• @Viking_Hippie
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    10 months ago

    Now if you take the idiotic idea of “cultural appropriation” to its natural conclusion a ridiculous extreme, you arrive at very nearly the same idea

    Fixed that for you.

    Opposition to cultural insensitivity and reducing cultures to exploitable stereotypes ≠ advocating for segregation and only idiots and people arguing in bad faith would ever claim anything of the sort.

    • @[email protected]
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      910 months ago

      I mean, is it cultural insensitivity or exploiting stereotypes for a white teenager to wear a kimono? Because one got sent home for doing so around here because it was “cultural appropriation and inappropriate”…

      In the end the people who see cultural appropriation everywhere might not be advocating for each culture to have their own country (they’ll never tell anyone to move back to their country), but what they’re advocating for is for each cultures to live in the same place and to not exchange anything…

      • @Viking_Hippie
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        -310 months ago

        Yeah, I’m going to need a source on that incident… I bet there was a lot more to it than just “wearing a kimono”.

        Even if there wasn’t, one example of overzealousness doesn’t mean that the entire concept of cultural appropriation is invalid. That’s not how anything works.

        the people who see cultural appropriation everywhere

        Are these people in the room right now? Or do you only imagine them when you’re actively making fallacious arguments to support your ridiculous claims that cultural sensitivity is the same thing as demanding segregation?

          • @Viking_Hippie
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            10 months ago

            It literally says in the very headline that it’s a lot more complicated than you think and that’s your “slam dunk” example? 🤦

            Also, wasn’t even a kimono, which is revealed in the very first paragraph of the article itself.

            If you’re going to deliberately lie and distort to fit reality around your claims, at least make a fucking effort!

            • @[email protected]
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              10 months ago

              Yeah, the complicated nature is that Chinese people weren’t offended, and white people were.

              Yes, it was a kimono. A qinao is a type of kimono. As it says in the article.

              I’m not lying, and I haven’t made any claims other than that this incident was a false alarm. Don’t confuse me for the other user.

              For the record, my view is that cultural appropriation is a real and serious issue, but some people are quick to jump the gun with such accusations, out of a misplaced (and potentially racist) paternalistic need to “defend” marginalised people, as if they themselves can’t call people out, especially when said people are saying such a thing isn’t even offensive, just like the OP.

              See? That’s the complicated part. I can actually describe it. You didn’t even try. Just waved at the word as if it made your point for you.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      There was this white singer that got uninvited by fff here in Germany because she wore dreadlocks. Cant have that when you are white it seems. No logical reason necessary, too. Can just brand it “cultural appropriation” and you’re good. Oh shit, there is prove that greeks or wikings had dreadlocks? Nae, just gonna ignore that cause it doesnt fit my stereotypical views of the world.

      The argument might seem overstreched, but shit like this happens.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        and yet Carola Rackete was a welcomed visitor of fff. i didn’t understand the reasoning behind the singer thing.

        • @[email protected]
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          410 months ago

          There is none, it’s all signal politics, shibboleth juggling. The same people also unironically use the term “BIPOC” in a German context without realising that it means Black and say Vietnamese Germans, includes organic potatoes, but excludes e.g. Turkish or Italian-Germans as they’re neither black, indigenous, or “of colour”.

          They simply heard that term online used by their ingroup and now parrot it to signal that they’re part of that ingroup.

    • @[email protected]
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      010 months ago

      My take here is that people eager to get angry at something without a proper academic background shouldn’t use academic terms such as cultural appropriation, because the popular understanding of the term is definitely what @[email protected] is referring to, and has led the first person at the OP to take an absurdly oversensitive position.