T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
67.2 | Only the ignorant _believe_ in stereotypes. | JANUS::FRASER | Sandy's Andy. | Mon Feb 02 1987 11:08 | 10 |
| Headline - 15 Scotsmen die in road accident!!
Reason - someone dropped a penny and it rolled under a truck.
Ban it?? NO way - stereotypical jokes are the same as any
other humo(u)r...meant to be laughed at (or with) and not
believed.
Andy (a Scot).
|
67.3 | With moderator hat half on... | CLT::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Mon Feb 02 1987 11:50 | 9 |
| Please, guys, cut out the examples.
We've gotten a complaint about the ethnic jokes. I won't
(at least at this time) hide the notes, because the authors
were clearly not claiming any truth in the ethnic slurs.
Still, such "jokes" aren't necessary... even for a discussion
of ethnic humor.
/dave
|
67.4 | And now, with moderator hat stowed under desk... | CLT::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Mon Feb 02 1987 11:59 | 22 |
| Humor does basically originate as a response to stress, and
certainly "humor" has been used to express hostility at least
as often as its been used to express anything else.
The pleasure one gets from hearing a joke is often a sense
of superiority over the fools described... or just a sense
of relief that it was someone else (as in "slipping on a
banana peel" slapstick). That's one reason why humor is
so cultural... different cultures lead to different tensions,
and a joke which doesn't relate to one of your tensions is
less likely to be appreciated. Someone who enjoys falling
on banana peels is probably less likely to see any humor
in such a schtick.
As for whether it's healthy to express hostility with humor...
well, it's more healthy than a direct physical attack... and
much less healthy than acceptance of others.
And of course, the generic disclaimer: not all men do so,
nor do *only* men do so.
/dave
|
67.5 | If we can't laugh at ourselves... | JANUS::FRASER | Sandy's Andy. | Mon Feb 02 1987 12:23 | 14 |
| Re: .3
Dave - I'll answer for my response, as I wrote it! :^)
If anyone can object to an ethnic joke told by someone of the
same ethnic grouping, then they're in need of a sanity check!
I'm a highland Scot - born in Kyle of Lochalsh, Wester
Ross-shire, and we're reputedly the second meanest group
(after Aberdonians!) Are you implying that I'm showing
hostility to my own people?
Andy (no flames - just shaking head in disbelief!)
|
67.7 | Who do Kerrymen tell jokes about? | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71, DTN 381-2525, WRU #338 | Mon Feb 02 1987 13:06 | 16 |
|
I'm not convinced that ethnic jokes are really based on a perceived
ethnic characteristic of the people involved. Example Polish jokes
are common in America, Irish jokes are common in England, and
Irishmen tell Kerry jokes ... Indeed as far as I can tell everybody
tells jokes about some other group. The jokes are frequently
identical, and I certainly don't claim all ethnic groups have
identical characteristics -- with one exception: they are not my
ethnic group!
So are ethnic jokes basically xenophobic?
/. Ian .\
PS: my familly (on my Mother's side) originated in Kerry so I could
I guess answer the question in my title, but won't
|
67.8 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Three rights make a left | Mon Feb 02 1987 13:50 | 8 |
| Re: .5
I am not personally offended by the jokes, but they CLEARLY violate
an explicit corporate policy against such items, so I feel they
are indeed not appropriate. It is not necessary to give examples
of ethnic jokes to discuss the subject raised in .0
Steve
|
67.10 | It's better to laugh than cry! | FDCV13::CALCAGNI | A.F.F.A. | Mon Feb 02 1987 15:50 | 14 |
|
Back to the subject. I do recall reading somewhere that without
the outlet of humor, laughter we'd all go nuts!
By being able to laugh and joke about something that could really
effect yo{ it's like a steam valve. Crying can work in the same
way.
I like to joke, and have fun especially at work, but never to offend
or hurt anyone.
I'm here to have fun!
Cal
|
67.11 | | RDGENG::LESLIE | Andy `{o}^{o}' Leslie, ECSSE. OSI. | Mon Feb 02 1987 19:09 | 6 |
| Objections to Sandys' Andys' joke are clearly absurd.
Others seem to have been deleted.
As to the TOPIC, jokes are a reaction to stress, according to
trick-cyclists.
|
67.12 | take my wife...PLEASE! | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Tue Feb 03 1987 01:05 | 19 |
|
I think I read somewhere that laughter is a child's response
to the undercutting of a tension by some anomalous event. So
the implication is that there is always some threatening
situation that is made non-threatening by the "punch-line"
of the joke.
The anomalous event is supposed to be the juxtaposition (or
superimposition) of a totally distinct and incongruous view
or interpretation of a situation on top of the carefully
built-up introduction that describes the situation initially.
In a pun, an incongruous word is substituted for a similar
sounding word. In more long-winded types of jokes, the
punch-line defalates an elaborate build-up that has preceded
along a different line of reasoning.
In line with that, many of the ethnic jokes I have heard end
up standing the stereotype on its head, to comic effect!
|
67.13 | He who laughs last probably didn't understand the joke | SAHQ::LILLY | | Tue Feb 03 1987 10:06 | 13 |
| I have loved humor all my life. In fact, in some respects, my life
IS a joke. I have found that ALL humor can be offensive to someone
because it is designed to help us laugh at our short comings, and
we all have them.
To cope, it is necessary to laugh in the face of adversity. Humor
is the preasure release.
If you can't laugh at yourself, you have no business laughing at
others. That is how I feel and I don't mean to force my opinion
on anyone. The advice is free (and worth every penny).
Mike
|
67.14 | Do what I tell you to do or else! | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Tue Feb 03 1987 10:59 | 15 |
| Another note which does little more than point out just how
intolerant and naive many people in the U.S. are. It is quite sad
so many of us exert so much enery telling other people how to
act, dictating our personal values while ignoring the rights of
others. Dictating, by the way, should not be confused with educating.
Is it any wonder there is such a strong movement in the U.S.
to burn books, dictate behavior between consenting adults in their
own bedrooms, force prayer into the classrooms, etc. Why can't
we live and let live?
Ethnic jokes are dumb, mostly unoriginal and rather harmless.
When they are sufficiently crude they should be ignored.
Douglas
|
67.16 | | RDGE43::KEW | Can you imanige?? | Tue Feb 03 1987 11:54 | 14 |
| > If you can't laugh at yourself, you have no business laughing at
> others. That is how I feel and I don't mean to force my opinion
> on anyone. The advice is free (and worth every penny).
Excellent!!! very true.
Eagle, I'd just like to ask you how you reconcile a desire to BAN ethnic
jokes with a desire for FREEDOM. I would feel banning and freedom to be
mutually incompatible concepts?
Jerry
|
67.18 | humor (yuk yuk) | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Tue Feb 03 1987 12:48 | 30 |
| In an ethical sense, it's wrong to ban anything... the proper
solution is to educate people so that things like ethnic
humor fade out of existance quietly on their own.
On the other hand, in the meantime, Digital has to take
pragmatic action to protect itself from people who might
consider anything recorded on Digital property (such as bits
on a disk drive) to be representative of Digital policy,
and take corresponding steps (e.g., a law suit). That, of
course, is only a guess... but it seems likely.
As for requesting that jokes not be entered in this topic...
it's very simple. Some people are bothered by their presence,
and they have nothing whatsoever to contribute to the discussion
of humor. It's a matter of simple courtesy to avoid irrelevant
stabs at someone.
Of course, some ethnic jokes (I stress, "some"!) really are
funny... but in each such case, there's absolutely no need
to use any particular nationality/race/whatever. I recall
that someone once published a book of "ethnic jokes" based
on the exploits of two bumbling imaginary species residing
on some faraway world. The joke, if any, remains. The insult
is gone with the specific human stereotypes.
So if you *really* need to include a joke to examine it...
why not try it that way? If it sounds stupid... it was probably
stupid to begin with.
/dave
|
67.19 | | 43156::ANDY_LESLIE | Andy `{o}^{o}' Leslie, ECSSE. OSI. | Tue Feb 03 1987 12:50 | 11 |
| How can one discuss n offensive topic without examples?
I'd say that it is an impossible dream to think that we inhabit
academic cirlces and that all our colleagues can share our academic
interest in offensive material.
When someone takes the negative attitudes, they drag the rest
of us down into their mire.
Andy
|
67.20 | | ROYCE::RKE | dragons slain....maids rescued | Tue Feb 03 1987 12:58 | 11 |
| I'm sure I got lost somewhere in this note.......
however, I shall add my tupence worth!
I am not sure where the humour and stress bits are related, I really
feel quite humourless when under pressure, or feeling stress.
When feeling hostile (hardly ever) Sarcastic comment would be the
best I could manage, that should not be mistaken for humour.
Could it be said that humour is the outpouring of joy from one
person hoping to inflict that joyous feeling on another?
Richard.
|
67.21 | | RDGE43::KEW | Can you imanige?? | Tue Feb 03 1987 13:13 | 5 |
|
I believe I misunderstood the use of BAN, it struck me as meaning ban as in
not anywhere, as opposed to a ban in notes.
Jerry
|
67.22 | Don't be so self-righteous | QUARK::LIONEL | Three rights make a left | Tue Feb 03 1987 13:31 | 22 |
| If you insist on using examples of ethnic-type jokes, you could
use a fictional name, such as Ruritanian, or whatever. Let's
face it, though. Ethnic jokes almost always have hostility as
a basis. For every one person of a certain background who says
he's comfortable telling jokes about his own ethnic group, there
are dozens of others of the same background who will be offended.
If you want to tell ethnic (or sexist or whatever) jokes privately, I'd
be the last to say you shouldn't. But NOTES is not simply a private
cocktail party, and DEC has made it VERY clear that ethnic, racial and
sexist jokes will not be tolerated on its computer systems. If
everyone insists on filling up this conference with their favorite
joke, eventually someone will get offended and the conference will be
in trouble.
For more on this topic, I'd recommend reading "Isaac Asimov's Treasury
of Humor", especially his sections on "Ethnic" and "Bawdy" jokes.
Asimov offers his opinions on why we tell jokes like these, and
their effects on people.
Steve
|
67.23 | | PISCES::MCCLURE | Who Me??? | Wed Feb 04 1987 08:00 | 9 |
| This response to an ethnic joke got the whole bar laughing.
Ya know what's black & blue and bleeds?
The next guy that tells an Italian joke!
Vinnie_the_bartender
|
67.24 | !! | RDGE28::SADAT | Jambo!! | Wed Feb 04 1987 08:55 | 17 |
| Well, I agree with Richard. I would say that laughter and stress don't go
together. But then again, what do I know about it?...
So, as is customary in this topic Here Is The Joke (today's favourite). Not
slurring an ethnic minority, but probably still libelous...
What's the difference between a cow and the James Last Orchestra?
Well, a cow has the horns at the front...
...and the arsehole at the back...!
Tarik.
|
67.25 | danger is funny... afterwards | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Thu Feb 05 1987 13:34 | 28 |
| Laughter and stress don't go together? Ever seen someone
who had a close call start laughing? It's so common it's
a stereotype. You've all seen it, in movies, TV... and almost
certainly in real life.
I know the time I fell out of a tree and busted my toe, in a
graveyard, my brother and I were giggling and telling "graveyard
jokes" for hours. It wasn't because we thought falling out of a
tree in a graveyard was funny: it was because of the rather
close call of falling 15 or 20 feet from a tree, with only
bicycles for transportation, well away from any help. It was,
in short, a reaction to stress.
Don't try to tell me that's uncommon... I've seen it too
many times.
The stress need not be physical... it could be a subliminal
discomfort with the surroundings: strange people, a strange
place, an overdue project... "ghost story" jokes are very
popular with little kids alone at night. They relieve the
stress of being "alone" in the dark by laughing at it.
The telling of ethnic jokes doesn't necessarily betray a
specific discomfort with the sort of people mentioned in
the joke (I'm sure to many people they are just jokes, like
any other), but they almost certainly began that way.
/dave
|
67.26 | laugh or cry | CELICA::QUIRIY | Christine | Thu Feb 05 1987 17:59 | 12 |
|
I haven't read the base note or the replies. However, I think I laugh
most often due to stress. I hate it. If I want to say something
"difficult" to someone, I very often preface it with a giggle (I suppose
to soften what I think is going to be a "blow") to release pressure.
I once laughed when I found my cat dead at the side of the road and was
horrified at my response because I was with some friends and they thought
I was a little deranged. And I know I've had the urge to laugh when I
hear really _bad_ news, like "so-and-so's been hurt" (or sick, or near
death). It's extremely embarrassing because it's so inappropriate.
CQ
|
67.28 | | RDGE43::KEW | Can you imanige?? | Fri Feb 06 1987 07:08 | 12 |
| > Laughter and stress don't go together? Ever seen someone
> who had a close call start laughing? It's so common it's
> a stereotype. You've all seen it, in movies, TV... and almost
> certainly in real life.
Stress is *a* reason for laughter, not the *only* reason for laughter,
humour is another reason for laughter.
Jerry
|
67.30 | | DSSDEV::FISHER | | Wed Mar 11 1987 15:57 | 36 |
|
> Ethnic jokes are dumb, mostly unoriginal and rather harmless.
> When they are sufficiently crude they should be ignored.
No. You shouldn't ignore oppression and oppression is very harmful.
Jokes can be and often are used to harm people and to perpetuate
stereotypes. Every time I hear a "fag" joke, I cringe. If nobody
speaks out against such "jokes," then people will continue to tell
them, and they will reinforce a lot of hurtful lies about people of
color, gays and lesbians, and people of different races and religions.
I might add that if you hear someone telling an offensive joke and if
you do not speak up, you are just as much at fault for perpetuating
that hatred and prejudice; the people telling/hearing that joke
interpret your silence as implicit approval. You have to take some of
the responsibility too.
As far as I can tell, no one has brought up the point that you don't
need to cut someone else down in order to be funny. Resisting ethnic
jokes is not an attempt to do away with humor; it's an attempt to do
away with prejudice. I think that the idea is to laugh WITH someone
not AT anyone.
Another question: has anyone tackled the idea that men use offensive
jokes more than women (this is MENNOTES)? Do men respond to stress by
joking about serious situations more than women do?
Just looking at various NOTES files, it seems as if it is the men who
undermine serious conversations by making inappropriate jokes and
remarks, moreso than the woman. Any comments?
--Gerry
|
67.33 | Hypothesis? | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Fri Mar 13 1987 17:43 | 12 |
| When "some men" joke about subjects I know they find painful to
them, I wonder if they feel weakened (less "masculine") by
acknowledging their pain. "Women" are often subtly trained that
they are weak, so perhaps we are more willing to say out loud, "this
hurts", as they have less of a need to put out a "strong" image.
The quotemarks are there to signify that I do not in any way feel
this is universally true of all men and women, and that I do NOT
equate the inability to acknowledge pain with what is masculine
or strong.
Lee
|
67.35 | | GENRAL::SURVIL | Not COLONEL::SANDERS | Tue Mar 31 1987 12:04 | 6 |
|
RE:.34
EXCELLENT!
Todd
|
67.36 | Great stuff | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Tue Mar 31 1987 12:41 | 4 |
| Re .34
I gotta show that to my wife! She'll love it.
Spence
|
67.37 | but 45 minutes of foreplay is fun... | KLAATU::THIBAULT | Swimmers Do It Wetter | Tue Mar 31 1987 13:12 | 3 |
| pshaw. David Letterman is my hero...
Bahama Mama
|
67.38 | Plagiarism? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | WAC-E Ideology & Planning | Wed Apr 01 1987 18:00 | 4 |
| re:.34
Are you SURE that it shouldn't have been labeled "�19xx Dave Barry"?
Nah, it was better than his normal standards!
|
67.40 | | WILLIE::TIMMONS | GO CELTICS | Thu Apr 02 1987 13:31 | 4 |
| Well, whoever originated it did a fantastic job!! I'm still chuckling,
especially about men veing vaguely aware of short people...
Lee
|
67.41 | all true | USATSL::LILLY | | Thu Apr 09 1987 15:59 | 7 |
| re .34
I read it twice just to see if I could find anything false. Well,
I didn't.
For a moment, there, I thought you were writing about my wife and
me.
|
67.42 | I'm disappointed. | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Thu Apr 16 1987 01:16 | 12 |
| RE; .34
All prejudice.
When it comes to Male/Female relationships, I am disappointed to
find that DEC men are no better than working class men I meet in my
local bar.
Hi-tech = Lo-brow?
- Karl
|
67.43 | That's offensive | GOOGLY::KERRELL | It's OK to know you're OK | Thu Apr 16 1987 04:50 | 9 |
| > When it comes to Male/Female relationships, I am disappointed to
> find that DEC men are no better than working class men I meet in my
> local bar.
As a working class man from a working class family I resent that remark.
I also feel that you are making sweeping generalisations on the basis of a
single reply (.34).
Dave.
|
67.44 | not true either | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Apr 16 1987 09:14 | 5 |
| I'm offended, too. My auto-mechanic father and his friends would walk
out on many of the male/female jokes and cracks that are routinely
offered in the name of humor at some DEC meetings I've been to.
--bonnie
|
67.45 | U49 | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Thu Apr 16 1987 10:09 | 4 |
| Yo Karl, what makes you think there are no working class
men here ? there is life outside the neat little cubicles.
Dana_who_gets_his_hands_dirty_every_day_and_is_proud_of_it >:-)
|
67.47 | Is this the best we can do? | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Thu Apr 16 1987 14:39 | 12 |
| Re; .44
So, perhaps Dec men are *less* enlightened than working class
folk?
My intent was not to offend (though I apologize - to working class
folk), but rather to express my dismay over the number of notes
dealing with serious male/female issues that degenerate into
wisecracks about 'women drivers'.
- Karl
|
67.48 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Apr 16 1987 15:08 | 12 |
| Re: .47
All this demonstrates is that you can find jerks anywhere. There's
no question on the employment application to screen out such
tendencies. (Nor should there be!) Perhaps also the serious people
who don't have anything specifically worthwhile to contribute to
the discussion stay silent.
Being a DEC employee doesn't automatically make you better than
anyone else, and we shouldn't expect it.
Steve
|
67.49 | what enlightenment? | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Apr 16 1987 17:48 | 31 |
| re: .47 => re: .44 => re: .34
"Enlightenment" doesn't have any connection to profession or
occupation. There are sensitive, considerate, perceptive men who
treat women as equals running multibillion-dollar corporations,
sleeping on park benches, and everywhere in between, just as there
are jerks in all the same places.
You can't make blanket statements about men in any economic or ethnic
or any other group being more or less enlightened than men in any
other group. Or women, for that matter.
There are many sensitive, considerate, perceptive men who treat
women as equals, who love their children, and who are nothing
like the stereotype portrayed in note .34. Thank God I'm married
to one of them.
What does this have to do with humor? Mainly that though .34 was
very creative, witty, and well written, it wasn't funny at all.
I was saddened by the blindness and narrowness it illustrated. The
man and woman portrayed in that joke are missing out on so much
of the richness each has to offer the other. They aren't seeing
each other as human beings at all but as a couple of cardboard
cutouts dancing on the screen of what they think society expects
them to think and feel.
And most of the people participating in this discussion think it's
TRUE? We're farther from enlightenment than I thought.
--bonnie, who doesn't mean to step on toes but feels rather passionate
on the subject
|
67.50 | I'm stilling rolling!!!!!1111!!!!!!!1111!!! | ALIEN::MCANULTY | sitting here comfortably numb..... | Thu Apr 16 1987 22:41 | 14 |
|
BOY, LIGHTEN UP FOLKS.....
This was just a little humor...after all it broke up my night
of doing work.......take it with a grain of salt....or pepper
or whatever......
RE STAR::MALIK
If all men are less then whatever your buddies at your local
bar, I guess you don't think to much of yourself 8*).....
Mike.....who_was_being_nice_for_a_change
|
67.51 | * | GENRAL::FRASHER | Disguised Colorado mountain man | Fri Apr 17 1987 15:48 | 24 |
| How can someone take the contents of .34 and think that it says
anything serious about anything or anybody? Someone mentioned
Dave Barry. There is a conference on Dave Barry. You can take
any of his articles this way. They are written for humor, not to
be taken as fact. I remember one of his articles about how stupid
dogs are and then went into details about a dog that he knew. I
have dogs that are nothing like he mentioned, but I laughed until
my sides hurt because of his humorous way of pointing out what he
thought was stupid. Of course, we all know that he doesn't really
feel the way he writes. The same applies to Andy Roonie.
re .49
> And most of the people participating in this discussion think it's
> TRUE? We're farther from enlightenment than I thought.
I remember seeing one reply that stated that the author thought
it was true and I suspect that the author was joking.
Finally, Karl, what is your definition of 'working class' and why
is it assumed that DEC isn't included in the working class? Since
I work at DEC am I assumed to be more than human?
Spence
|
67.52 | you're entitled to your opinion | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Apr 17 1987 17:56 | 18 |
| Sorry, Spence, I jumped to the perhaps unjustified conclusion that
one couldn't find the 'joke' funny if one didn't think there was
at least a certain amount of truth to it.
I started a lengthy defense of my position, but I think I explained
myself adequately earlier. If you think it is merely funny, not at all
serious, and doesn't even implicitly comment on the condition of
male/female relations in this country, nothing I can say is going to
convince you otherwise. I won't waste my 'breath' and my keyboard
arguing about it.
Perhaps the most offensive thing about it was the crack that "men
are vaguely aware of some short people in the house." If you think
that is merely funny . . .
--bonnie, throwing up her hands in dismay and walking away
|
67.53 | Unadulterated, slanderous poppycock.... | ROYCE::RKE | RKE, News at ten, Reading | Mon Apr 20 1987 06:48 | 13 |
| > When it comes to Male/Female relationships, I am disappointed to
> find that DEC men are no better than working class men I meet in my
> local bar.
Working at DEC, makes you working class, to assume anything else is
pretentious in the extreme.
> Hi-tech = Lo-brow?
Furrowed-Brow in this case.
Richard.
|
67.54 | Working class Yuppies? | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Mon Apr 20 1987 14:58 | 25 |
|
My comment, while hardly scientific, was based on ten years
association with Dec programmers and writers.
IN GENERAL, these people *seem* to be more intelligent, aware,
and literate than people I meet outside of Dec. I am not surprized
to overhear a discussion of Bergman films at lunch, or time/space
physics at the coffee station. Such conversations, while not
impossible, *would* be surprizing at the local bar.
My problem is the hard-to-give-up notion that intelligent, aware,
literate people are not racist/sexist/etc. I need to remind myself
that there are some highly intelligent axe-murderers out there.
To get back to the subject (humor and hostility), Bonnie hit
the nail right on the head - people (and I am speaking generally
here; not picking on anyone in particular) often don't even know
when they're being offensive. Saying that 'it's just a joke' or
(god, I hate this one) 'It's just my opinion' does not soften the
effect.
QUESTION: Someone tells you a very funny but very cruel racist
joke. You can't help but laughing (even though you may groan and
say 'God, that's terrible'). Would you retell it?
- Karl
|
67.55 | sometimes there better second time around.... | BEING::MCANULTY | sitting here comfortably numb..... | Tue Apr 21 1987 20:40 | 9 |
|
re. 54
retell joke:
I have before, I will again......
Mike
|
67.56 | | SNEAKY::SULLIVAN | El Perro de la Luna | Tue Apr 21 1987 21:56 | 7 |
|
Re: .55
Grrrrrr!!!
Bubba
|
67.57 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Wed Apr 22 1987 09:16 | 11 |
| re:54
Even if I wanted to retell it and remembered it (usually forget
everything but the punchlines anyway), I can't make the words come
out of my mouth (you know the bad n-word, the bad p-word, the bad
k-word, ad nauseum).
Now a good, sexist MCP joke is easier, but no men EVER laugh at
those :)
Lee
|
67.60 | Does this qualify as a MCP joke? | LILAC::MKPROJ | REAGAN::ZORE | Tue Jun 09 1987 17:54 | 11 |
| Re: .57 Men not laughing at MCP jokes
Oh yeah?
The average woman would rather have beauty than brains because
the average man can see better than he can think.
Now how many guys out there think this is funny? (I do)
Rich
|
67.61 | Depends on who's telling it. | TRACER::FRASHER | Undercover mountain man | Fri Jun 12 1987 14:51 | 3 |
| re .60 -----> 8-)
Spence
|
67.63 | Not me though... Well, not always...\ | AXEL::FOLEY | is back! in Littleton Hills Mangler | Sat Jun 13 1987 00:37 | 5 |
|
Male Chauvinist Pig.
mike
|
67.64 | | PENUTS::PENNINGTON | | Thu Jul 23 1987 10:31 | 2 |
| re .60 Funny, But TRUE!
|
67.65 | | CEODEV::FAULKNER | In need of a clue | Sat Jul 25 1987 18:56 | 1 |
| i find .64 to be offensive and should be deleted.
|
67.66 | I don't find it offensive ... do you really? | RSTS32::COFFLER | Jeff Coffler | Sat Jul 25 1987 20:16 | 13 |
| re: .-1
I don't, and I'm a man (judging by the fact that I wear contact
lenses, I *HOPE* I can think better than I can see). People are
welcome to state their opinions in this file as long is it isn't
insulting or overly threatening.
If you have a problem with the contents of this file, you should
send MAIL to one of the moderators, as the introduction states.
If you truly feel that .64 was offensive and should be deleted,
please state your reasons why in MAIL to me or another moderator.
-- Jeff (Co-moderator of MENNOTES)
|
67.67 | Rathole alert! | SKYLRK::OLSON | green chile crusader! | Wed Jun 15 1988 22:00 | 46 |
| Gads, dredging this old thing up to chase a rathole.
Consider yourself warned ;-).
Re 67.42, .51, .53, .54:
Wanted to comment on some cultural blinders, here, folks.
I think our British-English-speakers use the phrase "working
class" in a different sense than us American-English speakers.
Spence noticed this but got ignored.
.51> GENRAL::FRASHER "Disguised Colorado mountain man"
.51> Finally, Karl, what is your definition of 'working class' and why
.51> is it assumed that DEC isn't included in the working class? Since
.51> I work at DEC am I assumed to be more than human?
Richard even got a bit bent about it.
.53> ROYCE::RKE "RKE, News at ten, Reading"
.53> Working at DEC, makes you working class, to assume anything else is
.53> pretentious in the extreme.
Karl did respond...
.54> STAR::MALIK "Karl Malik"
.54> My comment, while hardly scientific, was based on ten years
.54> association with Dec programmers and writers.
.54>
.54> IN GENERAL, these people *seem* to be more intelligent, aware,
.54> and literate than people I meet outside of Dec. I am not surprized
.54> to overhear a discussion of Bergman films at lunch, or time/space
.54> physics at the coffee station. Such conversations, while not
.54> impossible, *would* be surprizing at the local bar.
========================================================================
Very minor point of course. My personal (American, as it happens)
thought is that the British are much more aware of allusions
to aristocracy (or the lack thereof) than we are, hence, "working
class" is a hot button. Americans tend to use that word to describe
manual laborers, welders, fitters, longshoremen (persons;-), etc.
Karl doesn't consider himself to be in the "working class", he's
probably more comfortable describing himself as a "professional".
To Richard, that smacks of lesse majeste'.
At least thats how I read it.
DougO
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67.68 | wild on wilde! | NZOV01::MCKENZIE | lothwell casts a spell.. | Tue Jun 21 1988 05:17 | 46 |
| Hope this doesnt break any rules....
Have just been reading some of the Feminist jokes in WOMANNOTES
and I am reminded of a couple of famous Oscar Wilde sayings to that
effect.
Since some of the feminist humour is pretty "down-tredding" towards
men - I thought it was about time to launch a minor counter-offensive
<warning - the following may be considered offensive to women>
Oscar Wilde often told of his experience walking home late one
evening, completely intoxicated. He was confronted
by an old and rather well known local woman who he
considered a complete pain in the *ss.
Any way she shouted at him "MR WILDE - YOU ARE DRUNK!!!!!)
to which he replied...
"And madam - you are extremely UGLY!!! - and tommorow - I'll be
Sober!!!"
One of Oscars most popular sayings was:
Men have MANY faults
Women only TWO
EVERYTHING THEY SAY
AND EVERYTHING THEY DO!!
And finally there is a story about Oscar Wilde sitting in parliment
falling asleep whilst a local feminist MP had the chair. Seeing
him dozing contently she cried...
"MR WILDE - DO YOU HAVE TO SLEEP WHILST I AM SPEAKING?"
and he replied
"NO MADAM - I DO IT PURELY BY CHOICE!"
hope this doesn't offend anyone - cheers
|
67.69 | a reply | NZOV01::MCKENZIE | lothwell casts a spell.. | Tue Jun 21 1988 05:55 | 7 |
| RE .68 - JUST A LITTLE NOTE....
The second statement in this reply was stolen by some feminist who
made a fortune, swapping the words MEN and WOMEN and making bumper
stickers and posters and selling the result to other feminists.
Oscar - where are you when we need you???
|
67.70 | more Oscar Wilde humor... | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | roll with the changes | Tue Jun 21 1988 09:21 | 8 |
| more Oscar Wilde sayings (from memory, excuse if they are inexact):
"I can resist anything except temptation..."
"The only way to get rid of temptation is to yield to it"
(both, I believe, from Lady Windermere's Fan, a play he wrote)
|