Robinrs
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Sep 7, 1999
- Messages
- 38,423
She was catering the wedding itself? Wouldn't that mean the people who hired her were the ones requesting the staff to dress a certain way?
Did you bother to read the article?
She was catering the wedding itself? Wouldn't that mean the people who hired her were the ones requesting the staff to dress a certain way?
Did you bother to read the article?
This was the part I was uncomfortable with too. Although I took "a desire to have African Americans dressed in "long-sleeve white shirts, black shorts and black bow ties, you know in the Shirley Temple days, they used to tap dance around" as more of a paid minstrel entertainer, not as a slave.
Either way, as a guest, I would be mortified.
But, again, I bet black actors would line up by the hundreds to do a paid presentation like that. Some people look at things differently.
What if it just so happened that everyone that applied to be a server at this catered affair was black? And therefore everyone serving at the affair was black. Would this be considered racist?
What if it just so happened that everyone that applied to be a server at this catered affair was black? And therefore everyone serving at the affair was black. Would this be considered racist?
Was that called for?? Deen described what she wanted for "a true southern plantation-style wedding" she was catering. Sorry if I misread that statement. I assumed Deen was catering it
You have been blindly defending her from the beginning. If you had read the article you wouldn't have asked that question. Defend if you like her but know the facts.
No one was a bigger fan than I was but I'm willing to learn the details and make a decision. I've been to her restaurant, been on her tour, met her family. Now I'd like to know more about this.
Manager sounds like a money grabber as well as someone seeking their 15 minutes of fame.
I hear the N word often, its usually coming out of the mouth of a rap artist or other similar character or an older black person in reference to another. How is that okay and its not okay when Paula uses it to describe a person who held a gun to her head 30 years ago?
The wedding scenario was something she discussed with an employee. She had a "vision" of a theme and noted that even though she thought it would be a good theme, she knew it would not go over well. Sheesh, it was a conversation not an action.
The fact that it would not go over well IMO has nothing to do with being a racist it has to do with the propensity we as a society have to somehow right all the wrongs back to the beginning of time by removing all references or treating so many scenarios as offensive. Colleges are contemplating changing mascots because someone finds it offensive, there are folks that would rewrite novels (Tom Sawyer) due to the use of vocabulary that was acceptable at the time but is now viewed as offensive. Sometimes we just can't win. Can't please all the people all the time.
Have you ever used the N word? is a wide open question to ask a person of her age, who grew up in the South. Attacking someone for something said or done years ago is just ridiculous IMO. None of us have led perfect lives, why do we put others on such a high pedestal.
Yes. And insulting.
Manager sounds like a money grabber as well as someone seeking their 15 minutes of fame.
I hear the N word often, its usually coming out of the mouth of a rap artist or other similar character or an older black person in reference to another. How is that okay and its not okay when Paula uses it to describe a person who held a gun to her head 30 years ago?
The wedding scenario was something she discussed with an employee. She had a "vision" of a theme and noted that even though she thought it would be a good theme, she knew it would not go over well. Sheesh, it was a conversation not an action.
The fact that it would not go over well IMO has nothing to do with being a racist it has to do with the propensity we as a society have to somehow right all the wrongs back to the beginning of time by removing all references or treating so many scenarios as offensive. Colleges are contemplating changing mascots because someone finds it offensive, there are folks that would rewrite novels (Tom Sawyer) due to the use of vocabulary that was acceptable at the time but is now viewed as offensive. Sometimes we just can't win. Can't please all the people all the time.
Have you ever used the N word? is a wide open question to ask a person of her age, who grew up in the South. Attacking someone for something said or done years ago is just ridiculous IMO. None of us have led perfect lives, why do we put others on such a high pedestal.
So if everyone that applied was black (even though everyone was welcome), you have to cancel the event or else be called racist?
Oh, dear, Paula. You know better. Think what you like, but keep your opinions to yourself.
I was born in 1956 and raised in the Deep South. Therefore, I can readily remember active, culturally sanctioned racism. Riding the city bus with my grandmother, I asked why all the "colored people", as they were called then, had to ride in the back. I was quickly shushed and told it's where they belonged. I asked my aunt why the KKK were standing on both sides of the street during a parade.She told me they were "needed."
Fortunately, I was raised by parents who did not subscribe to the status quo. We were not allowed to use the N-word, nor discriminate in any way. However, it was all around us in plain sight and my sibs & I were actually teased and called N-lovers because we would speak up in defense of individuals who were being mistreated.
Today is a different climate. It is unbelievable to me that anyone would think it okay to use racially charged language anywhere, but especially in public. I fear that Paula has opened a real can of worms on herself, one from which it will be hard to extricate herself. She will suffer a lot of negative publicity for this and she deserves it. There will always be those who see no problem with her "exercising her first amendment rights" but that doesn't make it a morally acceptable action.
I've never used the N word. Even when trying to convey a story about when somebody else said the N word. I just can't get it to come out of my mouth. It feels so dirty, hateful, ignorant and wrong.
There isn't a defense for the use of the word.
And yet it is used every day. If there is no defense then certain people (say Jamie Foxx and certain Hip Hop artists) would be out of the business. Apparently it is not the word itself, but who says the word. I think that is what frustrates many people.