Well we already know that most politicians are completely detached from reality, they all like to stick with their "own kind" rather than mingle with the peasants.
That's a first, never seen a quote from me attributed to someone else

Well we already know that most politicians are completely detached from reality, they all like to stick with their "own kind" rather than mingle with the peasants.
Well we already know that most politicians are completely detached from reality, they all like to stick with their "own kind" rather than mingle with the peasants.
It is an occasional quirk (AKA bug) of this forum software.Not sure how you’ve managed to add my name to somebody else’s post
Not sure how you’ve managed to add my name to somebody else’s post
Unfortunately not everyone sees things as you do and if the existence of 'black' and 'white' people is ignored then we risk turning a blind eye when someone doesn't see them as people but as 'black' and 'white'.
About 12 years ago I was working in a restaurant where there was a black chef. When he finished his shift, some awkward and inebriated well-meaning white folks made conversation with him. Afterwards he was shaking his head mildly amused, stating "WTF century were they from? Coloured? I'm BLACK not 'coloured'".
It's great we've got this thread and have logically and autistically hashed out that it's fine to refer to black people as coloured again. The fact a public figure and politician, who's choices can decide the fate of millions thanks to her role as secretary for the DWP, obviously hasn't done the expected mingling with the public we'd think her position requires and has made this faux pas has shot over most people's heads.
The funny thing here is, it's not the usual case of a millennial getting irrationally offended by an older person unknowingly using an obsolete term, it's a case of an older person getting fake offended by another older person unknowingly using an obsolete term xD
It hasn't flown over most peoples heads, it's just as most people would have made the same mistake they don't really care about it. It's no different than somebody still saying LGBT without realising they're supposed to say LGBTQI...JKLMNOP nowadays (unless it's changed again this week).
Same old nonsense.I disagree. As long as the idea that an obviously inaccurate description of a person's skin colour is their identity is treated as being valid, let alone actively encouraged and politically dominant, there's little or no chance of people being seen as people. We need to be saying "This view is wrong. It's factually wrong. It's ethically wrong. It's so wrong that it's downright deluded and possibly insane. It is not a valid view." So yes, "the existence of 'black' and 'white' people" should be ignored because it's not reality and it's a dangerous idea. Group identity politics is nothing more or less than the idea that "they're all the same", i.e. the foundation of irrational prejudice. We shouldn't ignore the fact that some people think that way, but we also shouldn't think that way ourselves.
I don't see this as a problem. It's the term I grew up with too. Far to many sensitive folks in this world who clearly don't have enough to worry about. If it's taught Ms Rudd anything it should be not to ever ever come to the defence of Abbott again.
The term coloured or brown is offensive...however black or white is not.
Hang on - why is brown offensive?
I've heard people from or with ancestry from the Indian subcontinent refer to themselves as "brown people" as no doubt "black people" is synonymous with people from or with ancestry from Africa.
Perhaps it's just a US thing but isn't person of colour now quite an accepted term? Coloured person on the other hand is very much frowned upon despite basically being the same thing.
I disagree. As long as the idea that an obviously inaccurate description of a person's skin colour is their identity is treated as being valid, let alone actively encouraged and politically dominant, there's little or no chance of people being seen as people. We need to be saying "This view is wrong. It's factually wrong. It's ethically wrong. It's so wrong that it's downright deluded and possibly insane. It is not a valid view." So yes, "the existence of 'black' and 'white' people" should be ignored because it's not reality and it's a dangerous idea. Group identity politics is nothing more or less than the idea that "they're all the same", i.e. the foundation of irrational prejudice. We shouldn't ignore the fact that some people think that way, but we also shouldn't think that way ourselves.
'People of color' is a buzz phrase invented to make all non white people feel inclusive, the issue with describing people as just 'coloured' goes back to times of slavery and imperialism. Tbh a lot of people don't like the phrase 'people of color' as it waters down peoples cultural and ethnic backgrounds verse's describing some as they are e.g 'black'.Perhaps it's just a US thing but isn't person of colour now quite an accepted term? Coloured person on the other hand is very much frowned upon despite basically being the same thing.