Ohhhh crap guys. We need to stop calling people Irish or Children!
Other than as a facile excuse to be gratuitously offensive about someone, does this thread have any purpose?
from what i've seen on Twitter, that seems to be quite true.I bet most of the people offended by it are white.
did you type that right? it's not a word i'd call my missus, who's black.Coloured hasn't been unaccepted for decades.
i suppose you call someone that's mixed-race "half-caste"?There as been no big incidents were someone called someone else coloured and a mini riot broke out. The only people ive seen offended is other white people who whisper "oh you shouldnt call them coloured these days...".
However, I had no idea "Coloured" was considered so offensive.
did you type that right? it's not a word i'd call my missus, who's black.
you're right. i'm just virtue-signalling and not contributing to the debate at all.I bet she's not black.
Would that be a bad thing?Yes - it gives LabR@t the chance to vent his alt-right faux rage - if he doesn't do it at least three times a week his head will explode in a shower of gammon.
She gets abuse on twitter because she is an utter spanner.I like how the context it was used in was completely disregarded, i.e. she was actually using it to high light the abuse Diane Abbott receives on Twitter, yet Diane then stabs her in the back for it like the moronic coward she is.
you're right. i'm just virtue-signalling and not contributing to the debate at all.
She would describe herself as blue-black. You'd have to actually talk to some PoCs to understand that. But calling someone "coloured" is just a bit outdated. I don't find it offensive because I'm pink-ish.Lol. No no, I have no doubt she's real! What I mean is that black as a term for describing someones race is utter crap. She isn't black. In the same way I (and I'm guessing you) aren't actually white. I'd hazard I'm closer to being white than she is to black by a fair margin though!
My argument would be that coloured is probably a more accurate term. The reason some see it as being offensive is because it was the term in use at a time when prevailing attitudes were wrong. I'd posit that if the term black had been in use in the 40s, 50s etc. then black would be seen as the offensive term.
What needed (and thankfully has) to change was the attitude. Not the terminology. Calling someone black doesn't mean you're not a racist. Calling someone coloured doesn't mean you are.
I thought the offensive part was sticking up for Diane.
Imagine bringing attention to the fact that black people suffer worse abuse than other MP's and then being called a racist. Where has common sense gone?
How comes white and black are the only accepted terms for skin colour? You can’t call a Chinese man yellow or an Indian a brown man.
Could you explain why black is an acceptable term?
Because black people tend to identify with the word. It's simply the difference between a group defining itself, vs a term used against them.
I have no Japanese people in my circles am I now not to be trusted to do my job?
She gets abuse on twitter because she is an utter spanner.