What is the historical significance of that term?
What is the historical significance of that term?
People like to get offended about everything. Obviously there is no Asian connection here, so I really don't see how you could connect the two.
Between this and the Colbert thing, I'm starting to think that my people have no idea what racism is.
.@USArmy uses racist term for Asians in headline! #inexcusable Im waiting for an apology. @bjones @ArmyTimesTony pic.twitter.com/ArqsHUbrwJ
Chanin Nuntavong (@authoriTHAI) January 29, 2015
there's more idiots on twitter than people on earth
People are getting wayyyyy too sensitive about the use of certain words in certain situations and it's starting to piss me the fuck off.
If you use "chink" as a racial slur then you can expect that people will be upset. The use of the word as demonstrated in the OP is not an example of this.
It unfortunately became racist when it started being used by racists. See Jeremy Lin headlines.
I'm offended at the offense, honestly.
I'm offended at the offense, honestly.
lolThat picture is Ghost Recon Future Soldier, lol.
People getting bent out of shape over nothing, as per fucking usual. Is there any words we are allowed to use without being branded racist?
"Just because this is a common term doesn't make it OK," Nuntavong said. "We're educated. We're better than that."
This generation of wet blanket millenials with their trigger warnings and going out of the way to be offended by ANYTHING will be the death of us all I reckon one day.
I knew this seemed familiar.Chink in the Armor as used here? Not racist at all.
Chink in the Armor headline to an ESPN article about Jeremy Lin? Yup, kinda racist.