Is this Racist?

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scoopz

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Sep 15, 2011
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DarthFennec said:
... wow lol. No, that's not racist or even insensitive. I could never grasp the whole `political correctness' bullshit this kind of criticism comes from, besides the fact that people just love to be offended by things for some reason.
I agree with you. Political correctness just makes it easier for people to ***** and moan.

Danyal said:
Oh no! Someone uses a stereotype instead of showing the exact opposite! RACISM!

Assuming you are American, are you offended by this video?
<youtube=xFVdvXGIT34>
If you are, don't be offended that easily.
If you are not, Asians probably won't be offended by this.
I love Rammstein!
 

JaredXE

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I find it intensely humorous when people don't acknowledge that certain realities exist or have never existed before. Guess what? There is a Chinese fat Buddha. Not Siddartha Gautuma the original Buddha, but another one. Also....Chinese people have worn/do still wear coolie hats. This was not a hat shape made up by racist whitey, they exist and asians wore/wear them. And as for Chinese laundry, they exist! In fact it was rather common for any laundry shop in big cities (especially on the west coast) to be run by asians.

Would it be offensive to have a chinese person depicted working on a railroad? Of course not because that's what they actually did. Now if the asians were depicted with buck teeth and pee-peeing in a coke, that would be complaint worthy.....

Does racism exist? Yeah, but nowhere to the degree it did here in America in the past, and most instances of "racism" aren't intended to hurt or put down other races. But try telling that to bandwagon, knee-jerk reactionary whiners (many of them white), that ANY depiction of race that isn't wholly positive is racist and hurtful. Bullshit.
 

Zerazar

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Aug 5, 2010
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Nope. Not even a little bit. At least if a characteristic of racism is "something that should be dealt with and mitigated".
 

Thaluikhain

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intheweeds said:
I'm so sick of that goddamn video clip. Listen, straight young white guys, can you not see how you don't understand? Since when has anyone persecuted you? When you know what it feels like to be on the receiving end of racism, or any -ism, you can start talking about what is and isn't offensive. Sure you can be a part of the discussion and you should be, but you can't tell other races what is and isn't offensive as a definitive fact. Period. It is not up to you.
More or less.

I'd add, though, that being persecuted over something gives you only a limited insight into someone else being persecuted over something else, which tends to be inconvenient for some people to remember.
 

PurpLemons

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Sep 2, 2010
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Furioso said:
The bottom ones with the stereotypical Asian occupations and headgear sure are, also Buddha wasn't fat, he starved himself while searching for enlightenment, but the image of him being fat will probably never change
While Gautama Buddha did starve himself and was skinny, he's not the only Buddha.

OT: As a Chinese I don't find any of the items offensive, especially not the necklace
 

JaredXE

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intheweeds said:
Listen, straight young white guys, can you not see how you don't understand? Since when has anyone persecuted you? When you know what it feels like to be on the receiving end of racism, or any -ism, you can start talking about what is and isn't offensive. Sure you can be a part of the discussion and you should be, but you can't tell other races what is and isn't offensive as a definitive fact. Period. It is not up to you.
Hmmm, lets see. As a straight, young white guy I am told that I am a rapist and that women need to fear me, that I am racist and should not be included in racial talks because I am white (remember, only the white man is racist and never experiences it themselves). I am held to a higher standard since it's a forgone conclusion that I am "The Man" and will just walk into a position of power by virtue of my skin colour.

If 52% of the population of the earth are women, and the remaining 48% of males are divided up amongs all the races of the world....how the fuck am I not a minority?
 

Swyftstar

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May 19, 2011
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While some people do just live to cry foul at everything under the sun, other people just have feelings. Feelings can be hurt. It's not logical, it's not rational, it's emotional and can't be reasoned. Never mind racism, everybody has their things that can hurt them and when commented on or made fun of they feel bad. Condemning somebody for having their feelings hurt is just as bad as crying foul at something because you think it's not PC.
 

Freaky Lou

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intheweeds said:
"although clearly not motivated by hatred so it's hardly a problem"

I see, so anything nasty I do to others is to be judged by my motivations regardless of who I hurt. Good to know, let me just go kill my kids to 'save' them.
/sarcasm

I'm so sick of that goddamn video clip. Listen, straight young white guys, can you not see how you don't understand? Since when has anyone persecuted you? When you know what it feels like to be on the receiving end of racism, or any -ism, you can start talking about what is and isn't offensive. Sure you can be a part of the discussion and you should be, but you can't tell other races what is and isn't offensive as a definitive fact. Period. It is not up to you.

Its like punching someone in the face and then telling them it didn't hurt. You didn't just get punched in the face, how in the hell would you know? Or maybe you think it's okay as long as your motivation was suitable?

Please watch the video by MovieBob on this very site called 'Correctitude'. You obviously do not understand what 'politically correct' even means.

OT: Everyone else in this thread I pretty much agree with, the necklace is not IMO racist, it's just an image. The Buddha shirt is pushing it in my opinion, but on it's own, whatever. The bottom two shirts though? What the hell were they thinking? Cartoons stopped using that imagery decades ago, what the hell is wrong with the designers first of all, but then you know these designs had to go through tons of other people to be printed. What kind of culture do they have over at Abercrombie and Fitch anyway?
This. It's pretty frustrating watching heterosexual white males tell everyone else that they should stop being bothered by racism, sexism, etc.

That aid, as far as I can tell, these shirts are just trying to follow the "old-school" trend, which is why they're using such outdated terms and imagery. They were obviously unwisely designed, but it's like Yahtzee said about Capcom---they're not bad people, they're just idiots.
 

intheweeds

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JaredXE said:
intheweeds said:
Listen, straight young white guys, can you not see how you don't understand? Since when has anyone persecuted you? When you know what it feels like to be on the receiving end of racism, or any -ism, you can start talking about what is and isn't offensive. Sure you can be a part of the discussion and you should be, but you can't tell other races what is and isn't offensive as a definitive fact. Period. It is not up to you.
Hmmm, lets see. As a straight, young white guy I am told that I am a rapist and that women need to fear me, that I am racist and should not be included in racial talks because I am white (remember, only the white man is racist and never experiences it themselves). I am held to a higher standard since it's a forgone conclusion that I am "The Man" and will just walk into a position of power by virtue of my skin colour.

If 52% of the population of the earth are women, and the remaining 48% of males are divided up amongs all the races of the world....how the fuck am I not a minority?
I bolded the part you clearly missed there. No one said you can't be part of the discussion. And when the discussion is 'how white males are persecuted' you can start talking about what offends you too. What you can't comment on is whether or not something is offensive to someone else. You are not black, you cannot claim something 'isn't offensive to blacks'. You aren't asian so you cannot claim something 'isn't offensive to asians'. I'm a woman and so I cannot tell you what is offensive to white males. You simply cannot relate. Honestly, why can't you see that?
 

Mandalore_15

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Aug 12, 2009
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"Oriental is an outdated term"... the fuck?

Just because a term is old doesn't make it racist. Besides, now that Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi people refer to themselves as asian, how are we supposed to differentiate between them and people of, for example, Chinese or Japanese descent? They're clearly very different (and admittedly broad) ethnic groups. I don't think referring to people as oriental asians does anything other than place their ethnic origins to a smaller group of countries.
 

Mandalore_15

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Furioso said:
The bottom ones with the stereotypical Asian occupations and headgear sure are, also Buddha wasn't fat, he starved himself while searching for enlightenment, but the image of him being fat will probably never change
Actually, I just got back from 2 months of travelling in south-east Asia today (true story), and from what I gather the skinny and fat Buddha are two different people. It gets a little metaphysical though, as they are considered different aspects of the same person (holy trinity style I guess), but nevertheless, they are separate and equally legitimate images. In Thailand and Laos, it is much more common to see statues of the thin Buddha, but fat ones do exist in some temples, and I think are worshipped more by some sects of Buddhism and less by others.
 

Bocaj2000

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Sep 10, 2008
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I was told this in my improv club in college:

"When depicting a race that is not your own, expect hostility. The easiest thing to do is have race not be involved at all. With that said, anything can be funny if you know how to do it properly."

Race depiction is a touchy subject because it is how one person defines numerous people withen a single stereotype. I'm getting tired of straight young white males saying that things aren't offensive when they cannot fathom what it is like to be discriminated against. You're not black, so blackface doesn't offend you; you're not Asian, so chinese railroad workers don't offend you; you're not Jewish, so Shylock characters don't offend you; etc.etc. It's not about having thin skin; it's about fear of a racist culture.

OT: I don't really know if I would call it racist. If a Chinese company made any of them, there would probably be no controversy. I think that because the company is American and displays out of date characicatures that have been used in old racist imagery, people are pulling the race card.
 

Fearzone

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Dec 3, 2008
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One is free to point out racial insensitivities, which isn't racism BTW, but if somebody cries wolf for everything, eventually we are going to stop listening. There is nothing I see here that ought to be particularly offensive to Asians.
 

surg3n

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May 16, 2011
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''We're all living in America, coca-cola, wonderbra!''
Love that Rammstein song.

I'm wondering if I 'should' be offended by stereotypes, like every Scotsman wears a kilt, is ginger, and liable to headbutt anyone who looks at them twice. Really I don't care or find it remotely offensive, just like most Asians wouldn't consider that necklace offensive. Racism has to be about more than showing an image, outdated or not - true racism should be a direct and detremental comment about a specific race of people. So if the little Asian woman was riding a scooter with 4 weeks shopping on the back and 3 kids hanging off the handlebars, then that might be considered racist. Some people need to wind their necks back in - especially when it's jewelry and T-shirts, these things are supposed to be light hearted - getting sick of listening to people who are offended because that's what they think they should be offended by.

The problem with political correctness, is that people who don't voice an opinion (i.e. the majority of people) don't find it offensive. If 0.1% of people find that necklace offensive, then maybe we should start caring about the 99.9% who didn't comment, people who might even like the necklace, or T-shirt, or whatever. We pay too much attention to negative people... like when news shows talk to 'the man in the street' - well the man in the street on a weekday afternoon is most likely a total idiot. The silent majority can do with speaking up, and call bullshit on all this.
 

Spinhorse

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Aug 2, 2010
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http://www.snorgtees.com/tuxedo-t-shirt-jesus

This is not racist or insensitive. Ergo, that isn't either
 

AngloDoom

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Aug 2, 2008
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As far as I can see, it's just stereotypical. Stereotypes aren't racist in my mind, as to be racist makes it sounds like it has intent to insult. Some Chinese people are bound to wear the headgear, and the geisha-necklace is as racist as a European knight on a necklace. It's not.

Now, if the shirts had the Chinese characters on them worshipping an American car or something to mock, then yes it would be racist.

brunothepig said:
Probably a little, although clearly not motivated by hatred so it's hardly a problem. More importantly, who the fuck cares? It's been a while since I posted this video actually...
This clip needs to die. I see it on every thread about a similar topic and every single time people worship it as if it has all the answers. It's a convenient one-size-fits-all retort. Being offended isn't the crux of it all - intent to offend is also an issue. If I say "I am a ****" no-one could be offended, and at most could politely request me not to say it around them. If I turned around and called someone a ****, even if they've heard the word a millions times before my objective of insulting them will get them riled alone. This is enough for me to say I simply don't agree with the man.

Steve Hughes is a comedian, not a philosophy.