This whole thread is great read and proves that Omid Djalili is a c unt.I just hate his fucking shouty Arab stereotype 'act' !The 'act' that just happens to be portrayed in every advert the tosser does.Should this be in a different thread ?
I think its only in 'white' countries where you can have this debate. Not only have we got most of our riches based on a racist history but our advancement in terms of society means that we can question racism on the level that we do. We beat ourselves up about it more than we set about dealing with it.In Nigeria the term for a white person is 'oyinbo' and is used by every Nigerian for any white person. It just means 'white person'. You couldn't say,'black person' over here when talking about them or to them. But Nigeria doesn't have a history of subjugating white people so there's an innocence in the term and I've never met anyone who has taken offence at the term.
Quote from: andyh on July 19, 2012, 11:56:22 AMThis whole thread is great read and proves that Omid Djalili is a c unt.I just hate his fucking shouty Arab stereotype 'act' !The 'act' that just happens to be portrayed in every advert the tosser does.Should this be in a different thread ? I actually find Omid Djalili quite funny, but then I've always interpreted his jokes as mocking the stereotypes rather than mocking the people they reference. After all, virtually every joke he does is about some sort of stereotype and the majority of them are non-Arab stereotypes.
Quote from: peter w on July 18, 2012, 09:55:17 PMI think its only in 'white' countries where you can have this debate. Not only have we got most of our riches based on a racist history but our advancement in terms of society means that we can question racism on the level that we do. We beat ourselves up about it more than we set about dealing with it.In Nigeria the term for a white person is 'oyinbo' and is used by every Nigerian for any white person. It just means 'white person'. You couldn't say,'black person' over here when talking about them or to them. But Nigeria doesn't have a history of subjugating white people so there's an innocence in the term and I've never met anyone who has taken offence at the term.Not sure that is a particularly fair comment Peter.
Quote from: tomd2103 on July 19, 2012, 01:35:26 PMQuote from: peter w on July 18, 2012, 09:55:17 PMI think its only in 'white' countries where you can have this debate. Not only have we got most of our riches based on a racist history but our advancement in terms of society means that we can question racism on the level that we do. We beat ourselves up about it more than we set about dealing with it.In Nigeria the term for a white person is 'oyinbo' and is used by every Nigerian for any white person. It just means 'white person'. You couldn't say,'black person' over here when talking about them or to them. But Nigeria doesn't have a history of subjugating white people so there's an innocence in the term and I've never met anyone who has taken offence at the term.Not sure that is a particularly fair comment Peter. What, Britain bucked the trend in being a cuddly and loving empire builder, rather than all the other nasty ones?
Quote from: Ger Regan on July 19, 2012, 01:49:36 PMQuote from: tomd2103 on July 19, 2012, 01:35:26 PMQuote from: peter w on July 18, 2012, 09:55:17 PMI think its only in 'white' countries where you can have this debate. Not only have we got most of our riches based on a racist history but our advancement in terms of society means that we can question racism on the level that we do. We beat ourselves up about it more than we set about dealing with it.In Nigeria the term for a white person is 'oyinbo' and is used by every Nigerian for any white person. It just means 'white person'. You couldn't say,'black person' over here when talking about them or to them. But Nigeria doesn't have a history of subjugating white people so there's an innocence in the term and I've never met anyone who has taken offence at the term.Not sure that is a particularly fair comment Peter. What, Britain bucked the trend in being a cuddly and loving empire builder, rather than all the other nasty ones?Oh come on now, it's not like we invented concentration camps or anything.
No, not at all, but I just felt Peter was discounting the fact that a lot of our riches were also gained by developing the best means of using the natural resources found on our own shores. I also think it is unfair that we are in Britain are constantly hammered about the Empire, when other countries very rarely have the finger pointed at them (Belguim's actions in the Congo spring to mind). Why should we feel guilty about events that happened way before most of us were born and that we had no active role in? Yes we should be aware of what happened, but it is this whole guilt trip that I don't get.
Quote from: tomd2103 on July 19, 2012, 03:09:11 PMNo, not at all, but I just felt Peter was discounting the fact that a lot of our riches were also gained by developing the best means of using the natural resources found on our own shores. I also think it is unfair that we are in Britain are constantly hammered about the Empire, when other countries very rarely have the finger pointed at them (Belguim's actions in the Congo spring to mind). Why should we feel guilty about events that happened way before most of us were born and that we had no active role in? Yes we should be aware of what happened, but it is this whole guilt trip that I don't get.The Industrial Revolution spurred the empire on certainly, but what made Britain rich in the first place was the triangular slave trade.
Quote from: Stu on July 19, 2012, 03:19:24 PMQuote from: tomd2103 on July 19, 2012, 03:09:11 PMNo, not at all, but I just felt Peter was discounting the fact that a lot of our riches were also gained by developing the best means of using the natural resources found on our own shores. I also think it is unfair that we are in Britain are constantly hammered about the Empire, when other countries very rarely have the finger pointed at them (Belguim's actions in the Congo spring to mind). Why should we feel guilty about events that happened way before most of us were born and that we had no active role in? Yes we should be aware of what happened, but it is this whole guilt trip that I don't get.The Industrial Revolution spurred the empire on certainly, but what made Britain rich in the first place was the triangular slave trade.Point taken Stu. It is just that I find the well-aired notion that Britain became a powerful nation only by exploiting other countries a little unfair.
Having said all that, if Britain hadn't have been active in empire building, then it's likely that we'd be speaking French or Spanish now. It really was sink or swim from the 16th century onwards.