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Cultural Appropriation - Censorship vs Racism, or not?

#1

Eriol

Eriol

Cultural Appropriation is a term that has been thrown around lately, and there have been repercussions from it in various forms.

Specifically, here's a good "summary article" of a recent shitstorm that's happened in Canada: Walrus editor Jonathan Kay quits amid free speech uproar: ‘I have been censoring myself more and more’

Here's another more generic response that doesn't mention the current controversy: Forget ‘cultural appropriation’ -- it’s about censorship

A contrary view here: Cultural appropriation and the privilege of creative assumption

So what's the opinions here? Free speech? Horrible racism? Censorship? Preserving Identity? Melting Pot of culture? Mosaic? Eriol's full of shit? Opinions welcome on all of that!


#2

Dave

Dave

Cultural appropriation is stupid. If I'm white and I want to wear traditional African garb then so be it.


#3

Tinwhistler

Tinwhistler

Here's how I feel about it:

I have a black friend who likes to play Irish music. Should she be allowed?
Can only cowboys wear jeans?
As a white male with 99.96 of my genes coming from Britain/Ireland (according to 23andMe) am I allowed to cook Mexcian food? Or do I have to stick with colcannon?
If I see an outfit someone is wearing, and I like it, do I have to do intensive research into the cultural and political history of the clothing before I can buy some for myself?
If I told a black person "You can't wear that. Those are white people clothes," would that be racist?


Also:
"We notice that you're using and ad-blocker, so we're going to hide the article so you can't read it." "That's nice. Did you also know I can adblock the javascript that you're using to do that? checkmate"


#4

Eriol

Eriol

"We notice that you're using and ad-blocker, so we're going to hid the article so you can't read it." "That's nice. Did you also know I can adblock the javascript that you're using to do that? checkmate"
I didn't even get that. I guess my combination of uBlock Origin and Ghostery took out the Javascript already.


#5

Ravenpoe

Ravenpoe

Can cultural appropriation be racist? Yes, most anything can, especially if said by a racist. So for this exercise, let's focus on the racist form.

Is blocking racist speech censorship and a limitation of free speech? Yes.


Is backlash against racist speech censorship? No, you should have the freedom to say it, but people have the freedom to think you're racist.


None of this is to say that "cultural appropriation" is inherently racist. It isn't, cultures blend and influence each other all the time, and have for as long as humans have existed.


#6

Gared

Gared

Any time someone tells me I shouldn't do something because it comes from another culture, I try to ask myself if the source* is really concerned about the culture that I'm supposedly appropriating, or if their main concern is keeping me from introducing more of a mixture into my own "white" culture. So far I'm mostly convinced that a lot of this "cultural appropriation" nonsense is actually white nationalists trying to prevent cultural mingling in order to keep America, Canada, and the UK "pure."


*since I've never actually had anyone tell me personally not to appropriate a culture - theirs or someone else's - the source always seems to be "someone on Twitter said," or "someone on Tumblr said," not really the most voraciously fact-checked sources.


#7

Denbrought

Denbrought

I think cultural appropriation is only relevant when what is being remixed/taken/copied/adapted is something fundamental/sacred to another culture, and then only because being disrespectful/desecrating is unkind or ignorant at best. Outside of the social faux-pas aspect (and the ensuing ostracism), IDGAF.

Context matters, and there shouldn't be firm rules (such as "X act is always cultural appropriation", or "Y group cannot partake in X culture's customs").

I swear, though, if I see another American restaurant serving mayo+garlic powder as allioli I'm going on a rampage.

Edit: For Poe's sake... The last line is a joke, and the only foods I would classify as susceptible to cultural appropriation would be items such as altar bread.


#8

strawman

strawman

Cultural appropriation feels like a single example of racism taken too far - perhaps to its logical extreme.

There are ways artists can use cultural notes/symbols/etc in a racist manner, intentionally or unintentionally. That could be labelled "bad", and I doubt you'd find many who disagree.

However these have to be evaluated in their context. The concept of analyzing for cultural appropriation in the absence of any other offense is problematic. You either find racism that isn't actually there, or you create racism merely by analyzing something looking for it. You've got people who incorrectly believe that wearing dreadlocks if you aren't black is cultural appropriation, but you find that they are hardly the first culture/race/people to wear them - if anything by denying that any other race or culture used them prior, or suggesting that they belong solely to one recent group/race/culture one could be considered culture destroying, worse in some minds than simple appropriation.

Those promoting cultural appropriation are on collision course with those who believe biologically determined identity is a cultural construct.


#9

Necronic

Necronic

This one is so hard because it exists on such an incredibly broad spectrum. Yes, it's totally unreasonable for me to censor myself for enjoying Ethiopian food or wearing a sarong, which I just find comfortable. But it would be foolish to pretend the other extreme doesn't exist:

http://www.thegloss.com/culture/dea...ollege-parties-blackface-mexican-stereotypes/

People who participate in stuff like this need to get called out and appropriate actions need to be taken. The issue is that people who are totally ok with blackface try to pretend they are in the same "halp I'm being censored crowd" as someone who is wearing a sarong to try and equivocate their blatantly racist acts.

Anyways. It's a complex issue at its face, but when you just judge each act on its merits I think it's easy to see what's really racist and what isn't.


#10

Eriol

Eriol

Anyways. It's a complex issue at its face, but when you just judge each act on its merits I think it's easy to see what's really racist and what isn't.
I think most people 100% agree with this statement Necronic, but IMO the problem is those who say, like @stienman mentions above, that anybody non-black wearing Dreadlocks is Cultural Appropriation. It's a decent example, as wearing them yourself (not a wig for a costume I mean) is clearly not done for making fun of another group, yet it has publicly been denounced as Appropriation. Another example (that I'm failing to find a link on) was somebody white re-tweeting parts of a Beyonce song (slightly altered), and getting called out on this... until people found out the song was written by somebody white. So where does that fall?

Because I think cultures mixing and changing one another is for the most part good, I think most of this is absolute crap. The main case where it's horrific is things like blackface, and other cases where people are clearly making fun of or trying to disparage another culture. Just wearing a sarong or dreadlocks doesn't qualify in the least, and is usually somebody liking aspects of other cultures, and wanting to celebrate them.

Another great realm is food. Fusion is delicious, but so is "genuine" food of another culture, prepared well by somebody not of that culture. I think one of the greatest examples of this is a Food Network judge named Marcus Samuelsson. Ethiopian, but adopted and raised by Swedes. Where does he fall? I'd argue, wherever he wants to.

Where it can get hazy is with things like art. Is a certain style (for art) ONLY for people descended from such? Well what "purity" do you need to be? What if you just like the style, shouldn't that be allowed to influence you? Should nobody who's not Dutch be allowed to paint like Van Gogh?

What about literature? If you write a story about a character who isn't of your race/sex/identity is that now invalid? Where does that go? What about your characters in something international where it's impossible to be everybody?

There may be some edge cases in a couple of the things I mentioned, but far and wide, I think that mixing and celebrating each other's cultures together to the point where we all take what we like from each into something new is the best way forward, not isolating each other into little camps where we're each "this" or "that" culture/identity.


#11

GasBandit

GasBandit

99% of the things I read where the term "cultural appropriation" is used is just bullshit with some wackjob who has their panties in a twist.

It is possible to appropriate cultural aspects, but that accusation mostly gets used by would-be SJW types with their head up their ass, and the massive amounts of crying-wolf dilutes what little genuine use of the term is left.


#12

Necronic

Necronic

I think most of it is people from both sides making mountains out of molehills which just ends up hiding the real mountains.

Because there are real mountains. I had someone at work recently tell me that they didn't think there was anything wrong with blackface, and then when we started talking about Eddie Murphy's white face in White Like Me he got very offended.

There are real issues of racism here. But people are choosing to go after the unimportant stuff because it's all easy ammo for both sides. Don't get worked up on the little stuff in either direction.[DOUBLEPOST=1495130380,1495130190][/DOUBLEPOST]By that I mean that you have people on the "left" getting worked up over nonsense, and people on the "right" saying how it's just a bunch of SJW's getting triggered over nothing.

And then you have frats wearing blackface and throwing MLK parties with nooses. And when legitimate criticism comes out about those it's drowned out by all the bullshit.

Both sides have a choice to ignore the bullshit, but they go for it because it's easy stuff to bicker over.


#13

MindDetective

MindDetective

I always struggle wit this concept. Like GB, it seems as if it is applied very broadly. Taken to an extreme, it requires every cultural group to be compartmentalized in perpetuity. That doesn't seem like the makings for a healthy society. I saw a pithy definition of it pop up on Facebook the other day that struck the right kind of chord in my wrestling to figure it out. I cannot for the life of me find it again, but this one is okay enough, I guess:



By this definition, making and enjoying my wholly inauthentic tacos at home does little to marginalize a group and their rich history. If I opened a restaurant to sell those tacos, called it Taco Juan's, and gave the entire staff sombreros to wear, then I'm marginalizing the group, no matter what my intent is. I am appropriating elements of another culture to benefit me, and in so doing reducing a rich history and culture to single note stereotype.



Cultural appropriation is like taking a shortcut through someone else's backyard without considering all the time, effort, and history that went into landscaping it.

At what point does appreciation turn into appropriation or vice versa? I don't know, but it must happen somewhere. I think we should be allowed the chance to learn about and appreciate a culture without it being appropriated. I think the danger comes in adopting a single aspect of a culture and eschewing everything else connected to it. The cultural artifact you've taken is stripped of its context and can become racist. But I'm not sure that is justification for censorship. Backlash is fine, but not outright censorship.


#14

Necronic

Necronic

Also I have to say I find this topic so interesting because it somewhat furthers my belief that white people these days are some of the most fragile folks around when it comes to racial oppression. Because that's what a lot of this stuff comes down to, being called racist because you are white and "appropriating" some cultural concept when really you just like the way some clothing or whatever looks. That's an (incredibly light) form of racism itself.

But listening to *how* white people react to stuff like this they think it's the harbinger of some kind of genocide. There are people that legitimately think that whites are the most oppressed race around, which is just hilarious.

White people are soft bitches on this stuff, and are more willing to accept blackface than consider running the risk of a little censorship. And I'm not saying that people here are ok with blackface, but you guys had a pretty substantial conversation about cultural appropriation without even mentioning the most glaring and awful forms of it.

Sure, in the back of your heads you know that's incredibly wrong, but what you're really interested in is "how does this effect me", and the truly racist stuff has no affect on you. So you don't really think about it.

But take a moment and really compare how the toothless censorship of shrill Tumblr SJW's really effects you, and then consider how the extreme forms of appropriation effect minorities.

Get over the completely ignorable "censorship", and pay attention to the fairly devastating appropriation that does actually exist. Because if the only thing we can talk about as White People is how racism effects us (the least racially oppressed group in the world), then maybe we really aren't as advanced as we think we are. We're just the shittiest participant in the oppression olympics.


#15

Eriol

Eriol

By this definition, making and enjoying my wholly inauthentic tacos at home does little to marginalize a group and their rich history. If I opened a restaurant to sell those tacos, called it Taco Juan's, and gave the entire staff sombreros to wear, then I'm marginalizing the group, no matter what my intent is. I am appropriating elements of another culture to benefit me, and in so doing reducing a rich history and culture to single note stereotype.
But can I open a restaurant called Taco Bill (yes I'm being punny) and just sell tacos, and maybe even tacos with marsalasauce? Or masala sauce? (Yes they're very different) Or with Hoi Sin? Or anything else that I think is tasty? Some would say THAT is still appropriating somebody's food/culture badly. I say it's putting nice stuff in my food that I sell to other people. But then how am I "allowed" to decorate the place? THAT would get interesting quickly.
At what point does appreciation turn into appropriation or vice versa? I don't know, but it must happen somewhere. I think we should be allowed the chance to learn about and appreciate a culture without it being appropriated. I think the danger comes in adopting a single aspect of a culture and eschewing everything else connected to it. The cultural artifact you've taken is stripped of its context and can become racist. But I'm not sure that is justification for censorship. Backlash is fine, but not outright censorship.
I have my objections on the idea that anything is justification for censorship, but that's a (slightly) different debate.

On-topic though, I think The Noob comic showed this very very well a while back: Direct Link

This is the "management" guy completely missing the point, and making fun of cultures as if they are only a stereotype. This is outright racism in pretty much every way.

But I disagree with taking one aspect and being "this is awesome" is a bad thing. The conditions that lead to Blues music are horrific life experiences in many ways. Does that mean that if I like playing (or dear God, even composing) such music that I'm "appropriating" it and not respecting it? That certain genetic tendencies in certain races caused hairstyles to go a certain way mean that using any said styles is also racist/appropriation? There are those who answer "yes" to both of those. MindDetective, you even linked an image more-than-implying such in your post. I don't hold to that, and honestly, I agree with @DarkAudit that a lot of this (from both sides) is just a smokescreen obscuring real and damaging cases of real racism and/or discrimination happening. And that's bad.


#16

GasBandit

GasBandit

I'm not even really convinced that most modern uses of "blackface" is cultural appropriation. Just plain old racism, as it is generally meant as a mockery. The old "White folks be like this, black folks be like this" line of comedy. Compare this to, say, Ganguro Girls "culture" in Japan, which might come closer to it given that it's done unironically without intent to mock, because they think dark skin is "cool."

For something to be true cultural appropriation, that lack of ironic intent seems to be required. Frat boys coating themselves in shoe polish isn't done because they think it is cool, it's because they're specifically trying to lampoon.

Now, compare that to someone who claims native american heritage or black/minority status when they are clearly not applicable. Or suburban white boys affecting inner city dialects and mannerisms that society oh-so-charmingly lables "wiggers." Heck, even American Japanophile weeaboos with their broken japlish and obsessive adoption of half-understood aspects of Japanese culture.

Basically, there's a lot of genuine appropriation out there, but it's also rarely the stuff that people get most worked up about. Really, cultural appropriation is seldom a "big deal." Racism is. And it seems to me that the term "cultural appropriation" is just a fancy buzzword that sophists like to use instead because it sounds fancier.


#17

MindDetective

MindDetective

But can I open a restaurant called Taco Bill (yes I'm being punny) and just sell tacos, and maybe even tacos with marsalasauce? Or masala sauce? (Yes they're very different) Or with Hoi Sin? Or anything else that I think is tasty? Some would say THAT is still appropriating somebody's food/culture badly. I say it's putting nice stuff in my food that I sell to other people. But then how am I "allowed" to decorate the place? THAT would get interesting quickly.
You are allowed to decorate it any way you want, but you might be appropriating culture to your gain and their detriment in doing so.

I have my objections on the idea that anything is justification for censorship, but that's a (slightly) different debate.
That was kind of my point as well.

But I disagree with taking one aspect and being "this is awesome" is a bad thing. The conditions that lead to Blues music are horrific life experiences in many ways. Does that mean that if I like playing (or dear God, even composing) such music that I'm "appropriating" it and not respecting it? That certain genetic tendencies in certain races caused hairstyles to go a certain way mean that using any said styles is also racist/appropriation? There are those who answer "yes" to both of those. MindDetective, you even linked an image more-than-implying such in your post. I don't hold to that, and honestly, I agree with @DarkAudit that a lot of this (from both sides) is just a smokescreen obscuring real and damaging cases of real racism and/or discrimination happening. And that's bad.
1.) Playing or liking it alone is not enough to answer the question. If you do so in the absence of understanding the context from which it came, then you are probably heading towards appropriation.
2.) If the hairstyle is culturally significant in some way, then yes, it is cultural appropriation. if it is not, then I'd argue it isn't appropriation. You bring of genetics here, which I think is a good place to differentiate cultural appropriation from racism. Blackface, as @Necronic mentioned, is incredibly racist, but it is also a racist act that is not always connected to culture, which means understanding or appreciating a cultural context doesn't make it any less racist.
3.) Cultural appropriation is not necessarily racist. I could appropriate Irish culture (I am white, with British heritage) without reflecting upon race. A black person could appropriate an African culture. I think it is important to differentiate cultural appropriation from racism. They often intersect but are not the same thing.[DOUBLEPOST=1495133873,1495133816][/DOUBLEPOST]
I'm not even really convinced that most modern uses of "blackface" is cultural appropriation. Just plain old racism, as it is generally meant as a mockery. The old "White folks be like this, black folks be like this" line of comedy. Compare this to, say, Ganguro Girls "culture" in Japan, which might come closer to it given that it's done unironically without intent to mock, because they think dark skin is "cool."

For something to be true cultural appropriation, that lack of ironic intent seems to be required. Frat boys coating themselves in shoe polish isn't done because they think it is cool, it's because they're specifically trying to lampoon.

Now, compare that to someone who claims native american heritage or black/minority status when they are clearly not applicable. Or suburban white boys affecting inner city dialects and mannerisms that society oh-so-charmingly lables "wiggers." Heck, even American Japanophile weeaboos with their broken japlish and obsessive adoption of half-understood aspects of Japanese culture.

Basically, there's a lot of genuine appropriation out there, but it's also rarely the stuff that people get most worked up about. Really, cultural appropriation is seldom a "big deal." Racism is. And it seems to me that the term "cultural appropriation" is just a fancy buzzword that sophists like to use instead because it sounds fancier.
Beat me by || that much.


#18

Necronic

Necronic

I'm not even really convinced that most modern uses of "blackface" is cultural appropriation. Just plain old racism, as it is generally meant as a mockery. The old "White folks be like this, black folks be like this" line of comedy. Compare this to, say, Ganguro Girls "culture" in Japan, which might come closer to it given that it's done unironically without intent to mock, because they think dark skin is "cool."

For something to be true cultural appropriation, that lack of ironic intent seems to be required. Frat boys coating themselves in shoe polish isn't done because they think it is cool, it's because they're specifically trying to lampoon.

Now, compare that to someone who claims native american heritage or black/minority status when they are clearly not applicable. Or suburban white boys affecting inner city dialects and mannerisms that society oh-so-charmingly lables "wiggers." Heck, even American Japanophile weeaboos with their broken japlish and obsessive adoption of half-understood aspects of Japanese culture.

Basically, there's a lot of genuine appropriation out there, but it's also rarely the stuff that people get most worked up about. Really, cultural appropriation is seldom a "big deal." Racism is. And it seems to me that the term "cultural appropriation" is just a fancy buzzword that sophists like to use instead because it sounds fancier.
I guess I disagree about the definition, but I can appreciate your perspective from that definition.[DOUBLEPOST=1495134249,1495134125][/DOUBLEPOST]What about how western otaku fetishize asians and asian culture (especially the women)? Is that appropriation? Because that shit is creepy and damaging as hell. Mostly to the otaku, but still.


#19

GasBandit

GasBandit

I guess I disagree about the definition, but I can appreciate your perspective from that definition.[DOUBLEPOST=1495134249,1495134125][/DOUBLEPOST]What about how western otaku fetishize asians and asian culture (especially the women)? Is that appropriation? Because that shit is creepy and damaging as hell. Mostly to the otaku, but still.
I specifically mentioned weeaboos in my post :D


#20

Necronic

Necronic

Actually, I got a good one, especially for any Irish in here. How do you feel about Saint Patrick's day?


#21

Denbrought

Denbrought

Actually, I got a good one, especially for any Irish in here. How do you feel about Saint Patrick's day?
For one perspective, you might look at The Boys #27.



Fucking septics.


#22

Necronic

Necronic

I really like The Boys.

Ok, so I'll give it to you that on its face blackface is not cultural appropriation, but in the context of the parties listed in the link o sent you have to see it as such. You know with people putting on blackface and dressing like Lil Jon for a rappers and ho's party or something like that. That still has to count right?


#23

Chad Sexington

Chad Sexington

I'm not sure I believe in cultural appropriation at all. There's racism, and there's what we used to call "learning" and "sharing."

Blackface isn't 'cultural appropriation' - it's racist.

Wearing dreadlocks isn't cultural appropriation - it's learning from another culture.

Opening up an ethnic restaurant? Sharing.


#24

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

. . . putting on blackface and dressing like Lil Jon for a rappers and ho's party . . .
Man, all I can think is "racist for the blackface, sexist for the ho's, and antiestablishment for the Robin Hood cosplay."


#25

GasBandit

GasBandit

I really like The Boys.

Ok, so I'll give it to you that on its face blackface is not cultural appropriation, but in the context of the parties listed in the link o sent you have to see it as such. You know with people putting on blackface and dressing like Lil Jon for a rappers and ho's party or something like that. That still has to count right?
I don't think so. It's racist, but not appropriation. When you appropriate something, you take it and make it your own. Much as I hate to bring up the old "It's a culture, not a costume" ads that were so laughable, I think it shows the difference. These people are not wanting to emulate Lil Jon - they don't dress like him because they want to BE him, any more than they'd dress up like a clown or a gorilla or a salt shaker because they want to be any of those things. They're intentionally becoming caricature, which gets back to what I said about intention to mock. They're wearing Lil' Jon "costumes" because they want to draw attention to his difference, not incorporate his difference into themselves.

This is different than, say, a white girl with corn rows (which is an example of harmless cultural appropriation which lacks racism) - she is wearing them to make them part of her personal identity, thus "appropriating" it from its original culture (if you ascribe to the argument that a hairstyle can "belong" to a culture and not another, which some seem to).


#26

MindDetective

MindDetective

(if you ascribe to the argument that a hairstyle can "belong" to a culture and not another, which some seem to).
It can belong in the sense that it comes from some historical, cultural roots. Clothing, food, idioms, they all are rooted somewhere in one's culture and history. I honestly don't know the significance of cornrows in black culture. If it is significant, then it is a pretty insensitive thing to do to imitate it without sharing the rest of the cultural history that spawned it.


#27

PatrThom

PatrThom

It can belong in the sense that it comes from some historical, cultural roots. Clothing, food, idioms, they all are rooted somewhere in one's culture and history. I honestly don't know the significance of cornrows in black culture. If it is significant, then it is a pretty insensitive thing to do to imitate it without sharing the rest of the cultural history that spawned it.
Pretty sure cornrows, specifically, can not seriously be considered "cultural appropriation." The style has been around for several thousand years (and yes, the earliest known depictions are in Africa...which also arguably birthed human civilization as a whole, so no surprise there), it would be like saying scarves or shoes are cultural appropriation. They may be "in" or "out," or they may make a resurgence as part of a statement, but no group can legitimately claim exclusivity any more than they could claim exclusivity on the wheel, or on bread.

There is no copyright on cornrows, and if there was, it expired a loooooooooooooong time ago.

--Patrick


#28

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

Pretty sure cornrows, specifically, can not seriously be considered "cultural appropriation." The style has been around for several thousand years (and yes, the earliest known depictions are in Africa...which also arguably birthed human civilization as a whole, so no surprise there), it would be like saying scarves or shoes are cultural appropriation. They may be "in" or "out," or they may make a resurgence as part of a statement, but no group can legitimately claim exclusivity any more than they could claim exclusivity on the wheel, or on bread.

There is no copyright on cornrows, and if there was, it expired a loooooooooooooong time ago.

--Patrick
Only if Disney didn't hold it.


#29

@Li3n

@Li3n

Cultural appropriation is stupid. If I'm white and I want to wear traditional African garb then so be it.
Of course, if you want to wear a Disney owned costume, you can't.

And that's kind of what it's about, someone benefiting from using a culture's ideas while the actual people that culture belongs to wallows in poverty (apparently Chanel just put out a boomerang).

I mean think about it, a lot of american culture is copyrighted or trademarked.

Blackface isn't 'cultural appropriation' - it's racist.
You're just using that as an excuse to steal the Dutch culture, aren't you... YOU MONSTER!


#30

MindDetective

MindDetective

Pretty sure cornrows, specifically, can not seriously be considered "cultural appropriation." The style has been around for several thousand years (and yes, the earliest known depictions are in Africa...which also arguably birthed human civilization as a whole, so no surprise there), it would be like saying scarves or shoes are cultural appropriation. They may be "in" or "out," or they may make a resurgence as part of a statement, but no group can legitimately claim exclusivity any more than they could claim exclusivity on the wheel, or on bread.

There is no copyright on cornrows, and if there was, it expired a loooooooooooooong time ago.

--Patrick
That is my suspicion too.


#31

GasBandit

GasBandit

You're just using that as an excuse to steal the Dutch culture, aren't you... YOU MONSTER!
I gotta say, the little woman was from Holland, and she definitely never got what the big deal was about blackface. Zwarte Piet was just a thing.


#32

Denbrought

Denbrought

I gotta say, the little woman was from Holland, and she definitely never got what the big deal was about blackface. Zwarte Piet was just a thing.
Yeah, I grew up with plenty of blackface, both in person (3 Wise Men parades) and on TV. I think the U.S.' minstrel show history, and the concept of a unified black identity, both make a big difference.

E.g.:


#33

blotsfan

blotsfan

I gotta say, the little woman was from Holland, and she definitely never got what the big deal was about blackface. Zwarte Piet was just a thing.
Just like Chief Wahoo.


#34

GasBandit

GasBandit

Just like Chief Wahoo.
Actually, Zwarte Piet is more culturally ingrained than an MLB logo... he's like... oh, I don't know, Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeer. Imagine you spent your entire childhood singing that song, putting up those decorations, seeing the next generation do the same, and then you move across an ocean and any time you mention a red nose someone gasps and looks at you like you strangled a kitten.


#35

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

Actually, Zwarte Piet is more culturally ingrained than an MLB logo... he's like... oh, I don't know, Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeer. Imagine you spent your entire childhood singing that song, putting up those decorations, seeing the next generation do the same, and then you move across an ocean and any time you mention a red nose someone gasps and looks at you like you strangled a kitten.
My uncle Clovis has a red nose. He got it from drinking whskey. He most definitely did not guide his car like Rudolph guiding a sleigh.

Also, kitten stranglers ought to be waterboarded.


#36

GasBandit

GasBandit

Cultural Appropriation!



#37

PatrThom

PatrThom

Cultural Appropriation!

Didn't @figmentPez just post about how anything is a dildo, if you're brave enough?

--Patrick


#38

GasBandit

GasBandit

It's a recurring meme.


#39

PatrThom

PatrThom

Right, but wouldn't that make this less "cultural appropriation" and more "reinventing the hummer?"

--Patrick


#40

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

Right, but wouldn't that make this less "cultural appropriation" and more "reinventing the hummer?"

--Patrick
I'm really concerned for whoever tries to use a hummer as a dildo

images.jpg


#41

PatrThom

PatrThom

I'm really concerned for whoever tries to use a hummer as a dildo

View attachment 24261
That's a Hummer, not a hummer.

--Patrick


#42

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

That's a Hummer, not a hummer.

--Patrick
dammit. i knew i should've gone all e.e. cummings on that post.


#43

PatrThom

PatrThom

dammit. i knew i should've gone all e.e. cummings on that post.
Hey now, that's probably a myth.

--Patrick


#44

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

I assume you actually meant e e cummings

--Patrick
*sigh*

You win the points this round


#45

Denbrought

Denbrought

Relevant to thread, turns out that white people can't make burritos in Portland:
The Portland Mercury: This Week in Appropriation: Kooks Burritos and Willamette Week


#46

sixpackshaker

sixpackshaker

It is probably a good thing that I did not open up that Persian Restaurant with my Bro's Mother-in-law.


#47

GasBandit

GasBandit

Relevant to thread, turns out that white people can't make burritos in Portland:
The Portland Mercury: This Week in Appropriation: Kooks Burritos and Willamette Week
It's hard to beat Portland for white flagellatory self-hate. Sheesh.


#48

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

It is probably a good thing that I did not open up that Persian Restaurant with my Bro's Mother-in-law.
But you could've decorated it like the inside of a genie bottle and hired a harem of belly dancers!

You made the wrong choice.


#49

Covar

Covar

Relevant to thread, turns out that white people can't make burritos in Portland:
The Portland Mercury: This Week in Appropriation: Kooks Burritos and Willamette Week
Well that's the most racist article I've read this week.


#50

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

Well that's the most racist article I've read this week.
Well, that sounds like a challenge.


#51

Eriol

Eriol

Well that's the most racist article I've read this week.
I completely agree. PLEASE tell me this is undetected satire... right? I really want to believe that.


#52

Bubble181

Bubble181

I think I'm going to start being offended by any French fry not made by a Belgian.


#53

Denbrought

Denbrought

I completely agree. PLEASE tell me this is undetected satire... right? I really want to believe that.
Here's the spreadsheet linked in the article, in case you missed it: White-Owned Appropriative Restaurants in Portland

Their definition is unironically steeped in the "whites = illuminati" brand of progressive politics I'm so fond of.
Criteria for Appropriation: Restaurants or food carts selling non-European international cuisine owned *solely* by white people who were not born or raised in the country or region from which the restaurant's cuisine originates. Particularly egregious examples of religious or cultural appropriation in decor or branding are also included.


#54

sixpackshaker

sixpackshaker

It's hard to beat Portland for white flagellatory self-hate. Sheesh.
That is not white self hate. It is just hate.


#55

Covar

Covar

They have to keep the races pure apparently. :(


#56

sixpackshaker

sixpackshaker

They have to keep the races pure apparently. :(
No, I did a little research on the author. She does not like white people, besides the one she appropriated.


#57

drifter

drifter

Naiwen moved to Portland, huh?



#59

evilmike

evilmike

A different perspective on BurritoGate: Let White People Appropriate Mexican Food—Mexicans Do It to Ourselves All the Time

What these culture warriors who proclaim to defend Mexicans don't realize is that we're talking about the food industry, one of the most rapacious businesses ever created. It's the human condition at its most Darwinian, where EVERYONE rips EVERYONE off. The only limit to an entrepreneur's chicanery isn't resources, race, or class status, but how fast can you rip someone off, how smart you can be to spot trends years before anyone else, and how much money you can make before you have to rip off another idea again.​
And no one rips off food like Mexicans.​
The Mexican restaurant world is a delicious defense of cultural appropriation—that's what the culinary manifestation of mestizaje is, ain't it? The Spaniards didn't know how to make corn tortillas in the North, so they decided to make them from flour. Mexicans didn't care much for Spanish dessert breads, so we ripped off most pan dulces from the French (not to mention waltzes and mariachi). We didn't care much for wine, so embraced the beers that German, Czech and Polish immigrants brought to Mexico. And what is al pastor if not Mexicans taking shawerma from Lebanese, adding pork, and making it something as quintessentially Mexicans as a corrupt PRI?​


#60

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

Cultural Appropriation!

Didgeridildo!


#61

blotsfan

blotsfan

The best way I've heard it described is that its an issue if there's a disrespect implied. Like, if there was one dish that was considered a holy meal in some religion and you opened up a restaurant where you deep fried it and covered it in nacho cheese. Cases where it goes beyond food.

I don't see anything wrong with having a good meal down in mexico and trying to recreate it for a restaurant in the US.


#62

GasBandit

GasBandit

The best way I've heard it described is that its an issue if there's a disrespect implied. Like, if there was one dish that was considered a holy meal in some religion and you opened up a restaurant where you deep fried it and covered it in nacho cheese. Cases where it goes beyond food.

I don't see anything wrong with having a good meal down in mexico and trying to recreate it for a restaurant in the US.
Yeah, but, dude, have you TRIED deep fried matzo nachos?


#63

Tinwhistler

Tinwhistler

Yeah, but, dude, have you TRIED deep fried matzo nachos?
Something's gotta give those damn things some flavor ;)


#64

GasBandit

GasBandit

Something's gotta give those damn things some flavor ;)
That was my little brother's argument about french fries. As far as he was concerned, they were just semi-edible, tasteless utensils for delivering ketchup into his mouth. Sometimes he'd use the same fry more than once without even biting it.


#65

blotsfan

blotsfan

Sometimes he'd use the same fry more than once without even biting it.
Me when there's no more wings but there's some blue cheese left.


#66

PatrThom

PatrThom

Didgeridildo!
He can blow it out his ass.

--Patrick


#67

Chad Sexington

Chad Sexington

That was my little brother's argument about french fries. As far as he was concerned, they were just semi-edible, tasteless utensils for delivering ketchup into his mouth. Sometimes he'd use the same fry more than once without even biting it.
Your brother is a monster. Ketchup is the damned worst.

Me when there's no more wings but there's some blue cheese left.
This is correct, possibly holy.


#68

Frank

Frank

I like both ketchup and blue cheese but if any of you mother fuckers puts ranch anywhere near food I'm going to eat I'll shoot you in the face.


#69

Denbrought

Denbrought

I like both ketchup and blue cheese but if any of you mother fuckers puts ranch anywhere near food I'm going to eat I'll shoot you in the face.
Didn't know you were ranch-intolerant. Do you have to ask for food to be cooked in a separate kitchen?


#70

Frank

Frank

Didn't know you were ranch-intolerant. Do you have to ask for food to be cooked in a separate kitchen?
I don't have to but I demand to.


#71

GasBandit

GasBandit

Ranch is the only thing that makes most food-that-doesn't-have-a-face tolerable.


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