Monday, October 9, 2017

About the N Word

Ok, I'm white, so if I say, "Nigga," it's racist, but if a black person says, "Nigga," it's fine.  So how about this?  If you're white, you can call white people, "Cracka."  But let's say you're part black and part white?  If you're part black and part white and you're mostly black you can say, "Crigga," if you're mostly white, you can say, "Nicka," and if you're half and half then let's just make up another word ending in, "a" that only you can say.  Is this complicated to you?  Then how about this?  For each word, either anyone can say it or no one can say it?  Otherwise it's segregation of vocabulary and segregation eliminates equality.

Now let me clarify some things, —everything that I said after, "Ok, I'm white, so if I say, "Nigga," it's racist, but if a black person says, "Nigga," it's fine." and everything I said before, "Is this complicated to you?"— was sarcasm.  The point I'm trying to make is that equality means you can't judge people based on what ethnicity they are, that means that you can't have mindsets like, 'this person doesn't deserve to be allowed to use this word because of this person's race.'

So let's promote equality and let's all have the mindset, 'I don't have a problem with people using this  word no matter what ethnicity they are,' or the mindset, 'I do have a problem with anyone using this word no matter what ethnicity they are.'  Just pick one mindset and stick with it.

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