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Gypsy Censored Version?


zevthepaparazzo
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4 hours ago, Foxyy said:

plenty of white Americans spend their time telling other people online how offensive it is to "use the g-word".

So nothing new... :triggered:

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djfreemymind

Just throwing this out there:

"The term "Gypsy" (and similar terms in other languages) derives from a historical misconception that Romani people came from Egypt. "

So the word, much like the word ghetto, is inherently ethnoracially charged and xenophobic (if not racist, depending which way you look at it). The word exists bc white people were like, "These people are dark-skinned, so they must come from Egypt."

Edited by djfreemymind
Maestro, play me your symphony; I will answer to anything. Take me on a trip,
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Meruk Holland
7 hours ago, hELXIG said:

I'm confused about how this word is considered such a strong slur. Oxford dictionary has two definitions, one is referring to Romani speaking people who travel, and I know it was used as an insulting term for these people. But the second definition is "a nomadic or free-spirited person" which is exactly what the song is about. I'm curious to know if the travelling people actually have a problem with it being used or if the internet has just taken it and run with it. Because my whole life I've known the term to refer to nomadic/free spirited people. Maybe I'm just uneducated and there's some massive historical drama I don't know about but it doesn't feel that serious to me. Is it really as bad as words like f*g and the n-word? Like it needs to be totally blacklisted. Someone educate me 

My understanding, which comes from a scant few conversations with only a handful of people whom I can only confirm one was of Romani ethnicity, is that the term isn't strictly a slur, but its at the very least pejorative, like bitch and slut are to women, or queer to...queer people. And that's an interesting distinction, because pejoratives have this quality of reclamation, wherein those terms can be used in a non-negative light, i.e. girls greeting each other with "what up, sluts" or queer people referring to themselves as queer people. 

That said, there is this issue when an outsider uses these terms. A gay person using f*ggot to joke with his gay friends is one thing, but a straight person using it to call out to a gay person is probably using it as a slur. So when most of the reclamation for g*psy is used by people outside of that demographic, it's harder to say it's properly being reclaimed and instead repackaged. In this case, it became co-opted by New Age, free-love, coexist types. 

I personally don't feel that looking up definitions is going to be the safest arguments when, linguistically, words like queer and colored had innocuous meanings but have since become pejorative. And context is super important too, obviously. 

And as I said, I personally have only had a few conversations with people this affects, and they weren't representative of the entire community, but when they expressed to me that it's not a good word, I personally felt it was just safer to treat it as a slur. I had always thought of the word in the positive intention, but I can't deny that I couldn't recognize it was used pejoratively. Such as the phrased "I got g*pped" and the song "G*psies, Tramps, and Thieves" wherein being called those thing was implied as bad.

Edited by Meruk Holland
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I think you should turn it into a comedy bit where the word is censored abruptly by an actual censor beep. 

the AuDHD polyamorous menace
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mightyriverz
9 hours ago, planetmayhem said:

Fall out boy too

I love the fact Cher to this day when she tours still rocks her Indian bollywood act coming out in her fake elephant and all

she just don't care, she's CHER

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zevthepaparazzo
12 hours ago, Meruk Holland said:

My understanding, which comes from a scant few conversations with only a handful of people whom I can only confirm one was of Romani ethnicity, is that the term isn't strictly a slur, but its at the very least pejorative, like bitch and slut are to women, or queer to...queer people. And that's an interesting distinction, because pejoratives have this quality of reclamation, wherein those terms can be used in a non-negative light, i.e. girls greeting each other with "what up, sluts" or queer people referring to themselves as queer people. 

That said, there is this issue when an outsider uses these terms. A gay person using f*ggot to joke with his gay friends is one thing, but a straight person using it to call out to a gay person is probably using it as a slur. So when most of the reclamation for g*psy is used by people outside of that demographic, it's harder to say it's properly being reclaimed and instead repackaged. In this case, it became co-opted by New Age, free-love, coexist types. 

I personally don't feel that looking up definitions is going to be the safest arguments when, linguistically, words like queer and colored had innocuous meanings but have since become pejorative. And context is super important too, obviously. 

And as I said, I personally have only had a few conversations with people this affects, and they weren't representative of the entire community, but when they expressed to me that it's not a good word, I personally felt it was just safer to treat it as a slur. I had always thought of the word in the positive intention, but I can't deny that I couldn't recognize it was used pejoratively. Such as the phrased "I got g*pped" and the song "G*psies, Tramps, and Thieves" wherein being called those thing was implied as bad.

This!!!!!!!!

✨ 𝓲 𝓪 𝓶 𝓼 𝓸 𝓯 𝓪 𝓫 ✨
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PartySick

She says that word almost 30 times in the song :bear: 

If you're concerned about the word potentially being offensive I'd suggest covering a different song :sweat: 

I'm just like 🧍‍♂️
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Roughhouse Dandy

The people here acting like treating an outdated racial term with the appropriate sensitivity is just woke cancel culture 💀 

Like others have pointed out, it was given to the Romani people out of ignorance/mistaken identification while used as an adjective for shady/thieving. The "romantic" definition of being free spirited, wandering individuals comes from the whitewashed perception of the Romani people since they had a tendency to constantly travel from place to place instead of settling down and building roots. They didn't travel like that because they loved it; they were oppressed by Russia and the Balkans, weren't given any job opportunities, enslaved by Christians, rounded up during the Holocaust, etc... so they had to make money however they could to survive and find another temporary home when their environment inevitably got hostile toward them. 

It may not be considered as bad as some other racial nicknames, but it sure isn't great to use. It's admirable for you to avoid the term. Don't let the anti-woke brigade delude you into thinking the word is innocent just because they like it. 

Sorry, I don't have any good replacement suggestion to use while singing the song 💜 break legs with your performance though! 

Edited by Roughhouse Dandy
This is my Hannah Montana™️ lipgloss.
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zevthepaparazzo
28 minutes ago, PartySick said:

She says that word almost 30 times in the song :bear: 

I'm thinking of actually skipping the first im im im im im im hook

✨ 𝓲 𝓪 𝓶 𝓼 𝓸 𝓯 𝓪 𝓫 ✨
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PartySick
9 minutes ago, zevthepaparazzo said:

I'm thinking of actually skipping the first im im im im im im hook

So...20 times :bear:

You do you but I just wouldn't censor it if I were you :laughga:

I'm just like 🧍‍♂️
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