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I take ghetto to mean substandard, unpolished, incomplete, etc... No racial undertone. An overly sensitive, dare I say politically correct and self righteous person, can read offense into anything.

To suggest that Pincus's comment had anything to do with race is your own self-oriented projection.



>> I take ghetto to mean substandard, unpolished, incomplete, etc...

Except that's not what it means. If we're making up definitions then that's a whole different ballgame.

Wikipedia: A ghetto is a section of a city occupied by a group who live there especially because of social, economic, or legal pressure. A ghetto is now described as an overcrowded urban area often associated with a specific ethnic or racial population.

Definitions: 1. A part of a city, esp. a slum area, occupied by a minority group or groups. 2. The Jewish quarter in a city: "the Warsaw Ghetto".

I know that in current day society the word isn't always intended on meaning that. It doesn't change the fact that this is what it actually means. And I definitely don't believe Pincus was using it with any sort of racial undertones.

That being said, I still agree with the parents statement and I too wish it would die.


I'm not saying that anyone here used it with racial intent. I'm saying that I believe the word originates from an intent to disparage people who live in ghettos, i.e. certain minorities.

I'm talking about what it what the connotations of something being ghetto are -- especially when I someone is being accused of ghetto behavior.

In some parts of the country, "Aunt Jemima" (and "Canadian", I've heard) are used as slurs against black Americans. The dictionary definition standard would permit this, since Aunt Jemima is only the name of a brand of maple syrup.

The notion that the dictionary defines what is an isn't racist is wrong. Dictionary definitions trail modern usage, they don't lead it.


I had a response written up, but then I realized that your garbage about political correctness and self-righteousness probably means that you are not curious enough to consider the case.

> An overly sensitive, dare I say politically correct and self righteous person, can read offense into anything.

No projection there, right?


No, that's not projection. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_projection)

Projection would be when fear of racism within yourself causes you to project that racism onto innocent language and people.


Well then, I'll just let it stand as plain old garbage.




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