T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
133.3 | associate vrs date | WATNEY::SPARROW | Vivian Sparrow | Mon Nov 03 1986 13:39 | 6 |
| Just to clarify......I didn't say associate, if you limit
who you associate with, eternal boredom will result.
Nationality and religion have nothing to do with who
I associate with. However I was wondering about dating.
V
|
133.5 | hunh? | CEODEV::FAULKNER | destroyer | Mon Nov 03 1986 14:04 | 2 |
| what ever floats yer boat
|
133.6 | ??? | ANT::WOLOCH | The time has come the Walrus said... | Mon Nov 03 1986 14:18 | 10 |
|
Re:133.4
Why do you want to only associate with DECies??
(There are many nice folks that aren't DECies...)
Sorry I got diverted from the intent of the main note...
nmw
|
133.8 | on bigotry | STUBBI::B_REINKE | | Mon Nov 03 1986 16:33 | 19 |
| Getting back to the original note.
Once I knew a young man from Africa who felt that the caucasian
American women who would not date him were bigoted. Actually
(looking on the situation as an outsider) he was just a very
unpleasant person, and would have had trouble getting dates
no matter where he came from. (I was his teacher.)
I think there well may be people who use this issue as a sort
of weapon when someone won't go out with them.
Also if someone is uncomfortable around a person then they are not
bigotted if they do not want to date them no matter what the reason.
Bigotry would be the refusal to learn about, to associate with,
to be acquaintances with etc. a person of a different race or ethnic
background because they are of that background.
|
133.11 | I'm a bigot, but at least I'm honest about it | SPIDER::MILLER | Real compared to what? | Mon Nov 03 1986 22:26 | 45 |
| re .1
> If a person declines an invitation to share some time with another
> solely because that person doesn't like the way he or she looks,
> talks, dresses, associates with etc., and then professes to be
> open minded and liberal, then I feel that is bigotry.
>
> By the same token, if a person declines the same and states openly
> the reason then that just being honest.
Suppose this person states openly that the reason is that they don't like the
way this other person looks, talks, dresses, etc.?
re .8
> Once I knew a young man from Africa who felt that the caucasian
> American women who would not date him were bigoted. Actually
> (looking on the situation as an outsider) he was just a very
> unpleasant person, and would have had trouble getting dates
> no matter where he came from. (I was his teacher.)
>
> I think there well may be people who use this issue as a sort
> of weapon when someone won't go out with them.
Of course there are people like this. On the other hand there are people who
won't date someone because they aren't the 'right' color, religious affiliation,
economic status, etc.
> Also if someone is uncomfortable around a person then they are not
> bigotted if they do not want to date them no matter what the reason.
But why is this someone uncomfortable around this other person? If it's
because the other person is a jerk, that's one thing. But if the reason is
simply because the other person is from a different ethnic or racial
background, then I think that constitutes bigotry/prejudice.
re .9
> Personally, I have been turned down several times for being white american
> male.
Just curious - how did you know that was why you were turned down? Maybe they
just didn't like the way you were dressed? ;-}
- Ed
|
133.12 | Bigotry or Avoidance? | BAGELS::LANE | | Tue Nov 04 1986 08:03 | 20 |
| I think people have to realize that when you first meet someone
you notice their physical appearance, everyone does. Some people
like blondes, or blue eyes, or some one tall, I don't really see
the difference. If I'm not physically attracted to someone of another
race, then I'm not attracted to him, that doesn't mean I'm a bigot!
If I won't be friends with him for that reason then it is a different
story.
I do realize that many people are prejudice. I was once going to
go out with a gentlman from an old job that was of a different race.
It didn't go over very well when I brought up the subject with my
grandparents. They brought up some very good points though. People
will look at you (if not stare), you get hastled by others, if you
get married and have children then you have to worry about how other
kids are going to treat them.
I don't personally see anything wrong with interracial dating/marriage,
but the points I stated in the above paragraph are realistic. May be
those reasons point out why some people would just rather avoid the
situation all together.
|
133.13 | OK, but not for MY kids | MANTIS::MILLER | Real compared to what? | Tue Nov 04 1986 09:05 | 32 |
| re .12
Yes, many people are prejudiced. Some try to hide it, professing to be
liberal regarding interracial dating until someone of another ethnic or
racial background shows up at their door. Then it's "OK except for MY
son/daughter!"
When I was in high school I became very close friends with a girl of a
different race, and after a while she made it clear that she wanted to date
me. She agonized over this because her parents (father, mostly) would never
tolerate such a thing, and had said so repeatedly. We kept in touch after
I left my home town to go to college, and for 4 or 5 years she dated guys
of her own race. Her parents never really took a candle to any of these
guys. After she broke up with one particularly awful guy her father asked
her "What ever happened to that nice young man you were friends with in
high school (yours truly)? How come you never dated him?"
"*DAD*!!!!! ARRRRRGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!!"
I'll be DAMNED if I let a stranger's stare dictate who I date! Suppose you
dated someone that looked like a Greek god(/dess) and they got into an
accident and were disfigured. People would look at you when you went out
together, wouldn't they? Are you gonna stop seeing them because of that?
Not trying to belittle the wisdom of your grandparents, but the times they
are a-changin'.. slowly..
> I don't personally see anything wrong with interracial dating/marriage,
> but the points I stated in the above paragraph are realistic. May be
> those reasons point out why some people would just rather avoid the
> situation all together.
If you feel the points your grandparents made are realistic then how can you
say you don't see anything wrong with interracial dating/marriage?
|
133.14 | | BAGELS::LANE | | Tue Nov 04 1986 09:43 | 16 |
| RE: 13
I don't think that you really understand what I'm saying. What
I think about interracial dating is that it is okay if you yourself
feel comfortable with it. But listening to my grandparents view
I do understand where they are coming from and why it wouldn't be
right for them. I'm not one to tell them if they are right or wrong,
just to listen and make my own decisions.
I do feel that the statements that they made where realistic, and
I do understand their point of view. Maybe they don't like feel
comfortable in that type of situation. You have to understand where
people are coming from and that not everyone is going to have the
same opions as you. If you just listen, whether you agree or not,
maybe you can just understand which would give you a broader outlook
on life.
|
133.15 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Tue Nov 04 1986 10:24 | 12 |
|
Re .14, if you don't "feel comfortable" with "interracial dating"
then, in my opinion, you are a racist and a bigot - regardless of
your particular color.
People are individuals. I decide who I would like to date because
of their personality, not their race, religion or ethnic background.
If I'm happy in someone's company I don't give a damn who stares
or what anybody else thinks.
Lorna
|
133.16 | Like gnarly, people are people... | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Lizzy Borden had PMS ! | Tue Nov 04 1986 10:42 | 13 |
|
Sure, don't we all sound like liberal little lefties here.
You all say that you will not care what people think,
well that is fine, until such time as those very same people
are your parents or very close friends.
No, I am not bigoted, I am REALISTIC. Saying that you only
judge someone by their personlity INCLUDES their BACKROUND
and any other associated elements of race, creed and nationality.
|
133.17 | Definitions sometimes help us communicate | ATFAB::REDDEN | WHOAREYOU 707 | Tue Nov 04 1986 10:43 | 12 |
| Websters 9th New Collegiate Dictionary
Racism - a belief that race is the primary determinant of human
traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent
superiority of a particular race - racist-n or adj
Bigot - one obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his own opinions
and prejudices
Is it possible to have a bigoted attitude toward bigots, or is
that recursive?
|
133.18 | advice is welcome, dictums are not | MANTIS::MILLER | Real compared to what? | Tue Nov 04 1986 10:48 | 24 |
| re .14
> But listening to my grandparents view
> I do understand where they are coming from and why it wouldn't be
> right for them. I'm not one to tell them if they are right or wrong,
> just to listen and make my own decisions.
I must have missed that point in .12 - you said that you were going to date
someone of a different race and that it didn't go over very well when you
mentioned it to your grandparents? It sounded to me like they were telling
you what was right for *you*. I'm happy to hear that you listened and made
your own decision, and didn't take their word as gospel. I was once in a
similar situation with my great-grandparents, and I handled it the same
way - I listened to them and then made my own decisions.
> I do feel that the statements that they made where realistic, and
> I do understand their point of view. Maybe they don't like feel
> comfortable in that type of situation.
But they weren't in that type of situation, you were.
I listen to, welcome and try to understand other points of view, whether or
not I agree with them. If I didn't feel that way then I wouldn't
participate in this conference.
|
133.19 | Who you callin' "little"? | MANTIS::MILLER | Real compared to what? | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:14 | 13 |
| re .16
> You all say that you will not care what people think,
> well that is fine, until such time as those very same people
> are your parents or very close friends.
My closest friends have no problem with dating across racial/national lines. In
fact my best friend has a roommate of a different race and they are both
currently going steady with women of different races!
My parents are a little different, they claim to be liberal but have surprised
me with bigoted statements from time to time. Despite that I feel they're
pretty tolerant.
|
133.20 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:30 | 6 |
|
Re .16, I don't know about you, but I *am* a "liberal little lefty"
and I don't let my parents and friends dictate my values and morals.
Lorna
|
133.21 | a friends point of view | WATNEY::SPARROW | Vivian Sparrow | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:41 | 19 |
|
I have a very dear friend who is a beautiful black lady. Her
kids consider me an aunt and my daughter calls her aunt. One
day we were talking about race differences. Anyway, I told her
she was prejudiced cause she always called "white" men little
white boys. Whenever she wanted whoever she was dating to introduce
me to someone, she specified a little white boy. I asked her why?
Cause she would kick the &*^&*^(* out of me if I dared to take
a black man away from an eligible black lady. Hmmm, I thought,
I asked her if she would let her sons date white girls, she said
as long as it didn't get serious she didn't want half breed
grandchildren. I asked her if she would date a white man,
never. Why? cause she was having a hard enough time by herself
as a black single woman.
There's alot more to our conversations
but they may not be appropriate for this notes file. Lets just
say she felt white men could never measure up to a black man.
|
133.22 | Serious Question | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Nov 04 1986 14:09 | 16 |
| What is wrong about prejudice or bigotry? Other than causing
the person with the belief to miss out on some good experiences,
who is harmed? Now, if a prejudiced person hurts someone, that
is a wrong thing, but it is the act of injury which is wrong,
not the motive behind it. Prejudgements are a way of saving
time otherwise spent thinking, a habit. Given that thought is
not free (it takes time and energy), making prejudgements is a
perfectly reasonable thing to do.
As an aside--to pick a mate who is of your own background is
a good general strategy, as there are likely to be fewer sources
of contention. Most people do, despite the oft-repeated theory
that you can't choose whom to fall in love with. This does
not strike me as wrong, but practical.
-John Bishop
|
133.23 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Tue Nov 04 1986 14:47 | 18 |
|
Re .21, I guess nobody ever said prejudice isn't a two-way street.
Re .22, What is wrong with prejudice if it's in thought only? Well,
I guess Hitler must have spent a little time thinking about how
he hated Jews long before the concentration camps, for one example.
I guess members of the Ku Klux Klan must have thought about hating
blacks before they started their lynchings. Prejudice, racism,
whatever you want to call it has caused a great deal of suffering
in the world - so much so that even thinking in that way should
be avoided so that this type of mass persecution doesn't keep happening
in the world.
It might be easier to kill somebody if you consider them to be one
of a race of people that you would never consider marrying.
Lorna
|
133.24 | "Think but don't do" is possible | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Nov 04 1986 15:17 | 14 |
| Re .32:
I said "what is wrong with the belief", not "what is wrong
with the act". You have cited bad acts, and not examples
of "predudice ... in thought only".
Acts cause suffering, I agree. Thought does not cause the
suffering of anyone but the thinker.
"Even thinking in that way should be avoided.."? This seems
to reveal a belief that the thought-to-act linkage is so close
that the thinker has no choice whether to act.
-John Bishop
|
133.26 | Terminate with extreme prejudice | ATFAB::REDDEN | WIKUD awesome | Tue Nov 04 1986 15:48 | 12 |
| Webster's 9th New Collegiate Dictionary
Prejudice 1: injury or damage resulting from some judgement or
action of another in disregard to one's rights, esp. detriment
to one's legal right or claims - 2: preconcieved judgement or opinion,
an adverse opinion or leaning formed without just grounds or before
sufficient knowledge.
I think prejudice, as used in this topic, is definition 2
I am prejudiced against prejudiced people, especially those that
abuse helpless little words.
|
133.27 | Am I a bigot if I choose to date only tall people? | HYDRA::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Tue Nov 04 1986 22:03 | 11 |
| It is not uncommon for people to use physical characteristics -
height, weight, age, hair color, <insert favorite part of anatomy
here> size - to select or reject potential dates. Most people I
know automatically pre-screen dates on the basis of one specific
physical characteristic - gender.
Is it *inherently* more prejudiced to use race as a criterion for
choosing one's dates than to use other physical characteristics?
If so, why?
- Jerry
|
133.28 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Liberal Little Lefty | Wed Nov 05 1986 02:49 | 30 |
| re:.27
You took the words right out of my mouth.
I, too, see nothing inherently wrong about using race or skin
color (or religion or ethnic origin or whatever) in deciding
to whom you're attracted or not. *I* don't use these as
criteria, but I don't see that someone else using them is a
bigot.
re:.16
> You all say that you will not care what people think,
> well that is fine, until such time as those very same people
> are your parents or very close friends.
My how we generalize. As it so happens, one of my sisters lived
with and eventually married a black man (and while in college,
she dated a number of black men, mostly students from various
African countries), and my parents didn't bat an eyelash. Now,
my aunts and uncles were a bit taken aback, but it didn't bother
any of us in the immediate family at all. I don't suppose the
reaction would be any different if I was to bring home a non-
Caucasian woman.
As for what my friends might think --- as far as I'm concerned,
if my happiness/desire/interest/whatever means that little to
them, they're no friends of mine.
--- jerry
|
133.33 | | REGENT::KIMBROUGH | gailann, maynard, ma... | Wed Nov 05 1986 11:30 | 43 |
|
hmm... let me see
I was married to a Mexican American
I have dated men that were Latin, Asian, Black, Irish, English and
'merican white.. people are people and a date is a date..( I better
be careful or I will end up back at what a date is note).. If a
person is nice, fun to be with and shares a common interest enough
to make wanting to go out and spend some time together, than what
possible difference can it make what color they are?
I will never forget the time I was sitting across the table from
a guy I was/am still very fond of and we were chatting and eating
dinner and somehow the word Jewish popped up.. I said "who is Jewish",
he said "I am", I said "oh".. I mean it was our third or forth
date and I did not know he was Jewish.. so that just goes to prove
how big a deal it was!!.. honestly.. I just can't imagine why if
a person wants to spend time with another 'person' why we worry
about these things!!
I can remember going dancing one night with a friend of mine that
is black.. sure I noticed people looking our way a couple of times..
if they had nothing better to do and we were that interesting then
let 'em look! We were having a great time so there really was no
reason to let a few stares ruin it.
I have said no to people who have asked me out.... reasons were
cuz I did not like them, *them*, the person, the attitude, whatever
it is that makes us like some people and not others... but I can't
imagine inquiring into their religion, race, heritage, etc before
hand..
All this rambling on and I still have not said what it is that strikes
me most about this note.. that is that we are all bound to have
something attached to our character that is bound to make us a bigot
in someone's eyes.. I mean I would prefer not to 'date' someone
that is not of my sexual preference, is loud and obnoxious, does
not have any common interests with myself etc.... guess that could
make me a bigot in someone's eyes.
later, gailann
|
133.37 | ain't we all just people after all??????????? | CEODEV::FAULKNER | destroyer | Thu Nov 06 1986 16:02 | 10 |
| faulkner you are a jerk
all i can say on this very large subject
is do what makes you happy
and do no give a flying
hoot what anybody says or does
|