tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post1527652252575229156..comments2024-03-28T16:58:17.705-04:00Comments on Grim's Hall: Why Not Imagine Your Opponents?Grimhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07543082562999855432noreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-90235577612183534442017-04-08T09:58:16.346-04:002017-04-08T09:58:16.346-04:00Half of my nieces and nephews married into Chicano...Half of my nieces and nephews married into Chicano families. One had a passel of kids, about half dark and Latino-looking, the other half distinctly guero, including one with fiery red hair. Huge, wonderful extended families, quite a treat for us. It's a huge part of Texas culture, of course, but never one I had much of a direct entree to until recently.<br /><br />About the Japanese: I was so startled in my youth to encounter my first anti-Japanese sentiment. A friend's father came completely unspooled when my friend's sister married a Japanese fellow. It was news to me there was such a thing as anti-Japanese prejudice; I had always assumed it was a problem limited to black people, and then I learned it was a more general out-group issue. It explained what had always confused me about the plot of "South Pacific." That's not to say I don't understand the pull of endogamy; every guy I've ever been remotely involved with was as Anglo as I am, which is very. Still, it seems to me there's a gulf between drawn romantically to your own ethnic group and concluding that all other ethnic groups are inferior, or objecting when other people are attracted differently.Texan99https://www.blogger.com/profile/10479561573903660086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-57968458735292231022017-04-07T23:52:52.427-04:002017-04-07T23:52:52.427-04:00Oh, it was used in California in the '70's...Oh, it was used in California in the '70's all right- mostly between chicanos, but not only. I mainly heard it in reference to them on the side (rarely), or jokingly between friends- one of them being chicano (more common).<br /><br />Interestingly, chicanos as I knew them growing up are almost all gone now- the more recent immigrants are most of the Mexican-Americans now, and so many are intermarried. They had a very particular accent and it's a treat when I hear it anymore, as it's so rare now. Reminds me of my youth.douglashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03241790925053112959noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-19727988963019706172017-04-04T00:30:57.493-04:002017-04-04T00:30:57.493-04:00Wasn't used in California in the 70s. 50s, pos...Wasn't used in California in the 70s. 50s, possibly.jaedhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03328666344764784829noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-53687717005815251472017-04-03T22:55:38.604-04:002017-04-03T22:55:38.604-04:00Beaners are Mexicans, but I've heard the term ...Beaners are Mexicans, but I've heard the term used only once: by Tommy Chong in a Cheech and Chong movie. Maybe it's used more in California than in Texas, or at least was in the 70s or thereabouts.Texan99https://www.blogger.com/profile/10479561573903660086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-5504447709461350982017-04-03T22:01:19.537-04:002017-04-03T22:01:19.537-04:00He's from Maine, where they don't have man...He's from Maine, where they don't have many black people, or even people who know many black people. Nor Hispanics, Asians or immigrants except French-Canadians. His understanding of all groups is founded on what he reads and what he imagines. <br /><br />I once knew a reform-school boy from a very white Massachusetts town whose fantasy was to find a situation where he could shoot as many black people as possible without getting into trouble. He thought maybe he could go to Africa and do that somehow. I have also antisocial types use any insults, racial slurs in order to try to get a rise out of others. But never did they talk about "darkies," or "beaners" what are beaners? Assistant Village Idiothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01978011985085795099noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-34781329778072370172017-04-03T16:08:04.673-04:002017-04-03T16:08:04.673-04:00Heh.Heh.Grimhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07543082562999855432noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-36848266325217362692017-04-03T13:37:43.629-04:002017-04-03T13:37:43.629-04:00I once knew a guy who despised Japanese people.
H...I once knew a guy who despised Japanese people. <br />He spent a while on Guadalcanal with the USMC.<br /><br />some things can color an outlook strongly.<br /><br />ravennoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-2983793121670165412017-04-02T19:26:17.064-04:002017-04-02T19:26:17.064-04:00We had a neighbor, recently deceased, who we all k...We had a neighbor, recently deceased, who we all knew had to be diverted if he strayed near the subject of race in a conversation. He'd done some oil-company project management in West Africa when he was younger that had left him with a disgust for black people he really could not control. (He made no distinction between Africans and Americans.)<br /><br />I was very shocked once when a member of my church mentioned to me, in a kind of nudge-nudge-wink-wink fashion, that "those kind of people" didn't belong in the White House. My shock must have been visible, because she never reverted to the subject.<br /><br />Once in line at the train station in NYC I heard a man spit out the word "schwartze" in an amazingly vicious tone.<br /><br />But these are the only three examples I can easily bring to mind. I know it's around; it's just not as common as some people imagine. I get nastier comments on my Republicanism, frankly, as a routine matter.Texan99https://www.blogger.com/profile/10479561573903660086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5173950.post-16109432034763420372017-04-02T19:01:33.472-04:002017-04-02T19:01:33.472-04:00Steven King is obsessed by racism, and his books h...Steven King is obsessed by racism, and his books haven't aged well, and they're all full of cliches to begin with, because I don't think he's ever had an original thought, and neither do some other people, as apparently he's being sued over that Dark Tower series he wrote because he allegedly ripped it all off from a 1970's comic book series.<br /><br />Pretty much like that article, which I couldn't finish, it was so dumb. <br /><br /><br />Eric Blairnoreply@blogger.com