Well this is just a clear-cut case of how impressed you are with yourself. I've never visited your profile.
http://www.theologyonline.com/forum...r_messaging&u=13987&page=16#visitor_messaging
You left me a message on it.
Well this is just a clear-cut case of how impressed you are with yourself. I've never visited your profile.
You sure did, back when you were on my friends list - and ive told you before.
You can pretend anything you want, your name was in the little box of those who have visited my profile before and it didnt get there without you being on it, sorry.
Dont make idiotic statements and you wont get called on them.
My grandmother was half. I would have called her redskin, yes.But that's not what they're being called in this case, and you know it.
Would you call an American Indian a redskin to their face? Yes or no.
Yes, I think that such must be seen in that light but we were doing it to each other long before whites ever came (if I can speak from my 1/4 blood at all). I suppose Grandma only being half disqualifies me. But we had a balanced view of these matters and felt we did some of it to ourselves. Not that such is deserved or an excuse. In my state, they are buying land back and may one day get a lot of territory back.I'm not aware of anyone who thinks the reservation situation is anything less than a shameful disgrace.
Er, I looked this up. You folks must be using a different dictionary than I do Article Wikipedia Websters /Dictionary.com (couldn't find it in my older complete edition so this one is surprisingly limited to modern sentiment.A recap...
Many TOLers are fond of pointing to the dictionary as the be-all end-all of a topic or issue (and Lord help you if you don't care about the definition; they will pounce on you). So, why isn't the dictionary definition of "redskin" good enough in this case?
Nothing is gained by keeping the name; we lose nothing by changing it; we gain, at least, a (very) small victory in the name of dignity and mutual respect.
The word was used to refer to dead Indians and the bounties paid out for their scalps.
Intention seems beside the point.
This is an issue more of good taste, dignity, and respect, not some insidious assault by the "thought police" who are trying to steal our "freedom," or somesuch.
We would lose our freedom. Nothing much really, just that.What exactly would we lose here? Practically and specifically--what advantage is there in keeping this ugly little name?
No problem with that. But that ain't the same as telling someone they aren't allowed to use this or that word. If the Washington Redskins want to change their name, I am sure that's fine. Like that village in Spain I mentioned before. They did it of their own accord. If you really want to give respect there are a lot of more practical things you can be getting up to.We would gain just a little something, a modicum, perhaps, of respect for a proud people we've treated disgracefully. That's not asking for a whole lot.
Bingo!
A sports team doesn't name itself after something they dislike or intend to mock. They named themselves the Redskins because they believed that was a tough, proud, and good, name to be called.
:mock: Liberals
In which case it should not be a matter of law or anyone suing or bullying anyone else.
We would lose our freedom. Nothing much really, just that.
We could have used any other word. If you make a law that you aren't allowed to use that word (or a societal rule of some kind) you could still use another word to convey the same meaning. All you have done is to make people frustrated at having their tongues tied.
What you really need is not the control over words but the control over intent.
You would have to outlaw 'the use of any words which have a disparaging intent towards any person based on their race, etc.' Now c'mon, be serious... This is not the subject of law but of education. You can't have people going round worried in case they utter the wrong word.
If the Washington Redskins want to change their name, I am sure that's fine.
By the way, I have heard of the Redskins a lot but I have ever once considered their name to be an affront to the red Indians.
Whereas diminishing something institutionally insulting to the minority in question is rather what a certain segment of the majority tends to do.Oh yeah, the one's sitting in high places making problems out of nothing, which is what ALL specialty groups do.
I was born and make my home in the South. That mostly doesn't happen. Blacks here mostly see and disparage that flag as a remnant of a racist past they'd as soon see covered in something other than mistaken glory.Go down south, for example, and notice black people themselves, whether redneck or thug, making use of the Confederate flag.
Then they'd be overreaching. But it's a symbol, in large part, of a racist institution.Now go ask the NAACP about it, and they will say it's racist.
No it isn't true, which is why I linked to an article that not only mentioned current efforts but that efforts have been ongoing for decades.... It is otherwise virtually true that Native Americans simply do not care, and this whole thing is just being blown out the water for no good reason.
I can believe that.A sports team doesn't name itself after something they dislike or intend to mock
Maybe so. But here's the point I just finished making: it's something very different to a large part of the population it represents.They named themselves the Redskins because they believed that was a tough, proud, and good, name to be called.
No, it's no more a liberal issue than the Civil Rights movement was about liberalism because they were the ones doing the fighting against an entrenched conservative front, strongly Southern.:mock: Liberals
You and I know what?Okay, it wasn't intended and the makers didn't know. Now they and you and I do.
I told you in my response, right before the part you quoted, that a sizable part of that community is offended by the use, that there has been an ongoing and several decades long attempt by representatives of those Native Americans to have the name changed. A name whose use Merriam Webster notes is usually intended as offensive.You and I know what?
The only people that I see offended by the Redskins mascot are a bunch of limp-wristed liberals.I told you in my response, that a sizable part of that community is offended by the use, that there has been an ongoing and several decades long attempt by representatives of those Native Americans to have the name changed. A name whose use Merriam Webster notes is usually intended as offensive.
I think many around here from the majority side of things are just tired of feeling pushed around by this or that minority and are responding to this more in that spirit than because they really think it's a good idea to keep a name that offends many of the people it purports to represent with good intention.
The NFL commissioner said that a significantly smaller number than that would be enough. I think he's right.
Sometimes the law is there to compel folks to do what they should have done on their own.
Then you should open your eyes a bit wider. But even if that were true (and it isn't) why should that matter? Why should your disdain for liberals keep you from supporting the measure (to change the name) any more than it should have kept you from supporting the Civil Rights movement?The only people that I see offended by the Redskins mascot are a bunch of limp-wristed liberals.
This is really your mentality. This argument was not about what the law intended to do. It was about what effect the law would have in a particular case.
You decided some while ago to reject Christ and in so doing you no longer have any clear basis for doing what is right.
Nothing is gained by keeping the name; we lose nothing by changing it; we gain, at least, a (very) small victory in the name of dignity and mutual respect.
They aren't projecting, unless you own a really bad dictionary. And it's not an either/or in terms of important or lesser issues. That's why you likely don't spend all of your political energy on one issue either.A lot is gained by keeping the name. It states that people need to grow up and focus on actual issues instead of wasting away at projecting anything that they find 'offensive'.
I'd agree if that was the objection. No one's civil rights are being violated. But the actual objection is reasonable. The response to it should be too.Seriously, so far people have managed to make this a civil rights issue- a name of a football team.
That's rank nonsense.
Like I said to Knight, this isn't about that. It's about a name usually offensive in nature being used to represent a segment of our society and a large number of those people naturally objecting.It's just another victory for political correctness, the same demon that hinders our sufficiency for doing just about anything when it comes to politics, religion, security, and so on.
Rather, it's sad to see conservative voices defending the absurd because to them the issue has to be about something other than the actual issue.It's sad that people have to walk on eggshells not to 'offend' somebody.
What if a mostly black team uses Vikings?