Question Author
sp1814
If you were walking down the road with your family, and I for no reason whatsoever walked up to your daughter and called where a f****** white c***, would you simply shrug it off and walk away?
To the best of my ability I would defend my daughter, since I as a white person does not enjoy the protection of the law, as a black person does, regarding such name calling.
/// If you were in a pub with your grandchildren and a group of men were using very strong language, effing and blinding, and telling dirty jokes, and you knew that they weren't 'trouble' (ie. you didnt feel physically threatened) would you ask them politely to keep in down? ///
Yes.
/// Lastly, can you tell me whether you have been subjected to racist abuse? How did you feel about it when it happened? Did it stick with you? Did it make you angry that people could get away with given you verbal abuse and you were supposed to just take it, no matter what? ///
No I have not been subjected to racist abuse, but apart from it being physical, I can see nothing different to what a white person has to endure in similar verbal insulting circumstances, so why should black persons be any different?
I only hope that that has gone some way in explaining my point of view?