You hit the nail right on the head.MeatMachine said:Having a preference is one thing, being a douchebag about your preference is another.ObsidianJones said:My question is... should someone be allowed to be offended?
Considering it's a sensitive subject, I don't really see any real situation where someone would have to be totally honest about their preferences, let alone aggressive about it. For a hypothetical example, if an Asian were hitting on me, there's really no occasion I could imagine where I'd HAVE to explicitly tell them, "nah, I don't dig Asians, sorry." There'd always be another way to diffuse the situation and make my lack of interest clear without revealing my unfavorable attraction towards Asians - and being outwardly racist and offensive is something that any thoughtful person would have no trouble with to begin with.
A 'no' can suffice. A 'you're not my type' is fine. But when someone takes the time to say out like "I'm not attracted to what you are", it's like a double slap in the face. Not only am I rejecting you, I feel the need to tell you what you are on a basic level repels me.
I know some people just like to share their feelings, but it can't help but to come off like someone is trying to twist the knife a little. There's such a thing as tact or decorum. If someone constantly smells and they try to ask you out, you'll never say "Never going to date you, you smell horrible". You'll be polite and say that you're just not into that person. If someone is physically weaker than you like, you might say you're not attracted to them, but you wouldn't say "You're way too weak for me, so I'm not into you"
People who reject others and who has to make it a point on communicating it's due to their dislike of their rejectee's racial background, it's hard not to feel negatively towards them. Especially if they only make it a point of communicating their refusal of affection due to race, but never mention the other different reasons why they are rejecting other people they aren't attracted to.