• @jaybone
    link
    187 months ago

    Do people really not know this term anymore?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      -137 months ago

      I’ve heard the term, but the only meaning for it I can think of is that they’re trash because they’re white.

      • @TrousersMcPants
        link
        217 months ago

        It’s actually kind of a fucked up term but a lot of people don’t consider it, it’s both super racist and classist. I don’t really think less of anyone for saying it because it’s such a common term but I personally don’t like using it. The original implication is that poor white folks are “trash”, comparing them to enslaved African Americans.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          127 months ago

          I always read it as referring to people who are (a) white and (b) trash, without either adjective implying all A are B or vice versa. Like: I’ve got a red cup on my desk, but that doesn’t mean everything red is a cup or that all cups are red.

          • @TrousersMcPants
            link
            107 months ago

            The Wikipedia article even describes it very much like how I did. Like I said, I understand how people view it but the word at the least has very nasty roots

            • @garbagebagel
              link
              17 months ago

              That was a fascinating wiki read. I’m not equating the two terms, but it definitely has its likeness with the n word in terms of etymology and white (specifically Anglo) supremacy.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            37 months ago

            You make a good point, but I don’t think that holds in the case of combining insults with people groups. Consider “jedi scum” or “filthy thieves” for example.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          37 months ago

          I also find it to be a derogatory, distasteful, and bigoted term. I definetly think less of people I hear who use it, & hope eventually it will be dropped from the cultural conciousness like other bigoted terms.

          It’s a way to police what “whiteness” should be, and is a term I’ve only ever heard from well off and judgemental people.

          • @TrousersMcPants
            link
            47 months ago

            I’ve heard a lot of poor folk use it too, it’s basically just a derogatory term for a redneck in the Midwest where I live. I don’t think a lot of people really understand it’s implications.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              07 months ago

              That’s fair. It’s definetly one of those offensive terms people use without necessarily thinking about, like “getting gyped” or “pot calling the kettle black”.

              Knowing is half the battle & raising awareness is half of activism lol

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  -17 months ago

                  This term is trickier since it is entangled with Europe’s long standing use of blackness to denote wrongness. & that whole dichotomy of good=white bad=black is an often talked about source of controversy in literature.

                  As the wiki says “It means a situation in which somebody accuses someone else of a fault which the accuser shares”. In the case of the quote the fault is being black. Both pot and kettle are black.

                  Here is an article I found that did a good job delving into the topic. They end up agreeing the term is okay to use but also offer some alternative phrases that side step the potentially offensive phrasing. My fav was, “the wifi calling the narrator unreliable”.

                  • @nomous
                    link
                    1
                    edit-2
                    7 months ago

                    I agree with the article that the phrase has nothing to do with race. Also, blackness in the idiom doesn’t connote shame or badness and it’s ok to use it.

      • @jaybone
        link
        137 months ago

        The term usually refers to white people who are poor and uneducated, often live in rural areas. This is to group them with the traditional stereotypes of ethnic minorities who are stereotyped to share a similar socioeconomic status. And to separate them from the good respectable white people who have money and jobs and education.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          47 months ago

          Oh wow, that’s worse than I thought. Honestly, I was half expecting a “yeah, that’s what it is, but it’s actually okay because…”