T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1182.1 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Jul 16 1991 17:32 | 44 |
| Cathy,
It's a matter of identity. They are no longer African, but ARE of
Afriacan heritage...
Just as the Texacan and Mex-Tex of Texas tend to prefer being called
such they are of Mexican heritage and do not like the term "Chicano"
or any other of the various Mexican-American heritage names applied
to them.
The terms "Black" "Colored" and "Negro" all have there place in
history.
When I was a small boy of about 5 I knew a man who wanted to be called
Colored, his son felt that this was a derogitory term and prefered to
be called "Negro" and HIS son felt both terms were dated suggested
racial sluring and wanted to be called "Black".
Further... the term Negro IS inappropriated being a derivative of the
name of a specific race of man (Such as the Caucasion or Whites... most
Whites prefer to be called by the country of heritage... (You yourself
stated you were European do you prefer being called Cauc? White? or
European? I'm of Indian heritage (American Indian) and as such I think
All of the other races here in the U.S. that use the term "American"
are a bunch of nuts anyhow... :-).
Better will be the day when you look to someone and ask them "What
nationality are you?" and they say "Human" without being ridiculed for
it or having it matter.
But to your question... it's a matter of pride to speak of where one
comes from.... a link to the past, and something to be proud of.
It's no worse then someone else claiming to be Chinese-American,
Amer-In or Chicano. It tells something of us. We are AWARE of our
ROOTS and heritage and although we now live in a different culture
(American) we have not forgotten where we came from.
From where I stand however, It doesn't matter much about what a person
is called, or what there heritage is, so much as who they are and what
they can do for themselves.
But then that's just my own opinions and a bit of the history that I
know of about terminiology.
Skip
|
1182.2 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Wed Jul 17 1991 01:47 | 4 |
| I just use their first name. 8^)
-j
|
1182.3 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Jul 17 1991 10:03 | 7 |
| re-1
That makes more sense then anything I said.
8^)
skip
|
1182.4 | Human... a nation? | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Wed Jul 17 1991 14:31 | 3 |
| "Human" is not a nationality...
A nation is a piece of our world and there are many, many "pieces" in it.
"ALL" of them, habitated by humans and animals.
|
1182.5 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Jul 17 1991 14:38 | 17 |
| Ah and it's because of the distinction of these pieces that we have so
many different problems
"Imagine there's no countries" are words from a song written about
world peace. What I'm saying is that the only thing that SHOULD
matter, is that each of us are HUMAN and should be treated that way.
Skin color, nationality, religious beliefs, and such should NOT be
the excuses we use for the way we treat each other.
Human isn't a nationality, but it IS a species and of more significance
then "Negroid, Caucasion, Mongoloid... etc, etc, etc" These are
distinctions that have no real value if we stripped away the surface
layer of skin on people.
SKip
|
1182.6 | I kind of like Euro-American (Europan?) | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Wed Jul 17 1991 14:39 | 18 |
| I think that Euro-American is probably more appropriate for most U.S.
whites than Afro-American is for most U.S. blacks, if cultural identity
is the criterion. Our schools and our media are more Euro-centric than
anything else; English literature, French history, Italian food :). The
typical American's exposure to "African culture" is minimal. I put
"African culture" in quotes NOT because the term is inapplicable,
rather because "African culture" is an incredibly diverse melange.
Africa is huge! Africa never had the underlying cultural structure lent
by the Romans and the Catholic Church. Even if black Americans make a
study of Africa, they necessarily pick a corner to learn about.
On the other hand, I think anyone should have the right to choose how
they are named, and I'm loathe to offend anyone if they happen to
prefer "Afro-American."
I believe that I saw the results of a recent poll in which a bare
majority (51%0 of U.S. citizens of African descent preferred to be called
"black", with "Afro-American" being the not-so-distant second choice.
|
1182.7 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Jul 17 1991 15:29 | 29 |
| Actually,
Since there are more then just the Afro-American heritage to the black
"culture" I think it's a matter of the the black race being tired of
getting lumped into the one group...
Very much like the American Indian... there are few who use the term
"AMer-In" most prefer to be called by the tribal name "Lakotas"
"Black-Foot" "Cherokee" etc. For many years they were all lumped
under the headings of "American Indian" and or "Red-Skin"
The reason you hear more of the "Afro-American" is that there IS a
larger population of African hertiaged people in the States then of
the other so called "black" cultures.
Yes, there are a lot of various lands in Africa but few records were
kept as to where those of slave origins came from. They simply came
from "Africa"
So they can't make the distinction of being Zulu or Watusi or Massi
(sp?) or any other tribal distinction because they just don't know.
Okay so I admit, some of this is conjecture and some of it is theory
and some of it is based on various relationships with "Home-Boys" and
such...
Skip
|
1182.8 | but still. | CSC32::PITT | | Wed Jul 17 1991 20:58 | 5 |
|
so what is derogatory(sp) about Negro? or even Black (since I am not
offended by being called White)?
cathy
|
1182.9 | Labels | WLDWST::HAESSNER | | Wed Jul 17 1991 21:39 | 28 |
| Hello Cathy,
I prefer being referred to as an individual - by my first
name, yes! I like that. But if for some reason the media
must designate my race, European-American would be my
choice.
Regarding African-Americans; I do not know if they prefer
to be referred to as such or not. But to be referred to
by one's skin color is odd to me. Most "blacks" appear
several shades of brown or tan to me. I have also met
African-Americans whose skin color is lighter than mine,
and I'm of primarily German descent, with pinkish/tannish
skin color!
Since we all have different levels of sensitivity, it's
difficult to determine what "label" may offend someone.
When in conversation, perhaps it would be appropriate to
ask an individual directly what his/her preference is.
Also, the tone in which a label is stated can make all the
difference. I have had the experience of feeling "put down"
when referred to as a "white girl". I guess all we can do
is be thoughtful in our statements, ask questions, and
GENTLY let someone know if we are not comfortable with a
label they have given us.
Dora
|
1182.10 | Well, actually records _were_ kept | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Jul 17 1991 22:28 | 34 |
| Actually, records were kept of where ships went to pick up
slaves (if not which villages slaves came from). European
powers controlled the area, and charged the trade for their
anti-pirate and customs services. The slavers themselves
kept records during the period the trade was legal.
Historical records, blood-group studies, language studies
and other evidence all imply that almost all (more than
90 percent) came from the southern coast of West Africa,
an area which used to be called the Slave Coast. The area
is now the nations of Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire), Ghana,
Togo, Dahomey and Nigeria. Major ethnic groups in that
area are the Yoruba, Ashanti and Ibo (there are sure to be
others, but my reference doesn't list them).
East Africa (Masai and Watutsi, etc.) was the source of slaves
for the Arab Middle East. Few if any Masai would have been
taken to the US.
Source: The Penguin Atlas of African History.
As for why the term keeps changing, it's a common feature of
euphemisms that a term tends to acquire connotations and need
to be replaced. Consider the sequence "crippled" to "handicapped"
to "disabled" to "differently abled". Each one in turn is
seen as a neutral or even positive replacement for a term
laden with negative implications. Each one in turn picks up
negative implications due to the real nature of the condition
it names. "Black" was unusual in that it marked an acceptance
(even a celebration) of reality--before it was championed as
the correct term to use, it was felt to be rude (and polite
people used "Negro").
-John Bishop
|
1182.12 | humm. | CSC32::PITT | | Thu Jul 18 1991 13:10 | 12 |
|
maybe I'm not as hung up on 'roots' as alot of other people. I know
where *I* was born, so that's what I am.
In my case, it's Canadian. Not even English Canadian or French Canadian
or White Canadian or White Female Canadian.
Just Canadian.
Seems to me that the only way to true 'racial' harmony, is for people
to stop being so stuck on their 'roots' and think about what they are
a part of today.
cathy
|
1182.13 | Who decides what to call whom? | AGOUTL::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Thu Jul 18 1991 14:59 | 10 |
| I think the objection is to having an "outsider" decide how to refer to
"insiders". When any person is referred to as member of some group,
there is an implicit suppression of personal identity, as if it were
less important than the group. If "insiders" are able to choose their
own designation, there is at least a tacit recognition of some power.
To me, it seems unfortunate that the walls have gotten so high, but
that is the legacy of many years of ugly behavior.
Dick
|
1182.14 | Americans are we ! | 2CRAZY::FLATHERS | Summer Forever | Thu Jul 18 1991 17:53 | 10 |
| I agree with Cathy. True racial harmony can only be acheived by
looking forward. Not in the past. I was born in the USA, that makes
me American. My grandfather, born in Ireland, came here when he was
young, and faced lots of "NO IRISH NEED APPLY". He, and others like
him worked hard to overcome the obstacles. They looked forward, called
themselves Americans not victims.
Jack
|
1182.15 | | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Thu Jul 18 1991 20:43 | 16 |
| RE: <<< Note 1182.14 by 2CRAZY::FLATHERS "Summer Forever" >>>
-< Americans are we ! >-
>My grandfather, born in Ireland, came here when he was
>young, and faced lots of "NO IRISH NEED APPLY". He, and others like
>him worked hard to overcome the obstacles. They looked forward, called
>themselves Americans not victims.
...and all those irishmen in chains on those plantations. Don't
forget the irishmen who were burned alive during the Irish Rights
years. And, what about the Irishmen who are beaten by policemen today,
just because they are Irish?
What a self-righteous lot of hypocrisy you write.
Greg
|
1182.16 | huh?? | CSC32::PITT | | Thu Jul 18 1991 21:05 | 14 |
|
re last:
Greg...sounds to me like you have a terrible burden to bear with that
huge chip on your shoulder.
I don't think that your 'slam' was at all called for....
Hypocrisy? please explain how you feel that .14 was in any way
hypocrisy. Are you saying that the Irish were NOT mistreated when they
came to this country?
cathy
|
1182.17 | My turn on the soap box | VINO::MACNEIL | | Fri Jul 19 1991 11:26 | 28 |
|
If we could go back in time, we could all find ancestors who have
been mistreated. We could also find some of our ancestors were the
mistreators (if I can make up a word). So what are we supposed to do?
Should we carry a chip on our shoulder for all the past injustice done
to our ancestors? Should we carry a guilty conscience for all the past
injustice done by our ancestors? Should we do both? And how should we
feel if we're adopted?
I enjoyed knowing my grandparents and, even now that they have all
been gone for some years, I still miss them alot. I could feel angry
about the bad things done to them or guilty about the bad things done
by them. But that doesn't make sense to me. I live now. I can't
really feel any of their suffering or their guilt, I can only imagine
it. And, while it's easier to feel anger or guilt, I think I should
just feel responsible, responsible for me and for what I do today.
It's tough enough to just live in the present.
As far as identifying myself with my ancestors by putting something
in front of "-American", it's difficult because I'm somewhat of a mix
so I don't think this would mean much in my case. But mostly I'm
happy to be here so I'll just identify myself by:
Glad-my-ancestors-got-together-American
John
|
1182.18 | | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Fri Jul 19 1991 14:16 | 12 |
| RE: <<< Note 1182.16 by CSC32::PITT >>>
> re last:
> Greg...sounds to me like you have a terrible burden to bear with that
> huge chip on your shoulder.
It is surely no greater a burden than you bear by being hostile to
such minor things about African-Americans. Considering that it
irritated you enough to start this conversation, I'd say you have a
much larger chip on your shoulder.
Greg
|
1182.20 | y | CSC32::PITT | | Fri Jul 19 1991 14:51 | 9 |
|
wait a minute.
this is NOT meant as racist..I WANTED TO KNOW/...
I think that this is a valid node that took a rasicst tone with Gregs
input.
cathy
|
1182.21 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Jul 19 1991 14:57 | 48 |
| Hmm - seems there's a battle being carried into H_R from somewhere else.
I do find myself wishing people would just respond to the questions and not
accuse the questioner of hidden motives.
The whole thing about "what is the currently acceptable name for a given
group of people" leads to endless confusion and frustration. Just when one
name is heralded as "this is what we want to be called", they change it.
Sometimes the changes make sense, other times I'm left scratching my head.
I never did figure out the reasoning behind "people of color", a group
name which seems to have been missed by previous noters, though it was
the "in" name just last year.
I note now that "differently abled" has transformed yet again to
"temporarily able", at least when referring to those who are not currently
"challenged", or whatever.
It's a dilemma. Groups of people, who would perhaps LIKE to be considered
"just like everyone else", find that they are separated out by others
for particular ill treatment. In order to find strength and unity, they
gather together under a name which identifies them as a group, sometimes
gaining a stronger voice, but this very act also works against them by
reinforcing the notion that they OUGHT to be treated differently. What makes
it even more confusing is that the groups overlap, and that within one
group there are often smaller factions which are struggling for an identity
of their own.
There are several cultural labels I could apply to myself, such as
German-Jewish, and I could match Greg Bruno's slavery horror stories with
tales of mass extermination of "my people", but I don't see the point
in doing so. Perhaps that's because I haven't found my heritage to be
a drawback in American society, whereas others have to battle it every
day.
Each time a new name is chosen for a group, often on behalf of the group
by a few, and rarely with universal consent of those so named, there is
an image which is intended to accompany that name. As times and sensibilities
change, so do the necessary images.
Names are powerful words. A name can be both an insult and a source of pride,
depending on who is saying it and who is hearing it. There's no making
any sense of it, other to understand that the sense of "belonging" is
a very powerful human emotion, and names are the biggest part of that.
As to the base note question, my response is "wait a year or two - it will
change."
Steve
|
1182.22 | what the heck is going on here?? | CSC32::PITT | | Fri Jul 19 1991 15:02 | 20 |
| re .18
Greg,
Please point our WHERE the H*** I was hostile (exclude this note).
I am NOT hostile.
I am not irratated by the term African-American.
I am not irratated at all. Until now.
I don't understand how you took this note and turned it into a racist
argument.
I WAS CURIOUS.
sorry if you choose to take it otherwise.
cathy
|
1182.23 | Mongrel-American | ICS::SARTORI | | Fri Jul 19 1991 15:57 | 5 |
| Hmmmmmm, well ... Let's see....
I'm of Italian/Portuguese/Scottish/English decent. So, I prefer to
be called:
Mongrel-American
|
1182.24 | | GIAMEM::JLAMOTTE | Join the AMC and 'Take a Hike' | Fri Jul 19 1991 16:05 | 16 |
| Roots are very important to me. My grandchildren call me Memere as I
am of French-Canadian descent. Someone made fun of this name and told
me that I really didn't have any right to use this name as I didn't
speak French and my Mother was not French. It is important to me what
I am called and how I am identified, if it is not to someone else that
is fine but I never expected that anyone would care that I chose that
name.
People do a variety of things to express their difference, their
uniqueness or to identify who they are. America is a sum of many parts
and would not be the place it is without the stamp of a lot of
cultures. I know if we looked into history we would be able to
identify some similarities in the black experience with the Irish
experience for instance, maybe even in the way they identified
themselves during the years that they suffered and recovered from
oppression.
|
1182.25 | | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Fri Jul 19 1991 18:14 | 9 |
| RE: <<< Note 1182.20 by CSC32::PITT >>>
Well, I can't give you the response I intended, but I can
reiterate the other noter's advice for you to post a duplicate topic
in OXNARD::BLACKNOTES. In the basenote, you queried "Why do Black
people...". Logically, the only way you're going to get a real answer
is to ask the people involved.
Greg
|
1182.26 | wrong audience??? hum... | CSC32::PITT | | Fri Jul 19 1991 19:10 | 12 |
|
re last.
Sorry. I expected that I would hit a large audience of African-
Americans in this conference.
And you're welcome to send me vms mail if there's something that you're
holding back in notes.
cathy
|
1182.27 | ok so there it is. | CSC32::PITT | | Fri Jul 19 1991 19:16 | 5 |
|
This note HAS been posted in OXNARD::BLACKNOTES.
Cathy
|
1182.28 | Yes! Americans are we !!! | CUEBAL::FLATHERS | Summer Forever | Mon Jul 22 1991 12:09 | 12 |
| Greg, Self-righteous hypocrisy??? Wow! Has this topic been reduced
to a game of "My hurt is bigger than your hurt"?
Yes, some groups have suffered much worse than others. And it all is
extremely regretable, and is a very dark side to human nature. Some
of our country's history is very very shameful.
Please re-read my note....my intention is to state that we should
move forward as a united people called Americans!
Jack
|
1182.29 | Relevant item from "US News and World Report" | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jul 22 1991 14:43 | 99 |
| A coworker had tacked up outside of his office wall the following piece from
the July 22 issue of US News and World Report, a magazine known to be somewhat
on the conservative side. I thought it made interesting and, at times,
amusing reading, and thought I'd share it with people here. (Please don't
assume that I necessaarily agree with the author's views.)
Steve
The New Verbal Order, by John Leo
Wishing to employ the correct modern term for "disabled", the Philadephia
Federation of Teachers set up a "Committee for Members with Special Needs."
That didn't work. A homeless person came by, announcing a special need
for housing. Then it became the "Committee for Members who are Physically
Challenged", but a frightened fifth-grade teacher showed up, thinking it
was a support group for instructors intimidated by their students. So now it
is known as the "Committee for Disabled Members." "Everybody understand the
words and nobody protested," said James Gallgher of the committee, satisfied
at last.
The descent into accurate English as a last resort is ever more arduous. In
the disability-rights movement, one must grope through a fierce blizzard of
euphemisms; the uniquely abled, the differently abled, the exceptional, the
handicapable, injury survivors and people with differing abilities. A recent
bulletin from the movement lets us know that Porky Pig, formerly a stutterer,
should be listed as speech-imparied, whereas Mr. Magoo is visually
handicapped and Captain Hook is orthopedically impaired.
From the Pentagon to feel-good self-esteemers, everyone seems to be
contributing mightily to the steady debasement of the Mother Tongue.
Entrenched euphemisms include senior (old), differently sized (obese),
meaningful downturn (recession), work stoppage (strike), quarantine (blockade),
make sexual dysfunction (impotence), educational equity (quotas),
undocumented workers (illegal aliens) and substance abusers (winos and
junkies.)
Mindbenders. On the PC front, we have dominant culture (the mainstream),
underrepresented groups (blacks, Indians and Latinos), survivor (victim,
as in incest survivor), monocultural (white), Third World (non-white) and
"racist!" ("I disagree with you on that"). Diversity means racial
representation, as the office of "diversity manager" on so many campuses
makes clear. (A group composed of St. Francis, Vivaldi, Falstaff, Jackie
Onassis, Hitler and Mick Jagger would not be diverse, since all are
mono-pigmented.) "Colored People", as in NAACP, is racist, but the
backwards construction "people of color" is progressive. Terms keep sliding;
Indians became Native Americans or Amerinds, but since both terms include
the dread name of a Eurocentric cartographer, the preferred term is now
indigenous peoples. "Oriental" has been declared a racist word, so all
college departments of oriental studies that do not wish to be burned to
the ground in the name of tolerance should rename themselves rather quickly.
PC-oriented newspapers, such as the Los Angeles Times, employ this remote
campus tongue as if it were real English. The Times, which uses physically
challenged without irony, once referred to a rap star's Eurocentric suit.
This meant ordinary Western clothes and not a suit that believes Europe to
be the focal point of all world history.
Pentagonese has come up with a new euphemism for friendly fire, or shelling
your own troops; incontinent ordinance, which sounds like something June
Allyson warns us about in TV commercials. The definition of peace ("the
temporary cessation of hostilities") does its bit to attrit, maul and
collaterally damage the language.
Animal-rights activists insist that the word "pet" is demeaning and should
be replaced by "animal companion." But that term is itself under fire because
it implies that humans are somehow distinct from the rest of the animal
world, an idea that reeks of speciesism. While a new and improved term is
being dreamed up, pets can be called "friends" and "protectors". Animals
are never "wild", they are "free-roaming" or "free". And expensive vinyl
pants are now known as "vegetarian leather."
Campuses are particularly vulnerable now to the spread of oddbal feminese.
Two of these terms - herstory and womyn (the latter circulated by the same
segment of the population that spelled America "Amerika" during the '70s) -
actually made it into the new and outstandingly softheaded Random House
college dictionary. My brother Peter, the distinguished Pittsburgh
columnist, says that if female history is "herstory", then a history of
humanity should be his'n'herstory, and a man with herpes should be listed
as a hispes survivor. Word comes that a feminist professor now calls her
seminar an "ovular". Let's hope that no one tells her the etymology of
"testimony" or she might have womyn ovarifying in courts across Amerika.
Finally, as a public service, here is how a few familiar books and movies
might be translated into modspeak:
- "Beauty and the Beast" - A Lookism Survivor and a Free-Roaming
Fellow Mammal
- "War and Peace" - Violence Processing and the Temporary Cessation of
Hostilities
- "Les Miserables" - Persons with Special Needs
- "Three Blind Mice" - A Triad of Visually Impaired, Wall-dwelling Protectors
- "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" - One of the Monocultural Oppressed
Womyn Confronts the Vertically Challenged
- "Men at Arms" - The Myn Are at It Again
|
1182.30 | Al pan, pan, y al vino, vino | GNYPIG::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Tue Jul 23 1991 10:18 | 14 |
| On the broader philosophical issue of euphemism or no euphemism, I
remain a throwback to an earlier era.
Written and spoken language is to communicate ideas, body language is
for emotions and attitudes.
The only test I apply to my prose is whether I have written clearly
what I think.
Any interpretations about my current or past emotional states are and
always will remain the responsibility of my readers (if any).
I vote for using words in ways that do not leave anyone scratching
their heads.
|
1182.31 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jul 23 1991 12:04 | 12 |
| Since it would appear that there are no black readers of this conference
who wish to discuss the question posed in the base note, perhaps we could
broaden it to a more general discussion of "hyphenated-American" group
names. Why do some people identify themselves as Italian-American,
French-American, Spanish-American, etc? What are the advantages of doing
so? What are the disadvantages? Do such people use whatever label is
most advantageous at the time?
For a country that has been often called a "melting pot", what we seem
to have instead is a stew....
Steve
|
1182.32 | | QUIVER::STEFANI | | Tue Jul 23 1991 13:22 | 13 |
| Along that note...
My parents immigrated from Italy some 30 years ago. The Italian
culture has always been important to my family, evidenced by our
speaking Italian at home and visiting our family in Italy every so
often. I don't use the title Italian-American, but whenever I'm asked
what nationality I am, I say "I'm Italian". It's understood that I'm
American and I don't feel any less patriotic by not stating the
obvious. In this country, saying "I'm from New York" or "My family is
from Italy" is more indicative of who I am and where I'm from than "I'm
American".
- Larry
|
1182.33 | us-they-Americans | CSC32::PITT | | Tue Jul 23 1991 14:12 | 40 |
|
re last.
Steve,
I think that it's a good idea. Lets talk about the anything-American
thing.
Why is it?
I was thinking how much this need to 'identify with your own group of
people' reminds me so much of a gang. "We wear THIS color and THESE
shoes and have our OWN name, so we are 'our own group'. Everyone within
MY group is just like me, and everyone outside of mY group is NOT
like me"
I am not saying that this is what folks who prefer to be called
xxx-Americans are doing, but I think that the results are the same.
What we fail to realize,(and this applies to 'gangs' as well) is that
just because someone meets all of the criteria to be "one of US",
doesn't mean that they are anything LIKE us. It doesn't make them good
or bad or better.
There was an interesting show on TV about HATRED. They spoke to two
youths (impressivly intelligent in the way they presented themselves),
who were members of they Bloods and the Cryps (??) respectively.
They were the same age, the same race, both from the same type of
family and upbringing, similar education and, as I said, both very
intelligent.
But they would kill each other if they met on the street wearing their
'colors'. Why?? Because they are in the WE-THEY game. "YOU are not US,
so you're differant; differant is bad." It's a kids 'game' but
adults play it everyday without even knowing it.
Anyhow, I didn't want to get into the philosophies of gangs, but I do
think that until we can drop the we-they, us-them mentality, we will
always be seperate. We-they implies differances. Colors or religions
or history doesn't make us so differant as who we are NOW.
....off the soapbox!
Cathy
|
1182.34 | reading list | HOTJOB::GROUNDS | Mostly confused... | Tue Jul 23 1991 22:18 | 5 |
| reply to .33
You might want to read a book called "Between the Devil and the
Dragon" by Eric Hoffer. He has some pretty interesting ideas regarding
the things that motivate people to identify with groups/organizations.
|
1182.35 | | AKOV05::JLAMOTTE | Join the AMC and 'Take a Hike' | Wed Jul 24 1991 10:04 | 11 |
| I tend to disagree with the concept of we and they in the need for
people to identify their uniqueness in terms they have selected. That
is what we are really talking about. Specific groups of people with
similar characteristics and/or differences choose to be identified with
a name.
The base author said it clearly in the original note that origins and
roots were not important to her. It seems to me that names identify
and those of us that find enjoyment/pleasure or a need to identify
their uniqueness feel differently.
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1182.36 | Belonging to groups | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Wed Jul 24 1991 10:43 | 8 |
| Along a similar vein, I have always been aware that I do not identify
with groups as others seem to. My association with any group of people
is always temporary, at my convenience, and with no expectations of any
group loyalty towards me. Similarly, I reserve the right to pass
judgement on any action or activity of any group I belong to. There
are only a few groups that are willing to have me on those terms.
Dick
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