Saffron said:So last year, when the hurricanes hit Florida, three right in a row, and people were displaced, did anyone call them refugees?
I was here on the DIS through all three of them and never saw the term used here once.![]()
CheshireVal said:They are people who had to flee from a horrible situation. I've been calling them refugees and will probably continue to do so.
peachgirl said:Gosh, I wonder if it was who said it rather than what was said that was the problem????
I don't recall tens of thousands of them being spread out all over the United States, with no homes to return to, but maybe I missed it.
Jesse's always one of the first to make a racial mountain out of an insignficant molehill,
peachgirl said:But that doesn't make them refugees and other hurricane victims not refugees.
peachgirl said:I don't know, but since hurricane victims from anywhere don't fit the definiton of refugee, I'm not going to call them that. I can't figure out why anyone would want to.
peachgirl said:Yeah, only this time Bush did it too...or neither of them did it.
And why would that make a difference? There were people who didn't have homes to return to, why does the number of people make a difference?BuckNaked said:I don't recall tens of thousands of them being spread out all over the United States, with no homes to return to, but maybe I missed it.![]()
, but then maybe you wouldn't want to object so loudly when others do it to you. 
Call them whatever you like. To me, they are refugees, and I'll continue to refer to them that way.

It's his MO, and it's pretty well known.
Saffron said:And why would that make a difference? There were people who didn't have homes to return to, why does the number of people make a difference?
Weren't you one of the people objecting to be called a "rightie" last night because it lumps people into a category that not everyone fits into blah, blah, blah?
I think I won't label anyone something they don't want to be labeld, if that's what you want to do, but then maybe you wouldn't want to object so loudly when others do it to you.
![]()
And why would that make a difference? There were people who didn't have homes to return to, why does the number of people make a difference?
peachgirl said:Hey, you can call them apples for all I care, but it doesn't mean you're using the correct term by definition...which you are not.
If you like using the wrong words, have a ball!![]()
Wow, you sure know a lot about other people's MO's these days. I'm really, really impressed!
peachgirl said:It's a degrading term that I wouldn't want to be called and the President recognized it as such.
Sure I am - one who flees in search of refuge. You don't think that's what they did?
It's a talent that many obviously don't possess!
And if you like misunderstanding definitions, have a ball!
peachgirl said:That's one definition, but not what most sensible people think of when you say refugee. However, if you want to go with that one, then all hurricane victims who leave their homes are refugees.
Either all hurricane victims that leave their homes...if even for a night, even for a few hours..are refugees or none of them are.
And one that many think they have and don't.
Goofyzgurl said:To call them refugees suggests that they are not part of us and that they are people who don't have the same rights as citizens of the United States.
Charade said:Personally, I think they are refugees. They sought refuge from the hurricane. I don't think it's demeaning at all. JMHO. If that happened to me, I wouldn't really care what I was called as long as I was safe and sound.
ITA.BuckNaked said:That's how you choose to take it, which is certainly your right. And since that's the case, then by all means, don't call them refugees.
J.Cooper said:Refugees is the wrong term. They are not refugees. They are SURVIVORS!!!!