09-06-2019, 05:45 PM
(No ladies, not that one)
vs the "N" word. From the AB situation.
I believe in my heart words have different historical meanings and the history behind the two is way different.
But, for employment purposes I don't think you should be able to call someone either.
if Mayock would have called Brown a N word, he'd be fired on the spot. We all probably agree.
Should both of these terms carry the same weight?
I don't think they do (calling someone a C word, never preceded a lynching, raping, whipping, enslavement, etc), but I am here to say for the record they are equally insulting and should be handled at the place of employment equally.
vs the "N" word. From the AB situation.
I believe in my heart words have different historical meanings and the history behind the two is way different.
But, for employment purposes I don't think you should be able to call someone either.
if Mayock would have called Brown a N word, he'd be fired on the spot. We all probably agree.
Should both of these terms carry the same weight?
I don't think they do (calling someone a C word, never preceded a lynching, raping, whipping, enslavement, etc), but I am here to say for the record they are equally insulting and should be handled at the place of employment equally.
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"Let not the dumb have to educate" ~ jj22