Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
Someone needs to get the memo about the N-word out to thousands of hiphop artists.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkNg3b-PdV8
Because my kids and their friends have tons of songs with the N-word in it on their iPhones, and they (and I can only assume millions of others of all colours in the U.S. and other countries) sing along to the lyrics all the time.
They're all doing the same thing Wendy Mesley did at the CBC: repeating someone else's words.
If I presumably have 25 or 30 teens (including several who are black!) in my basement screaming the N-word at the top of their lungs (because it's part of a song they like) what exactly should I do?
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As has been noted, Quebec is a little more laissez-faire when it comes to this sort of thing so I'm not sure there is anything you really should do...
That said, the "rules" such as they are around the use of the N-word seem way more complex in the rest of North America. I can't remember the details but I recall a big social media kerfuffle a year or two ago when a white woman was invited on stage at a rap concert in the US... she sang along with whatever the well known was but the rapper and crowd turned on her when she failed to self-censor the N-word.
What teens do is another issue, but I think it's safe to say that at this point, no non-white adult should ever utter the N-word in a professional environment in North America for whatever reason, even if quoting someone else. If only as an act of self-preservation.