Am I Right To Be Feeling This Way?
Family Life2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Trojanfarce. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Trojanface - I've just reread my post to you and it reads overly aggressive and I didn't mean it to.
My point is that things simply change...you wouldn't sing 'Ten Little N***ers' to your child sitting on a bus, because it's just not acceptable and you know it would give offence.
The story about Baa Baa Black Sheep angers me because it came up about 18 years back (around about the time when the GLC were accused of banning 'blackboards' - which was, by the way, completely fabricated).
Simply put - if people start believing that black people are offended by the word 'black', then it just overly complicates things for the white population.
Believe me - this is a bogus story. Just because someone has taken it upon themselves to create the ban, it doesn't mean that anyone else is going to support it. Remember, we live in a diverse society where people are alllowed to be stupid. Some of these stupid people work for local authorities and educational establishments...this is how these stories come about.
Bill
I honestly can't work out why those policemen would confiscate those toys. To me, they're mildly offensive (because of what they represent), in the same way that the Black And White Minstrel Show was, but they're just so...so...in the past.
My point is that in my day to day dealings with people, PC is just not an issue. I work with people in their 20s and 30s who simply aren't brought up wanting to give offence - it's just not in our vocabulary.
The problem as I see it is that these extreme stories are published and everyone takes them as 'the norm'. They're not the norm - if they were, they wouldn't make such big stories.
By all means, shout if you feel that PC is encroaching on your daily life, but shout even louder when you hear/see examples of real racism, sexism and homophobia.
SP, don't worry, I didn't take any sort of offence as I quite agree with you on there being many things that needed to be eradicated for being out of date and out of context for this day and age.
I guess what I'm trying to get at though, is not so much that we were and continue to be brought up on nursery rhymes, it's just seems to me that it another example of interfering busybodies doing there best to erode what is harmlessly traditional.
Nox, Supernick and SP - thanks for giving me another angle to come at this from.
It's a relief to know the PC brigade don't actually exist. I for one was convinced it was a formal organisation with a rule book, membership cards, and a secret handshake like the masons. I could have sworn they hold regular meetings to discuss what things to ban next. Thanks for putting me straight on that guys, I'll sleep easier now.
Another point actually - Baa Baa Black Sheep isn't offensive, because at no point in the rhyme is the sheep in question denegrated. If the rhyme went:
Baa baa black sheep / I conclude that your wool is inferior / To wool from a white sheep
then I could see the point...but it doesn't.
Unless of course, there's a second verse to that rhyme that I've never heard.
The chances are if you're bald headed and accident prone, then Humpty Dumpty isn't exactly going to be your favourite nursery rhyme...
Let's see - Three Blind Mice is offensive to people who have lost their sight; This Little Piggy Went To Market is ofensive to Muslims (as well as those who suffer from bladder incontinence), and of course Little Miss Muffett is offensive to people with a phobia of spiders.
It wouldn't surprise me if nursery rhymes came with a government health warning in the not too distant future!
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