Anonymous wrote:I (a white person) enjoy eating mac and cheese but I can still recognize that it's a significant food for pepole the AA community. It's not that hard to understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I (a white person) enjoy eating mac and cheese but I can still recognize that it's a significant food for pepole the AA community. It's not that hard to understand.
Lol
No. Mac and cheese is a significant food for you American people. It so happens that AA are American. So are non-AA.
Anonymous wrote:I (a white person) enjoy eating mac and cheese but I can still recognize that it's a significant food for pepole the AA community. It's not that hard to understand.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly didn’t know adults played Uno. There’s no strategy to it! It’s a children’s game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a sad thread. Some things can be part of more than one American cultures the same time (eg, Mahjong). AND some ethnic groups in different part of the country or heck a different part of a city, may not do things people associate with AA culture (eg, just because you’re AA doesn’t mean you grew up on collards). Yeesh.
It is sad. Not too long ago things were the “American culture” and now it’s all getting divided up. It’s the wrong direction and it’s such a bummer
Anonymous wrote:God forbid we all have something in common, like freaking playing games with our cousins at holidays and barbecues and stuff. God forbid we have similar stories about hyper-competitive uncles or brothers who notoriously cheat.mgod forbid we all just say hey yeah, I loved playing Spades in college, or Uno at my aunt's house. Let's make this a thing. Let's make everything A Thing.
Anonymous wrote:My white family played spades too.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you need to unclench. No one is saying non-black people can’t play Uno. Just that it’s very common for black people to do so, so common that it’s a cultural touchstone.
And that's great. Some of us didn't know that yet; including a Black person.
Funny how only the white people got told how "that's like saying you didn't know pasta is an important part of Italian culture," and literally nothing was said to the Black poster who was unaware of the Black cultural importance.
I am the first Black poster. My comment was about nit having heard that it was black-owned or invented by a black personality (turns out it is neither). But I absolutely would identify adults playing Uno frequently and passionately as a Black thing.
I believe you,and that's interesting, and I'm glad to know that now.
What I want to know why this poster was not told "that's like not knowing pasta is part of Italian culture," in a rude tone, as I was:
"I’m Black and I seriously did not know this. We play it often but it never occurred to me, I guess because White people play it too? Unlike spades; I can’t think of anyone I know White that plays spades.
My family will probably “pull my Black card” for not knowing this! 😫😂"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm White and we played it a ton growing up, especially when cousins got together at my grandparents' house. We also played Hearts a lot. Thank you for bringing up good memories!
I didn't know this was considered to be connected especially to Black culture. Looking forward to hearing more.
Oh! We also played Rummikub. Anyone else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A little primer on AA culture: we like to put our own twists on mainstream US culture. What we like doesn’t have to have an African origin or come from our own history for it to be embraced as “a black thing”. And something being “a black thing” doesn’t mean that we’re saying we invented it. Only that we’ve embraced it and it’s a recognizable part of our cultural identity.
So if I grew up playing Uno with my grandparents, moved on to playing it with my white friends at college and now play it with my white kids, doesn’t that make it a “white thing” for me? Of course not. It’s a game meant for and played by people of all races. It doesn’t belong to a set culture. It can be your thing or my thing. It’s not a race thing.
We have all really gone over the edge of ridiculous race baiting issues.
Grits
Collards
Fried fish
All part of black culture but also white peoples ear it.
Do you not understand culture?
I think the point is that something ubiquitous is not uniquely cultural by definition. I would be like saying drinking water is a part of XX cultural identity.
It’s like saying eating pasta is part of Italian culture.
Pasta is literally an Italian word. Uno is Spanish. Stupid argument.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A little primer on AA culture: we like to put our own twists on mainstream US culture. What we like doesn’t have to have an African origin or come from our own history for it to be embraced as “a black thing”. And something being “a black thing” doesn’t mean that we’re saying we invented it. Only that we’ve embraced it and it’s a recognizable part of our cultural identity.
So if I grew up playing Uno with my grandparents, moved on to playing it with my white friends at college and now play it with my white kids, doesn’t that make it a “white thing” for me? Of course not. It’s a game meant for and played by people of all races. It doesn’t belong to a set culture. It can be your thing or my thing. It’s not a race thing.
We have all really gone over the edge of ridiculous race baiting issues.
Grits
Collards
Fried fish
All part of black culture but also white peoples ear it.
Do you not understand culture?
I think the point is that something ubiquitous is not uniquely cultural by definition. I would be like saying drinking water is a part of XX cultural identity.
It’s like saying eating pasta is part of Italian culture.
Anonymous wrote:God forbid we all have something in common, like freaking playing games with our cousins at holidays and barbecues and stuff. God forbid we have similar stories about hyper-competitive uncles or brothers who notoriously cheat.mgod forbid we all just say hey yeah, I loved playing Spades in college, or Uno at my aunt's house. Let's make this a thing. Let's make everything A Thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a sad thread. Some things can be part of more than one American cultures the same time (eg, Mahjong). AND some ethnic groups in different part of the country or heck a different part of a city, may not do things people associate with AA culture (eg, just because you’re AA doesn’t mean you grew up on collards). Yeesh.
It is sad. Not too long ago things were the “American culture” and now it’s all getting divided up. It’s the wrong direction and it’s such a bummer
Not true at all.
All regions in the US have always had their own “culture”.
Texas vs. nc bbq
Chicago vs ny pizza
Southern food vs Midwestern food
On and on
It’s actually better we can share in all cultures.
Exactly- share all cultures, the American culture being a blend of them all. And your examples are REGIONAL which is not anywhere near the same tho g as different races claiming things as “theirs”
Again... even black people have regional cultures... just like America... and AA people are American so it’s literally the same.
Italians have a culture but Ny and Chicago are different
AA have culture but Ny and Chicago is not the same... music coming out of Chicago is very different than NY is very different than DC.
It’s the same.