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So people get annoyed with words - sticks and stones obviously doesn't apply anymore.
So what is racist, what is ofefnsive and at what point do we stop.
Listening to 5 live quite a while ago, I remember a woman saying that she found the word "miss" offensive. Obviously TCL and j_bug find coloured offensive - or do they?
Do they actually find it offensive, or do they not like the use of the term in case some people do find it offensive?
How many people does it take to take offense at a word before it gets banned?
Best quote I ever heard was from a member of the dyslexic association. When asked if dyslexics found the term "brain storming" offensive she replied in the negative and added that they actually took offense at the word "dyslexic"
No best answer has yet been selected by Oneeyedvic. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm not entering into the debate on either sied here but just wanted to point out to Jan Bug that, by your logic, if the word coloured or the n word gives a feeling of a "them and us" divide then surely describing someone as black or white will still give the same divide as you are still using different words for each ethnicity.
Just a thought
Apart from being anachronistic (as is black) in describing a characteristic in a subset of a population it is both offensive and non-specific. Offensive: in that it has a history of use in segregation in the US and has been used to describe people of mixed race who were afforded a different (slightly less discriminatory) position than "blacks" under US and South African law based on having some portion of "White" genealogy. Non-specific: because the term is unnecessarily generic (potentially could include all ethnic groups including north and south european. (why Caucasian?).
jim
I dont like anyone being referred to as coloured.
Has anyone noticed if someone is - say relating going to the hospital 90% of the time they will say that they were seen by a coloured doctor.What difference does it make?Am I being too simplistic but dont we all have the same bodily organs under our skin - so what difference does it make the tone of skin holding us together!
The reason why people use color as a descriptor is because it is easy to do so in certain circumstances. (Of course, it is sometimes done in a racist or disparaging way like the "doctor" example mentioned in another post).
If a black guy moves into Little Witherington and helps an old lady across the road, people will know who she means if she tells them about the "nice black man" who helped her. It works the other way, too: if a white guy does the same in a small Indian town.
Is Coloured a racist word?
Yes and no depending on to whom it is ascribed. Some people from ethnic minorities and multi-ethnic origin find it offensive and some don't. I can see why they do find it offensive - coloured just makes it sound like someone just got a great big felt tip pen and coloured them in.
Ortrere - The point being white people are not generalised by the skin tone they have because it is inconsequential.The same should be for everyone.after all we are all in the words of Rabbie Burns 'Jock Thamsans Bairns'.In language eveyone will understand we are all the same and that comes from a very astute man clever man who had wisdom beyond we have in this so called learned age.
Of course coloured is offensive because it harks back to slavery.I absolutely dont get it at all because as I said before we all function as human beings and have all the same organs wrapped up in a skin.