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04-14-2008, 12:36 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Mar 2005
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWTXBelle
I have to respectfully disagree about intent not being important. Someone who unthinkingly acts in a culturally insensitive way can be educated.
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Anyone can be educated, intent or unintent. But most people with a grain of brain will claim to not know that they were potentially being offensive.
Many of these incidents have prompted campus forums on tolerance and diversity. But that doesn't stop the university or the nhq from handing down sanctions. People learn best when education is mixed with a sanction because now they see the consequences of their actions.
Now if these were 5 year olds we are talking about, then I'd truly believe they were clueless.
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04-14-2008, 01:13 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DSTCHAOS
Now if these were 5 year olds we are talking about, then I'd truly believe they were clueless.
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Do you honestly believe that they thought "I know this is offensive, but I don't care?". No one, of course, can know for sure, but if they knew it was offensive and chose to do it anyway I don't think they would have happily posed for pictures, and then posted them on facebook. Insensitive means they didn't consider others feelings - it doesn't have to mean that they considered them, and then said it didn't matter.
There have been comparisons between black face and this, and I think the difference is that because of the association with sports teams "redface" has been seen and accepted by some in a way that blackface is not. That is not to say that it is not wrong, but that there is not the overwhelming agreement on the topic that you have with blackface. Turn on your TV and you can see sports fans whooping away, tomahawk chopping, etc. There is a very active debate on the matter, and it still has shades of gray that, not to be punny, you don't have when discussing blackface.
eta - so, to get past the point where we argue back and forth over something we can't know (whether or not they meant to be offensive), what do you think the appropriate response should be?
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Last edited by SWTXBelle; 04-14-2008 at 01:17 PM.
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04-14-2008, 01:57 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Mar 2005
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWTXBelle
Do you honestly believe that they thought "I know this is offensive, but I don't care?". No one, of course, can know for sure, but if they knew it was offensive and chose to do it anyway I don't think they would have happily posed for pictures, and then posted them on facebook. Insensitive means they didn't consider others feelings - it doesn't have to mean that they considered them, and then said it didn't matter.
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I honestly don't care what they thought.  I deal with outcomes. Some outcomes come from more deliberate and intentional actions than others. But that is be based on more than "we didn't know."
The speculation and semantics ("insensitive" versus "clueless") game is a waste of time. After all of these incidents that have been in the media, no college student with a head as distinct from their ass should claim they aren't aware of the potential for offense.
Regarding taking photos: An analogy are the photos of black face that dumb college students took--imagine them happily posing for photos in deliberate black faced costumes and pretending that they don't know that black face is offensive. Perhaps more overt than in the article for this thread, but the "didn't know" defense is all the same. Even if these idiots claimed they "didn't know," the outfits were very crafted and intentionally black face. But if they "didn't know," that says a lot about this society.
And if they truly didn't know, NOW THEY DO and will be handled accordingly.
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04-14-2008, 04:23 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: In the fraternal Twin Cities
Posts: 6,433
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWTXBelle
Do you honestly believe that they thought "I know this is offensive, but I don't care?". No one, of course, can know for sure, but if they knew it was offensive and chose to do it anyway I don't think they would have happily posed for pictures, and then posted them on facebook. Insensitive means they didn't consider others feelings - it doesn't have to mean that they considered them, and then said it didn't matter.
There have been comparisons between black face and this, and I think the difference is that because of the association with sports teams "redface" has been seen and accepted by some in a way that blackface is not. That is not to say that it is not wrong, but that there is not the overwhelming agreement on the topic that you have with blackface. Turn on your TV and you can see sports fans whooping away, tomahawk chopping, etc. There is a very active debate on the matter, and it still has shades of gray that, not to be punny, you don't have when discussing blackface.
eta - so, to get past the point where we argue back and forth over something we can't know (whether or not they meant to be offensive), what do you think the appropriate response should be?
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Given the years of controversary about the symbolization of Native Americans, especially at UND, I find it hard to believe that these young ladies did not know it would be offensive.
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04-14-2008, 04:36 PM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Posts: 18,668
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ladygreek
Given the years of controversary about the symbolization of Native Americans, especially at UND, I find it hard to believe that these young ladies did not know it would be offensive.
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Perhaps they knew and just didn't care? To me, it doesn't matter if something I does happens to offend a few hippies or native american activists or whatnot.
Heck.. me opening my trap to defend these girls has probably shaved a year off of someone's life already. I guess I should wait for the process server to serve me those papers since I clearly "discriminated" against someone.
I can think of any number of themed parties, e.g. white trash, gangsta & ho, or toga (alert the Greco-Roman anti defamation league!) which happen routinely all over the country, rarely drawing any criticism whatsoever. This is no different than any of those cases except the connection to a race of people and the relevance of stereotypes is probably even more tenuous than usual.
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04-14-2008, 04:48 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Down the street
Posts: 9,791
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevin
Perhaps they knew and just didn't care? To me, it doesn't matter if something I does happens to offend a few hippies or native american activists or whatnot.
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It doesn't matter if it matters to you.
As I always say, there are policies in effect because every individual isn't capable of monitoring her/himself.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevin
This is no different than any of those cases except the connection to a race of people and the relevance of stereotypes is probably even more tenuous than usual.
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How profound of you, Kevin.
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