Brazen White GOP Rep Refuses to Apologize for Racial Insult

Son is a colloquial expression and not a racist one. You all call each other ni””er far far far more than anybody calls you boy. You want respect? Then have some for yourself
Russobot needs to say it in one of the wards in Houston. I will pit flowers on your grave.
 
Nope, not at all.

You all need to understand how southerners talk and. HOW they use these words.

You do realize that white southern guys refer to other white southern guys as "boy", right? And as Winston eluded to, whether they are fighting words or not is dependent on the context and the tone of voice in which they are said.
No, white Southerners do not refer to other white Southerners as "boy", unless they are looking to get in a scrap.
 
Um..were ALL here to argue...you didn't think this place was for solving problems did you?

I'm not full of shots, I'm just pushing back against you leftys who use this game as a means to attack. Truth be told, I'd imagine most of you couldn't care less about the race issue, or trans issue, or illegals or any of it. It's simply a vehicle for your attacks.
Shots of vodka… considering the bullshit you spew
 
Not one to defend the GOP but what I read is she said "Boy oh boy". Not the same as calling someone "boy".
That is what I thought at first, but when you view the clip, it is clear she is as bigoted as the southern day is long.

 
Not one to defend the GOP but what I read is she said "Boy oh boy". Not the same as calling someone "boy".
No, that was her response to the previous use of the word. "Boy oh boy" was afterward, her thinking she was being clever.

Here is the context:

“Al Green was over here with his cane and I’m like, ‘Gosh dang it, boy,’” Harshbarger said, recalling the moment. “He does not need that cane. That cane is a prop. I swear it’s not real.”

 
Don't even try it. Your responses give you away.

Ok then, you're a racist. Got it.

So, anyone who disagrees with you and tries to give a logical and rational explanation, is racist?


Sorry but when white southerners calls someone black boy, the history of that use shows it's a racial slur.

That's because, in your mind, you still think it's jim crow and slavery. You don't understand context. You don't understand intent. You look at this woman as if she was trying to be overtly racist, when, judging by her dialect, and her tone, she was just using it as a reference to him as a man, not as a black person.

"Gosh dang it boy", this is southern vernacular for "come...on....man!!". That's just how some people talk in the south, especially in redneck areas of the south. It isn't about race it's just the way they talk.

I know you'll never agree to this, because you want to push this idea that every person who disagrees with you is racist.




Now, since whites call themselves white boys, and speak proudly of being white boys, when did that become a slur? When whites believe that being white is superior to everything else, when did white become a slur? Or is this just something whites have done to create a false equivalence to deny the real racism they have imposed upon others who are not white?
 
No, white Southerners do not refer to other white Southerners as "boy", unless they are looking to get in a scrap.

You do not understand context then. It's one thing to use the word "boy" when you are trying to be confrontational and another when just casually talking.

As in the examples I've previously given, there are different ways to use it.

If you're from the south, you KNOW this. Hell, many southern guys refer to themselves as "boy".

"Well, I'm a pretty big ole boy"

"Yeah, I'm just a southern boy"
 
Shots of vodka… considering the bullshit you spew
You're simply intolerant of anyone else's point of view, especially when you are trying to push the race card.
 
You do not understand context then. It's one thing to use the word "boy" when you are trying to be confrontational and another when just casually talking.

As in the examples I've previously given, there are different ways to use it.

If you're from the south, you KNOW this. Hell, many southern guys refer to themselves as "boy".

"Well, I'm a pretty big ole boy"

"Yeah, I'm just a southern boy"
And white people never, never use that term for black males because of its historically racist connotations unless they are old racists themselves.
 
Old folks that are still swimming in their In-Group bias, are a dime a dozen in our society.


I honestly don't know why folks vote for them, or why different old people are judged by different standards.

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Beyond Biden calling LL Cool J a “BOY” to his face, here are some other blatantly racist gems from the OP’s Vegetable Messiah.


Examples dating back to his campaign for president (and earlier) abound.

On Charlamagne Tha God’s popular morning radio show in May 2020, Biden infamously asserted to the largely black audience that if they were unsure of whether to vote for him or Trump, then “you ain’t black!

Then in August 2020, Biden told a gathering of black and Hispanic journalists that “unlike the African American community, with notable exceptions, the Latino community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly different attitudes about different things.”

Taken together, these statements clearly suggest that Biden believes all black people think alike.

In the same interview, responding to a question on whether he had taken a cognitive test, Biden angrily fired back with the suggestion that the black reporter was a drug addict.

“That’s like saying you . . . before you got in this program, you’re take [sic] a test whether you’re taking cocaine or not,” Biden said. “What do you think? Huh? Are you a junkie?”

Put these words into Mitch McConnell’s mouth and try to envision how long he’d be allowed to remain in the Senate, let alone in a leadership position.

But Biden has been getting away with this for years.

In 2010, he warmly eulogized Sen. Robert Byrd, a former Exalted Cyclops in the Ku Klux Klan, saying he was “one of my mentors” and that “the Senate is a lesser place for his going.”


In 2007, he referred to Barack Obama as “the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean.”

In 2006, he said, “You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent.”

Way back in 1977, he said that forced busing to desegregate schools would cause his children to “grow up in a racial jungle.”

Of course, he infamously worked with segregationist senators to oppose that mandatory busing, which decades later led to the strongest moment in Kamala Harris’s campaign for president, when she blasted him as having personally impacted her as a young girl.

And over the course of his entire career, he had kind words to say about staunchly segregationist senators.

Any one of these statements or episodes would have been enough to sink the political career of any conservative in Washington, D.C., against whom tenuous accusations of racism are commonplace and occur almost daily


 
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