this was for a a oc development meme but i’m doing it for tobirama ..surprise
anyway you dont live through that many wars without getting a few scars 👌🏽
Tag: leo’s queue
On Asian “accents”
It started when I was in kindergarten, and I was so proud I did not have to go to Bingo class, unlike my friends, because I could speak good English –
although I had no idea what a yellow dog that could spell had anything to do with Chinese.
(I figure out now that it was probably called Bilingual class)
I am lucky. I speak the fluent, accentless English of newscasters, the dialect spoken by the children of immigrants, that we learned not from our parents but rather from watching Sesame Street and other things on tv.
Last year, a white facebook friend of mine posted, “In order to celebrate Chinese New Year, me talk rike chinese man arr day.”
And then told me that she was “sorry I was offended” and “she didn’t mean anything by it” when I (nicely, sweetly) told her that that shit was not okay. She said that she saw it the same as doing an accent, like Irish. Or British. Or Italian. (for bonus points, she even said that she has lots of Asian co-workers and friends, and LOVES Asian people, and so is not a racist.)
And when one of my white friends gets drunk, he thinks his “Asian accent” is hilarious.
And I was told by a coworker about the time my Asian coworker mispronounced “Barroway” as “Bwawwoway” and how hilarious it was.
Here’s the thing – can you guess how many Asian people I know who actually say
me rikey
me from _____
me so solly
(or, if you like, the fetishized versions: me so horny, me love you long time)
if you said ZERO, then ding ding ding! Congratulations, you have working brain cells.
No, my misguided fb friend, the “Asian accent” is not an actual imitation of an accent, comparable to your bad British/Irish/Italian – but rather a mockery of Asian people and their supposed inability to speak English. It is the perpetuation of the image of Asian people as perpetual foreigners in America.
Like that time when my family was at an Italian restaurant, and we were speaking to my father in Cantonese, and a drunken white lady said very loudly, “GOD when you come to this country at least learn the language!”
Or when my father was pulled over for speeding, and although he said “what’s the problem, officer?” the first thing the state trooper said was, “Do you speak English?”
Your fake “Asian accents” are not harmless and silly, because at the root of the joke, it says – you, you are stupid. You cannot speak English. You are Other. You do not belong.
my parents have been in this country for 30 years. They have been American citizens for 30 years.
And they are very self-conscious of their imperfect English, afraid that it makes them look ignorant, knowing that it marks them as immigrants. That, after 30 years, you can still be told (in not so many words) that you do not belong.
The Cultural Revolution started in China when my father was 13. He was pulled out of school and, later, sent to work in the fields. (He escaped to Hong Kong when he was 18, but that is another story for another time.)
When my father came to this country, he had a middle school education and did not speak a lick of English. He worked as a busboy at a Chinese restaurant, the evening shift that ran until 3 or 4 in the morning, and went to school during the day.
It took my father ten years to earn his bachelor’s degree. He is now an engineer.
Is this not your “American Dream?”
When my mother came to this country, she spoke very little English. She got a job as an entry level clerk. Over the years she earned one promotion after another. She is now management at a large federal agency, and manages funds for the whole state.
Is this not your “American Dream?”
And my father didn’t understand why his coworkers said, “flied lice, flied lice!” to him over and over and laughed.
And my father is still afraid to speak in a professional setting, even when he has ideas.
And my mother still checks and double checks her professional e-mails with me, for fear of mockery from the same people she manages.
And people don’t understand why I can’t take a harmless joke. Why I don’t think that shit is funny.
No, I don’t “rikey.”
No, I won’t “love you long time.”
And no, I’m not sorry.
So, please, kindly – FUCK OFF.
Reblogging this for, like, the fiftieth time because it has never stopped being relevant to my life and it always, always breaks my heart.
It’s not funny. It’s not okay. It’s not harmless. It’s alienating and hurtful.
some of y’all in the notes are so fucking dumb like you think you’re superior despite only knowing english while asian immigrants are out here learning two languages and you’re gonna make fun of their accent? i bet you’d sound funny too if you tried to speak an asian language
I just wish the exclusionist side would be more respectful.
I don’t know if they understand this but, the bottom line of if asexuality should be considered LGBT is so not the major issue here.
Like, I have had this conversation with asexual people (way before discourse mind you)…some who passionately believe that the communities should be separate due to issues being different.
Genuinely a lovely conversation. Interesting viewpoint.
In fact, most asexuals don’t even bother with being a part of the community, other than supporting the cause and assisting fundraisers and such.
If you ask, you will frequently hear, “I’d rather just hang with the asexual community. I’m happy here.”No one is mad that you want a community to yourself.
It is the minute you start saying evil things, and making mocking “jokes” and entire blogs dedicated to hating us, and overall being assholes (bullies) that you piss people off, and people like me come out of the woodwork.
I would have never been a part of this discourse had I not seen people being such dicks.
10% of this discourse deals with the actual pertinent questions at hand. The other 90% of it is exclusionists getting heated and saying rash things (aces are pedos, nazis, manipulative sociopaths…generally making themselves angry) and the inclusionists rebutting these posts and getting snarky and rude in return.
Like if you kept it nice, you might still have people who will truly believe aces should be LGBT, but you would’ve just had difference of opinion and not all of this drama.
FYI my friend who is a lesbian thinks asexuality is the queerest thing there is, because it calls into question so many basic assumptions of what humans are “supposed” to be/want with regards to sexual relationships. Personally I think we have just as much right to queerness as other LGBTQ ppl and it’s not a competition, but it was super validating to hear that not everyone thinks we’re interlopers, and some do think we have every right to call ourselves queer and be in the community.
That’s great! I agree that it’s not a competition, and it seems a little silly to me to phrase it as one, but I’m glad to hear you had such a positive experience. I think that, by and large, queer communities are more accepting of us than not, at least on paper. That doesn’t stop them from committing microaggressions or missteps born of ignorance, but that happens to everyone pretty much, and the blatant hatred and exclusion of aces from queer spaces is nowhere near as widespread in real community spaces as some of the discourse on this hellsite would have you believe. The worst perpetrators of aphobia are Straight people, not the community.
-Dew
Reblog if 2017 is the year we stop interrogating d/Deaf/HoH people
If a d/Deaf/HoH person tells you that they are d/Deaf/HoH, you believe them. No questions asked.
If a d/Deaf/HoH person wants to communicate orally with/or without lip reading, using sign language, gesturing, cued speech, using their cell phone, or pen and paper, you respect their decision. No questions asked.
If a d/Deaf/HoH person speaks, do not comment on the “quality” or “tone” of their speech. If they choose to speak to communicate that’s their choice, no matter how it may sound to you. No compliments given, no criticism given, and again, no questions asked.
If a d/Deaf/HoH people talks/listens on the phone, uses hearing aids/cochlear implants, speaks clearly, grew up hearing, reads lips, etc, you will respect what they tell you about their being d/Deaf/HoH. No questions asked.
2017 is already an amazing year for equality, support, solidarity, and inclusion. Let’s band together to make the lives of d/Deaf/HoH people a little easier, and allow them to breathe easier when communicating with hearing people.
Please reblog and add your own “d/Deaf/HoH No Questions asked”! I want to see what y’all have to say!
Don’t ‘test’ out if someone is really hoh or deaf.
Don’t ‘test’ how much hoh someone is.Don’t roll your eyes, sigh, or speak overly slow/loud when asked to repeat something.
For some people their level of deafness may fluctuate.
A cold, stress, other illnesses flaring up can and do influence how well someone who is HoH can hear.That is not your ‘gotcha’ moment or “Last time it was different”
Ok people, please block user “acetungldotcom”. They are posting abusive and shitty stuff in the ace positivity tag.
I wouldn’t advise trying to comment on their posts or sending them asks, because the reason they are doing it is just to get attention. The best method is to just not give them what they want, so block or mute them.
(i don’t care which side of the ace exclusion discourse you’re on, stuff like “aces should be exterminated” is not an ok thing to post, much less in a positivity tag)
People: You don’t seem autistic???
Me: *is terrible at expressing emotions, doesn’t know how to respond to things people say sometimes*
Me: …You don’t say.
Bad Things Happen When You Get A Nat 1
So the party was walking through some tunnels together looking for whatever was destroying a farmers crops, when a giant ant comes around the corner and bumps into me.
Me (OOC): I scream and stab it with a dagger!
DM: That’s your reaction to being startled? Remind me not to scare you. Roll for it.
Me: *rolls a nat 1*
DM: You try to stab it, but you miss horribly and manage to get your dagger stuck in the wall.
Me: *frowning*
DM: Bad things happen when you get a nat 1.
Is it an autistic thing:
To absorb opinions? I can generally be relied on to pick up an opinion and roll with it without doing much critical engagement with it.
It’s frustrating to never be able to justify my opinions but I can’t normally verbalize it much past ‘because it is’ and I’m not if it’s an autistic thing or if I’m just stupid.
@candidlyautistic do you know?
I can’t remember if I answered this? I thought I did? The answer is yes. We do this a lot, for a lot of reasons, for a lot of different autistic traits. So yeah.
New cryptid of 2017 had just been revealed