Edit: Meme has been slightly altered to be more accurate. Credit to @ininewcrow for the updated and better image.

  • Wogi@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Context is important here.

    I wouldn’t be offended at a team called Caucasians, filled entirely with Indian players. But I don’t live in the same universe that Indian people do.

    But maybe if white people made up 2% of the population, after being systematically eliminated by Indians to make use of our land, maybe if white people were relegated to the poorest, least productive areas of the country and told to be thankful for it, and maybe if the word Caucasian was kind of a rude way to refer to my skin color, I could see myself being offended at the idea.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      This one’s on me, because I was trying to make a point and be sarcastic at the same time.

      While I agree with you, I’ll quibble that context isn’t actually important here. The point of the shirt, and the point I was trying to make, was that reducing an entire culture to a caricature is offensive in any context (regardless of whether or not you would it offensive). The people who defend using native imagery for sports mascots often claim that the portrayal is intended as an honor, and that they are celebrating the culture instead of demeaning it.

      All of your points are correct, and each one compounds the offense. But even if you turn it around and use white people as the mascot, a people and culture who have not been systematically oppressed, deprived of life, liberty, and property, it’s still an inherently prejudicial and ignorant thing to do. So any argument about how mascots are intended to promote or celebrate or honor a culture or a people still fails to justify the practice.

      • The_Biggest_Cum@lemmynsfw.com
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        1 year ago

        It’s one of the multiple accepted terms for them,I have personally known a family who preferred the term offer others

        • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 year ago

          Isn’t that basically “I can’t be racist, I have black friends”? What if I told you that I’d been told by Native Americans that they DON’T like being called “Indian”? And if they are Indian, what do you call people from India, exactly? You know, Indians?

          • doctordevice@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            And others feel the same about the term “Native Americans.” It’s a big group of people from hundreds of independent nations that never had need for a collective term for themselves before Europeans arrived and started assigning labels.

            There is no right answer on what to call them, the best you can do is use the term preferred by the people you’re interacting with at the moment, which will usually be their actual nation. For those situations where you are referring to them collectively, I’ve variously been told to use “Native Nations,” “American Indian,” “Native American,” and “Indigenous Peoples.” Each term will be liked by some and hated by others. Just be willing to change for the situation and people you’re talking to and you’ll be fine.

            • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 year ago

              Oh, I do for sure. I’ll call people by any name or group or whatever if they ask. But I would never assume that a Native American is perfectly fine being called the equivalent of “a native or inhabitant of India, or a person of Indian descent.” That’s insane to me, and it’s insane to assume that they’d be fine with it. This whole thing is because of the irony of a person who was so clearly trying to defend Native Americans using a label that describes a completely different ethnic group. “No, not THOSE Indians, the other Indians, so named because a monster of a person landed here and thought he was somewhere else”. It’s just hilarious to me.

              • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                While I probably wouldn’t make “Indian” my first choice due to the negative historical connotations, we do have plenty of formal institutions – indigenous-led institutions among them – that use Indian in the name. So it’s bound to come up in casual discussion.

                I think what is most important is that, if a group or individual expresses a preference, we should honor that preference where possible.

                Even the term “indigenous” is problematic. It was the term used by the Romans to describe the subjugated peoples in remote provinces.

              • doctordevice@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                I’m not kidding, just last week I was participating in a diversity workshop run by people from Native Nations (their preferred term), and they regularly referred to “Indian country.” It’s a complicated term but it has been incorporated into their identity regardless of the fact that there is another group of people called Indians.

                To be more specific you can say “American Indians” but even that’s problematic in the same way “Native American” is because you’re labeling them based on some Italian guy’s name. You’re so hung up on the “Indian” label but don’t seem to have a problem constantly using “Native American” when the people you’re referring to have absolutely nothing to do with Amerigo Vespucci.

                • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  1 year ago

                  Relating the word “America” to “Amerigo Vespucci” is a HUGE stretch, don’t you think? It’s what the continent is called in English, which we’re speaking right now. How far back through etymology do we have to go?

                  • doctordevice@lemm.ee
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                    1 year ago

                    No? Lol, that’s literally where the name comes from, how is that a stretch? Using the term “Indian”, which you’re arguing against, predates the term “America.” So if the origin of “America” is too far in the past to matter, then that’s even more true of the term “Indian.” (Technically the Spanish “Indios” from Columbus’s 1493 writings is what predates “America”, which first occurred in a German map in 1507. The writings were subsequently translated into Latin and disseminated through Europe, they may well have been translated into English before that map but I can’t find when the first English translation occurred.)

                    My point is that the term you’re insisting is the sole correct term isn’t universally endorsed by native communities. Many view it as yet another Eurocentric term for exactly the reason that we named an entire continent after some European guy rather than the cultures and people that had been here for millennia. Others don’t mind it and have adopted it in their identity.

                    Just ask people when interacting with them and don’t be so dogmatic online. Sheesh.

          • Infynis@midwest.social
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            1 year ago

            It doesn’t matter what you think, dude. It’s a generally accepted term among the people it’s referring to. It’s usually better to use the name of their tribe, but that’s not always possible

            • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 year ago

              That’s cool. I prefer to call people from India Indians if that’s alright. If I’d like to refer to a Native American as something else I’ll at least do them the courtesy of saying American Indians so they aren’t referred to as a completely separate ethnic group.

      • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Some of the most racist and bigoted people, are also very politically correct.

        Some of the least racist and bigoted people, are also very politically incorrect.

        PC language is often used by people who are awkward around minorities or want to disguise their true intentions.

        Political correctness has its place, but it’s better to judge people by what they do or say, not how they say it.

      • Wogi@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Grew up near a res friendo, it was generally the preferred term. But tell me more about that horse you’re on

        • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 year ago

          Oh hey pot! I’m kettle, nice to meet you!

          The fuck you on about “horse I’m on” lmao, you just did the same exact thing

          • Monster@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m indigenous and I personally have no problem with being called Indian but I know a few of my relatives hate the term. I guess it really depends on the person

          • Wogi@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m using the term I’ve been told to use to describe a group of people, by that group of people. Or at least a group of that people. If someone of that group comes up with a different term they’d like me to use I’ll happily use that, until then, I’ll use the last term I know to have been acceptable.

            If you’re a member of that group and prefer a different term, then make that known.

            If you’re not a member of that group, then you’re making assumptions for a group of people and calling it respect while completely disregarding the wishes of the people to whom you’re attempting to refer.

            • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 year ago

              I’m not disregarding wishes. I’ll call any INDIVIDUAL whatever they want to be called. Groups will be referred to by the most accurate and accepted name. Indians are from India and it’s ridiculous to call Native Americans/American Indians that. It’s as ridiculous as calling any black person “African American”, like when the interviewer insisted on that terminology for Idris Elba, a black British man. That’s it. I’m not calling them “Redskins”, for example. I’m using a perfectly respectful and accepted term and not one that may or may not be accepted, depending on who you ask, and not one that is literally incorrect.

              Edit: There’s a person directly below this comment whose relatives hate the term “Indian”.

        • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 year ago

          So you speak for ALL American Indians, then? Do I speak for ALL Germans? Or have I been in the US long enough that I’m no longer German? My grandmother was born in Germany, is that too far? Or is it just skin color, I speak for all whites, no matter the country or culture of origin? I’m curious to the rules here- I shouldn’t speak for American Indians because I’m not one, right? So who can speak for all American Indians and all 547 distinct tribes (federally recognized)? Do you speak for every tribe? If not you, then who? Your phrasing was “Unless you’re American indian”, so… yes? You speak for all 547 tribes and 5.2 million people?

            • PrinceHabib72@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 year ago

              Buuuuuut… you did say “Unless you’re American indian”, so that does imply that you or someone else CAN speak for all of a group. So I’m a bit confused here. I will call you whatever you’d like me to call you, including “Indian” on its own if that’s what you’d prefer to be called (even though that doesn’t make sense to me), but you didn’t actually answer my questions. Let me try again- how is it bigoted to not assume that a group of people would want to be called something that is fundamentally incorrect by definition, has a turbulent history, and is not what most federal programs call them- you yourself say that the benefits go to “American Indians”, not “Indians”.

              Thanks for the coloring page, is it one of your favorites?

      • MyTurtleSwimsUpsideDown@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Baby steps…
        Or maybe they are not familiar with sportsball teams and are confusing the logo with that of the Cleveland Indians.
        I had to look it up.