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by mcv
1570 days ago
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Depending on what you're writing, sensation might well be the entire purpose of the writing. So words that trigger the wrong sensation should absolutely be avoided, and not used to test the reader's maturity or anything like that. However, these sensations are extremely cultural. As a non-American, it's funny to see Americans trying to impose their cultural sensitivities on other countries and cultures. Like criticising crayon brands for using the word "negro" on their black crayons. Or criticising people for using an online name that vaguely looks like a forbidden American word. I also remember from many years ago an American interviewer trying to interview a black British athlete what it was like for him as an "African American". He corrected her that he's British, and she corrected to "African American Brit". It's absolutely great that Americans are trying to rid themselves of racist slurs, but combined with American cultural imperialism it can lead to weird situations that can ironically come across as quite racist again, because other cultures refuse to play by the new (entirely justified) American sensitivity rules, because in those other cultures the words lack the racist connotation that they have in the US. |
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Ah this is an old internet rumour. Either a) no footage of it survived to be on the internet or b) it was always a rumour.
Here's some discussions respectively from 2015 (trying to find it) and 2000 (stating a slightly different version of it):
https://old.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/2bf9fw/black_peo...
https://everything2.com/user/iain/writeups/Why+I+don%2527t+u...
If you can find a video source of it, I'd be curious to see it.