View Full Version : Analyzing Stereotypes And Lightheartedly Poking Fun At Other Races
mickill
02-09-2006, 12:47 PM
If you don't feel like reading all of this, that's great. Thanks for your input in advance. I only feel like hearing from certain kinds of people anyway.
There's the common, cliched, sometimes completely false stereotypes like the ones about Japanese tourists never being without cameras, Black dudes having 13 inch wangs, White people not being able to clap on beat and Filipino people eating dogs etc. But what about all the stereotypes nobody acknowledges? Like how Chinese people seem to take really small steps when they walk or how a lot of Middle Eastern guys call people 'boss' and 'guy' a lot. A lot of it's generalizing, yes, but that doesn't automatically make it counterfactual, I don't think.
For example, I've only had 3 Korean friends in my whole life, all at different points in time. And each of their families owned a corner store/market at one stage or another. Could be coincidental, I suppose. But even they would recognize that commonality in their race. I acknowledge the ones for mine as well. I don't see how ignoring the common implications of these insignificant traits and similarities really empowers or protects anyone. I don't think they need to be discussed at great length, but recognizing that they exist doesn't necessarily kill anybody. Or does it?
When I was a child I read somewhere that the first stage of racism is stereotyping. And that stereotyping inevitably leads to discrimination, which in turn eventually leads to segregation, which can lead to apartheid, and if all hell breaks loose, even genocide.
But stereotyping itself isn't necessarily offensive. Like if I claimed that a lot of Greeks have sex with sheep, that would upset some people. But if I said that the majority of Greek people are very friendly, it just seems so much less insulting. Nobody would necessarily want to stab me in the face for it. Both are still generalizations, though. The lines are still for the most part blurry. What might or might not be construed as appropriate or politically correct depends on who you're talking to.
Do all stereotpyes just bother you, regardless of their implications? Does it matter if it's a positive or negative remark? Is their any validity to it ever? Do people need to lighten up? Is it okay as long as it's not a white person making the comment? Just wondering what you think.
abcdefz
02-09-2006, 12:58 PM
Some really bug me, but I can't help but notice some things which seem very true.
Like: the Korean folks at the supermarket use public space as their own, man. They just don't care if they block the entrance or whatever. Some will push their cart into checkout line (with or without babies in the seat) and then go back down the aisle, still shopping. I have no idea what that's about.
And Americans of Asian descent will ferociously cling together, man. It's hell getting them to let whitey into their cliques, although some blacks get honorary Asian status for some reason. Mainly 'cause I think American Asian youth want to be black.
And, yeah, if there's a loud mouth yelling into the cell phone or having a screaming match with their S.O. on a public street, it's almost always a black person. If not black, it's a Latino woman. No idea why that is, but they have to make sure everyone's in on their business and how hard they are or something.
skinnybutphat
02-09-2006, 01:02 PM
Do people need to lighten up?
Imagine all the great comedic routines we wouldn't have without stereotypes.
abcdefz
02-09-2006, 01:11 PM
Black men saying "nigger" are hella funny.
Anxious Jews, too.
hpdrifter
02-09-2006, 01:21 PM
I often think about what people's true colors would be without laws and social restrictions that reign people in. That was the most interesting thing to me about 28 days later, that the men all were up to rape the two women, one of which was a teenager. It was like this was bubbling beneath the surface the whole time for these men.
I often wonder that about people and races. I mean, Seattle is not known for its progressive race relations, for better or worse it is a super stratified city and occasionally it rears its ugly head (the riots on Mardi Gras a few years back). So is it the fear of jail and social rejection that keeps the blacks and the whites around here from murderizing each other?
I guess what I'm trying to say is related to your slippery slope discussion: stereotypes inevitably lead to discrimination, which in turn eventually lead to segregation, which can lead to apartheid, and if all hell breaks loose, even genocide. Is it really the other way around and people want to go straight to genocide but they can't so they content themselves with stereotyping and discrimination until a hoarde of zombies renders all social structure null and void.
abcdefz
02-09-2006, 02:18 PM
Playing basketball where I did, I got called "white boy" and "cracker" a lot. Sometimes, there was hate and discrimination behind it, sometimes there was genuine love.
The Band almost called themselves The Crackers.
True story.
Qdrop
02-09-2006, 03:59 PM
stereotyping groups is enevitable....and often necessary.
our human minds have evolved to make rash, generalized assumptions and classifications...that's how we are wired.
and stereotypes themselves, ON A GROUP LEVEL, are often correct or at least have some truth to them on the average.
the real problem is when we take a stereotype of a group, and put it on the INDIVIDUAL.
for example, like it or not, the stereo type that lots of blacks commit crimes has truth to it.
the % of black americans involved in criminal activity is exceptionally higher than any other race.
the % of crimes committed in ANY major city tends to a majority of black americans.
the may upset many people, and CERTAINLY there are many historical and social reasons for it( and NOT biological ones)....but that stereotype still rings true.
the problem really arrises, when we take that stereotype....and put it on one black man that we meet on the street one night....or a black male interviewing for a job at your company. the true unfairness is when you judge that individual on the stereotype of a much larger group.
ToucanSpam
02-09-2006, 04:16 PM
I agree with QDrop partly. When you impose the stereotype on a person, then you are almost robbing them of their individuality.
However, I think that sayings like 'all black people have large penises' or 'all Latinos are womanizers' or 'Chinese people are superior at mathematics', unless real hardcore facts are presented, are largely untrue and mildly offensive.
beastieangel01
02-09-2006, 04:22 PM
But stereotyping itself isn't necessarily offensive. Like if I claimed that a lot of Greeks have sex with sheep, that would upset some people. But if I said that the majority of Greek people are very friendly, it just seems so much less insulting. Nobody would necessarily want to stab me in the face for it. Both are still generalizations, though.
yep.
For the most part, stereotypes are based on some sort of truth. When bringing those stereotypes up, joking around lightheartedly about them is something that doesn't bother me. Someone who takes it to another level and applies it to EVERY single person with a stereotyped group is another thing though and doing so in a malicious manner is awful.
However, in general, I think people need to lighten up a bit about it. Like in the Simpsons. They make fun of everyone.
bigblu89
02-09-2006, 04:27 PM
I'm in the same boat here with BA01 and mickill, most sterotypes are based off of some sort of truth.
roosta
02-09-2006, 04:31 PM
yeah, like Irish people are all drunks.
it's more or less true. it's very funny when the simpsons make fun of it.
yeahwho
02-09-2006, 04:46 PM
I do on occaision poke fun a scandinavian's, but I really feel that only a true scandinavian can call a fellow scandinavian "His Viking".
CrankItUp!
02-09-2006, 05:10 PM
I thought Filipinos ate pinos to filli up on....hmmm didn't know they ate dogs though ! But what kinda ?..slaw or chilli on their labradoors ?
hpdrifter
02-09-2006, 05:11 PM
Isn't it funny that English people say sport and maths and people from the U.S. say sports and math?
HEIRESS
02-09-2006, 08:15 PM
I love my friends (http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v88/HEIRESS/shat/DSCN0222.jpg)
stereotype #93234249234938274: cant see asian eyes in photossssss
comment buddy on the right made post seeing pic "FUCK I CAN EVEN KEEP EM HELD OPEN"
Freebasser
02-09-2006, 08:31 PM
Last time I said anything about stereotypes on here, Mickill called me racist.
FACT.
I love you, Mike (y)
TurdBerglar
02-09-2006, 08:37 PM
things about race that i notice...
lets get to the point. im from the hood. plain and simple. and went to school in a semi posh school outside my city. so i have a pretty decent amount of diversity around me and have been around lots of different types of people. i basically have contact with every type of person that can be found in the us in a noticeable percentage. and a lot of stereotypes are true to some degree. it's just that the stereotype doesn't dipict the majority of the population of the race that the stereotype refers to. there's just more people of that race that fit into the actions of the stereotype then others of a different race. it's not all black peopel like chicken. it's more black people then white people like chicken. when you say it like that it doesn't seem as bad and most people seem to agree when you word shit like that.
ericlee
02-09-2006, 09:13 PM
I agree with QDrop partly. When you impose the stereotype on a person, then you are almost robbing them of their individuality.
However, I think that sayings like 'all black people have large penises' or 'all Latinos are womanizers' or 'Chinese people are superior at mathematics', unless real hardcore facts are presented, are largely untrue and mildly offensive.
I know alot of black people and they practically brag over the fact that they have big....They don't take that in an offensive way.
Not just that but being my wife is Chinese, she has and I have alot of friends that are Chinese and they take pride in the fact that they are skilled in mathematics.
The latino one is just stereotypical though. So just Latino's practice spouse abuse?
You're right about that one, I think every race takes a part in that role and they need to get shot.
marsdaddy
02-09-2006, 10:53 PM
Stereotyping is usually a way of trying to control. Afraid of the unknown? Well, the person's Latino, so they must know how to merenge -- I know them!
I find stereotyping useful on a comedic level -- usually to point out the craziness of the stereotype in the first place.
You can quote statistics all day long, but differences between people are not based on race or sexuality but culture and exposure.
Koreans might be more likely to buy a corner grocery -- though not in LA, since the Rodney King riots -- because they've been exposed to friends and family that have done it.
Muslims - Here in SF, the majority of corner stores are owned by Muslims -- go figure.
Blacks make up a large % of crime, based on their population. They make up an even larger % of the impoverished. Still, the MAJORITY of crimes are commited by white people.
Gays - Speaking of basketball, it was really eye opening to me about 8 years ago when I started playing in a gay basketball league. There is very little difference in that league than in any other league in which I've played. Except that most of the people in the gay league will not fight you for a bogus foul call.
Talk about all the stereotypes you want, but in the end people are people and all pretty much are capable and want similar things.
PS. I didn't read all of mickill's post.
DroppinScience
02-09-2006, 11:52 PM
it's a similar story over here. the oriental people over here more or less hang out with eachother exclusively but sometimes they'll have a token white/black guy in there group.
Hmm, maybe I'm the token white guy among my Asian friends? ;)
I do gotta admit that even though we live in a society that is striving for integration, we all tend to hang around the same groups of people.
Lots of Asians with other Asians. East Indians with other East Indians, etc.
I try my best to be integrative, but even I have more white friends than non-white friends...
We just gotta rise above, y'know.
vickista
02-10-2006, 12:04 AM
Hmm, maybe I'm the token white guy among my Asian friends? ;)
I do gotta admit that even though we live in a society that is striving for integration, we all tend to hang around the same groups of people.
Lots of Asians with other Asians. East Indians with other East Indians, etc.
I try my best to be integrative, but even I have more white friends than non-white friends...
We just gotta rise above, y'know.
we all tend to hang around the same groups of people because we feel safer with them because we subconciously believe that they ARE like us because they LOOK like us, of course thats not true.
however i find that i prfer to mix my friends, like in my group i have asians, aussies,an african australian, and then me and im greek, however i would still like to have more greek friends at english school, because im the only greek inmy entire grade so its funny everyone else has someone like them and i dont.
see, black guys drive like this
and white guys drive like this
also black guys walk really slow what's up with that
Sarky Devotchka
02-10-2006, 12:35 AM
teenagers are always yelling. I'm serious!
Documad
02-10-2006, 01:27 AM
Blacks make up a large % of crime, based on their population. They make up an even larger % of the impoverished. Still, the MAJORITY of crimes are commited by white people.
I recently went to an interesting conference where an expert discussed this. One thing I noticed in my past job was that the crime rate for local juveniles roughly corresponded with their percentage of the population. But this isn't true of adult crime. There are many reasons for this.
What I feel in my gut but can't quantify is that police tend to make choices about where they invest their resources, and perhaps they aren't as likely to be looking for the kind of crimes that white adults commit. Until meth got out of hand, you found our police doing reverse stings with crack sellers in the inner city instead of busting up white drug rings out in the country, for instance.
ericlee
02-10-2006, 01:44 AM
Ok, I'm gonna go ahead and bust my guts on this one..
My ex is from Tijuana..
Says enough? Nah. She has married and only still has married people in the U.S. Military. Her former husbands before me has been in the Navy, Air Force, Marines and then she met me and at the time, I was in the army.
Damn, I am being stereotypical but does anyone else see the resemblance of her planning?
Now that we've been divorced, she already has a new husband who is in the army now and she milks off of me for child support.
guerillaGardner
02-10-2006, 02:33 AM
That was the most interesting thing to me about 28 days later, that the men all were up to rape the two women, one of which was a teenager. It was like this was bubbling beneath the surface the whole time for these men.
Bear in mind that 1) its a fictitious scenario for the purposes of drama and 2) if it reflects reality then perhaps (at risk of stereotyping military types) aren't soldiers more likely to indulge this way.
For one the military has recognised there is a natural abhorrence of violence in most normal people and they actually initiate programmes to remove these natural scruples - part of that, acclimatising soldiers to blood and violence, and also breaking down their personalities in training in order to replace them with a persona of the military's choosing.
Bear in mind the most suitable mindset of any joining the military - a predispositon to aggressive behaviour, a willingness to kill, lack of prospects in the real world (because after all who would join the military at this point in time if it wasn't a last desparate option or a need to be handed a gun and given the chance to shoot someone.)
Nuzzolese
02-10-2006, 09:08 AM
Do all stereotpyes just bother you, regardless of their implications? Does it matter if it's a positive or negative remark? Is their any validity to it ever? Do people need to lighten up? Is it okay as long as it's not a white person making the comment? Just wondering what you think.
Even the positive ones bother me because of the closedmindedness they insinuate. There has to be validity to it somewhere but it's like everyone has to have a selectively heightened label or stigma in order to be recognized on a large scale. Without a short generalized summation of a population, they can hardly exist in a comprehensible way to outsiders. And it seems to help the individual to identify themselves by contrasting with others - I am this but you are that. I think everything we're aware of depends on a binary relationship, or a tension between opposites. So you can't be aware of one thing without being aware of it's reverse or its counter role. And this is why I think it's inevitable but it still bothers me on a fundamental level because I wouldn't be able to enjoy a sense of righteous justice without the necessary injustice. It's there because it has to be, so we can believe that it shouldn't be there.
Also, and this is related to what hpdrifter said about the violent urges under the surface, Maybe the stereotyping does come from the same basic urge as the rape because it's an urge to impose order and control and domination as a response to a seemingly lawless and orderless world. So the desire to have laws and etiquette and decorum and rules is similar to the desire to stigmatize and label and condem someone or even rape them - because it's from a desire to control and order things, it's just that we have these two conflicted ways to express that desire for control, and one is dependant on the other. Without social rules there is social lawlessness and violence. But the social rules come from the preexisting violence we fear in ourselves. h fuck I've totally lost myself in this rant. Why do middle eastern guys wear so much cologne and make such creepy eye contact with women?
marsdaddy
02-10-2006, 11:20 AM
...unenlightened gibberish...Yep, that was pretty much it. Had me questioning my own sexuality and basketball skills.
You're from TX so I'm sure you can only see the big picture here.
Nuzzolese
02-10-2006, 11:45 AM
He'll be back in two weeks with a predictable and familiar insult.
Qdrop
02-10-2006, 12:13 PM
He'll be back in two weeks with a predictable and familiar insult.
HAHAHAAHHH!!
JimmyTheScumbag
02-10-2006, 12:50 PM
I started playing in a gay basketball league.
The comical opportunities are endless.
Team Swish
'Take it to the hole'.
The real game begin in the after-game shower.
White people smell like turkey & cucmbers
DapperDiverge
02-10-2006, 01:47 PM
Why do middle eastern guys wear so much cologne and make such creepy eye contact with women?
I know... there's sandwich place at the mall that have really good phillies but the guys there are middle eastern and everytime I order they always give me this creepy look and start making small talk with what they think is "flattery"... I mean some of them are cute... but damn they're direct!! SLOW DOWN!! be more subtle... you're in america now... plenty of women here... no shortages, alright!! :D
I think Paul Mooney said it best when he said,
everybody wants to act like a nigga, but nobody wants to be a nigga (lb)
abcdefz
02-10-2006, 01:56 PM
I think Paul Mooney said it best
Paul Mooney.
I thought, for a second, that you meant Paul Dooley.
fucktopgirl
02-10-2006, 02:06 PM
marocain guys are pervert in a bad sense.I was working at this little restaurant and the cook was a fat marocain.HE's cooking was awsome but he was disgusting.And one day he just grabs my ass,i was like"what the fuck",he was all like "what did i do wrong.I say "you know fucker,dont do that again".Next day,there was another girl in training,i loose my job.BEcause i did not want a fucking pervert grab my ass,but i was happy to be out..There was this other girl working there,A french(france),she did not have a working permit,therefore she was illegal to work.BUt she she find this place,,she had to let herself grab by this pervert fuck.
or when i did travel in france,thoses marocain guys where all over myself,i was travelling alone for the first couples of days.I had to back them off with anger and karate moves :D
Nuzzolese
02-10-2006, 03:02 PM
No kidding, what's with the Morrocan dudes all over the touristing women? Tunisians too. Their favorite hook "You are the most beautiful woman I have ever seen." And shirt of choice, anything Italian.
marsdaddy
02-11-2006, 05:30 PM
He'll be back in two weeks with a predictable and familiar insult.You forgot boring, asshole, and snobish.
Have you started flooding the board with your autobiographical verbosity?
vBulletin® v3.6.7, Copyright ©2000-2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.