Well you've really missed the point.
I don't know if you're black or white but whenever I see that viewpoint I read it as "well if white people can't say it, nobody can"
I personally don't know if t_d really means that nobody "can", but I personally believe that nobody SHOULD.
He literally says that when his 'homie' says it, it doesn't feel bad, only when someone white says it.
As a black man, I hate that view point, because normalizing that nonsense only allows it to linger around, along with all the baggage it brings. I used to throw it around alot when I was younger. Getting older gave me more of an appreciation of what that word means and the history it brings with it.
It's a racial slur, no matter what color your skin is.
I agree with you here. I consider this to be the most horrible word in the English language. I never actually say the word out loud, even to my wife. Instead, I say "the n-word", and even that makes me want to puke. Why anyone would want to ever use this word in such a cavalier manner is incredibly baffling to me.
Oh my head hurts.
The whole point is reclaim this word that was ounce used to insult us and put us down.We took that power away.
As some other poster here has already mentioned, this power has not been taken away unfortunately. I fully understand the desire to take it away and to reclaim that word. That would be an ideal outcome, but I don't believe that it is realistic. If such an outcome did actually occur, the word would ultimately still be around. Does anybody really want to immortalize this word? I believe that just not saying the word at all would accomplish so much more.
When I was a kid in the 70's and 80's, I quickly learned that the n-word was a terrible word. Ironically, back then I rarely heard that word at all. Nowadays, this so-called effort to reclaim the word has resulted in its frequent use in music, movies, television and other media. Ironically, the word is used even MORE than it ever has been, even to the point where it is used as a personal affectation between friends.
If black people want white people to respect that word, I do not believe that casually using the word in such a normalized manner is going to accomplish that goal at all. There are many, many, MANY more words that can be used in the place of the n-word. Despite all of these choices, people still actively choose to use the most horrible word in the English language. On Purpose. The word will never go away if you keep using it, no matter WHO uses it.
Ice Cube said:
Its not cool because when I hear my homie say it, it dont feel like venom. When I hear a white person say it, it feel like that knife stabbing you, even if they dont mean to.
So if the word feels like a knife stabbing you, even if the person saying it is well-meaning and oblivious to its connotations, why exactly would you want it around at all? Bottom line is that it's a disgusting and terrible word. I will never understand why anyone would ever want to keep it around at all, let alone actually making it more and more ubiquitous.