Nancyg56
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2005
- Messages
- 29,496
That generation is just different. I had a great aunt who would say racist things, but it was just how she was brought up and how they did/said things back then. She was not racist, she just didn't know any better.
I just don't buy that reasoning. I think that when an older person refuses to edit their commentary even though you have told them it is not acceptable, that commentary becomes a choice. I was raised in an era when certain words peppered many adults speech. It is not an acceptable reason to continue using them now. As a child I did not have a powerful enough voice to express that they were offensive terms, but as an adult, I do.
The example of the old lady in the elevator maybe so pathetic it is laughable, and as a stranger I woudl probably not try to make a change, but simply walk away. A family member or a friend talking liek that? It becomes personal and if I simply accepted that they did not know better what would that say about me?