Someone who would use my race as weaponry in an argument of any sort is someone who's words have no weight or meaning to my ears, so no.
Speaking as a 5th/6th generation native[footnote]I never can remember which[/footnote], that's not something you get just from settling down here. Not unless you did it in the 19th century, anywayDRTJR said:As a citizen of the state of Florida I am a Cracker.
It's not less a racial slur than any other racial slur out there. Equality is equality right? Cracker can be used in the same degrading fashion as ****** and don't even try to tell me it can't because it is, most likely on a daily basis in some areas. A few years ago 3 black kids beat the shit out of a white kid in Seattle while yelling "Die cracka!", and "We gonna kill you honky!" for no apparent reason during a New Years party. So yes, cracker, cracka, honky are all racial slurs aimed at white people.SaneAmongInsane said:Been watching a lot of the George Zimmerman case. Last night I was flaberghasted when Erin Burnette of CNN referred to the word as a racial slur.
I'm sorry, but there is not a world where Cracka or Cracker could offend any white person. Right? I mean I'm pretty sure any of hear the word our minds do not jump to our skin colour but to delicious Saltine crackers. It's like calling someone Spaghetti.
Even honky... If I get called a honky the only thing my mind jumps is the old Jefferson's TV show.
Is there any white slur that has any bite at all? I mean I suppose "You impearalist swine whos anncestors kidnapped and enslaved my ancestors for years and then tried to pull that segration bullshit" but that'd be to hard to say in conversation.
Not really. I find crackers to be a delicious, if not somewhat bland, snack food. I suppose that characterizes the insult, but if somewhat bland is the worst insult someone can throw at me, I'll live. I suppose white trash would be offensive, but nobody has ever called me white trash, so I can't say. I have called other people that, but they were pretty horrible people, and I'm white, so I regret nothing.SaneAmongInsane said:Been watching a lot of the George Zimmerman case. Last night I was flaberghasted when Erin Burnette of CNN referred to the word as a racial slur.
I'm sorry, but there is not a world where Cracka or Cracker could offend any white person. Right? I mean I'm pretty sure any of hear the word our minds do not jump to our skin colour but to delicious Saltine crackers. It's like calling someone Spaghetti.
Even honky... If I get called a honky the only thing my mind jumps is the old Jefferson's TV show.
Is there any white slur that has any bite at all? I mean I suppose "You impearalist swine whos anncestors kidnapped and enslaved my ancestors for years and then tried to pull that segration bullshit" but that'd be to hard to say in conversation.
Same in Argentina. Everybody communicates loudly and aggressively. Nobody's going to bat an eye if you drop a racial slur.Carnagath said:I'm not American, so I'm unfamiliar with the word. I am Greek however, and it's pretty safe to generalize and say that we are a loud, rude and quite aggressive bunch. So, I've grown quite immune to words over the years. What does offend me are things like sleaziness, stupidity and pretentiousness, even more so when the three of those are combined, which I've unfortunately seen plenty of recently.
agree, and also, "couldn't care less" is the term you are looking fortippy2k2 said:Well whether it offends you personally or not is negligible for it is a racial slur. I'm sure there are black people who would say that it's OK to call them "Nigga" but you'd be a fool to think that it's still not a racial slur. Same thing here.
Personally, I could care less and am not offended by it at all. I have never had anyone call me a cracka but I imagine I'd just roll my eyes at them if they did.
This is correct, just because you OP don't understand the colloquial slang of another culture does not make it any less offensive and does not nullify the fact it is a racial slur.tippy2k2 said:Well whether it offends you personally or not is negligible for it is a racial slur. I'm sure there are black people who would say that it's OK to call them "Nigga" but you'd be a fool to think that it's still not a racial slur. Same thing here.
Personally, I could care less and am not offended by it at all. I have never had anyone call me a cracka but I imagine I'd just roll my eyes at them if they did.
Another interesting origin of the term comes from the time of slavery in the USA, cracker could have come from the cracking of the whips commonly used by slave drivers. To me that sounds even more offensive, who would want to be associated with such barbarism, and contempt for fellow human beings?crack·er (krkr)
n.
1. A thin crisp wafer or biscuit, usually made of unsweetened dough.
2. One that cracks, especially:
a. A firecracker.
b. A small cardboard cylinder covered with decorative paper that holds candy or a party favor and pops when a paper strip is pulled at one or both ends and torn.
c. The apparatus used in the cracking of petroleum.
d. One who makes unauthorized use of a computer, especially to tamper with data or programs.
3. Offensive
a. Used as a disparaging term for a poor white person of the rural, especially southeast United States.
b. Used as a disparaging term for a white person.
If I was able to, I would /thread you here.Zachary Amaranth said:The false pretense that we're currently equal aside, there is such a thing as context which does grant bodies unique rights to use words without offense. For example, I can make a crack about any one of my friend's mothers without repercussion. They can do the same about mine. We trash talk each others' families, beliefs, and even spouses where applicable. I wouldn't expect to be able to make a joke about your mother, or anyone else's here without repercussions, because I'm capable of understanding the difference. And I wouldn't want someone random attacking any member of my family, period. Even though I know they're all screwed up.SinisterGehe said:If you call me Craka, Cracker, Milk, Milk-face... etc... Then I am allowed to call you black, ******... ect...
We are all equal that means that you can not say that you have the unique right to some words, if it is so then we have that right also.
If you're going to equate a word tied to centuries of slavery, hate, and even abuse and violence to one literally derived from being the one holding the whip, well...I'd say it sounds like you're going out of your way to look for a reason to be offended or even possibly combative.
And honestly, if you've got a grasp of the English language (or almost any other), you should probably have some grasp on the way language always has tiers of severity in its connotation. This is one of the reasons "******" is reacted to with more vitriol than even other slurs against black people, of which there are TONS.
It's not up to you to determine how others feel when their skin color is being mocked and their dignity insulted. And I'll have you know, having an Italian side in my family, throwing the word spaghetti on them may not go over well.SaneAmongInsane said:I'm sorry, but there is not a world where Cracka or Cracker could offend any white person. Right? I mean I'm pretty sure any of hear the word our minds do not jump to our skin colour but to delicious Saltine crackers. It's like calling someone Spaghetti.
"White boy" has a hair trigger with me. Like when one of my state representatives attacked my senator for a position on gang violence as an "upper middle-class, elitist white boy solution." Yes, that has some bite, and Mark Kirk, a white man, had to sit there and take it like a professional while Bobby Rush, a black man, basically rebuked it because that's just how he is and he'll say what he means. No apology.SaneAmongInsane said:Is there any white slur that has any bite at all?