- Banned
- #1
This post is not about racial hate. Just an observation, that above looks, I can actually smell and hear different races.
When it comes to smell, I think some of it is genetic, but some of it is behavioral. For example, white people smell of dogs, because, well, they love dogs and are always around them. Some races smell of their cooking. And I swear that soap/deodorant etc. preference is also racial. When I'm around black people it always seems like I'm smelling the same cologne.
I can also hear the races when they speak, even if they are speaking the same language. I think some of it is genetic, but much of it is also imprinted on us by parents, peer groups, etc. In other words, we grow up among people of the same race, absorbing the way they speak, and thus our tone, accent etc. is different. Even 2nd, 3rd generation hispanics in the U.S., for example, sound different. If a white man and a black man are both singing rap, I can easily tell who is white and black.
When it comes to smell, I think some of it is genetic, but some of it is behavioral. For example, white people smell of dogs, because, well, they love dogs and are always around them. Some races smell of their cooking. And I swear that soap/deodorant etc. preference is also racial. When I'm around black people it always seems like I'm smelling the same cologne.
I can also hear the races when they speak, even if they are speaking the same language. I think some of it is genetic, but much of it is also imprinted on us by parents, peer groups, etc. In other words, we grow up among people of the same race, absorbing the way they speak, and thus our tone, accent etc. is different. Even 2nd, 3rd generation hispanics in the U.S., for example, sound different. If a white man and a black man are both singing rap, I can easily tell who is white and black.