this post was submitted on 14 May 2024
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[–] TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

don't think "being upset" should be the bar to determine whether something is racist. I could get upset because someone has decided to put their hair up in a ponytail or something equally silly, this should not give me the right to lock someone up...

I did specify people, not person. I very much doubt there's going to be several members of the public that would be disturbed by the pony tail scenario.

My point was that the person doing the actions that may be interpreted as racist, aren't the person who gets to decide if their actions were racist or not. That is up to the group of people interpreting the actions.

Also, I don't mention prison at all?

So there has to be some kind of intent or even awareness that they might be offending lots of people... an example of this might be wearing coal black face paint with bright red lipstick... otherwise someone who chose the wrong skin tone makeup might have a legal battle on their hands.

You don't have to have awareness or intent to participate in racism. I don't know why you are interpreting this as if it was a legal issue rather than pertaining to human decency?

If you somehow "accidentally" wore enough makeup to look like you were casted in a minstrel show, I'm sure someone would question your actions. If you somehow actually had no idea about the racism implicit in your actions....once informed, any decent person would change their behavior.

I think you are giving a bit too much benefit of doubt to this idea that it's easy to accidentally get mistaken for a racist.

I have similar concerns about "cultural appropriation" as well. Besides, if you're making an honest effort to integrate into that community or accept that community... should you be punished for it?

There's a difference between integrating with a community and claiming that you are a different ethnicity. I don't think that has much to do with cultural appropriation.