’m white. No one called me out, and it took a bit for it to sink in as to why a random stranger wanted a selfie with me. He was Black and definitely using my costume to make a point. I think I threw it away or gave it to someone the next day. I realize there were white combed out curls in the 70s, but it’s a Black identified style. It could have been worse, but I still need to own the mistake. It was over a decade ago and I was utterly clueless.