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From http://www.cbc.ca/news/viewpoint/vp_burman/2008/01/is_canadian_a_racist_slur.html:
What does the word "Canadian" conjure up in your mind?

Polite? Peacekeeping? Harmless? Heroic? A weak-kneed, pot-smoking, sexually-permissive anti-American? Or, perhaps, cheap?

This is a question being debated this week with both intensity and some humour in a variety of internet blogs in the United States.

The trigger point occurred over the weekend on the popular American website The Huffington Post, quoting a brief Canadian newspaper story that revealed that the term "Canadian" is being used in parts of the U.S. as a euphemism — as code — for a racist characterization of black people.
The comments wander off into how much one should tip in a restaurant, but I guess that was inevitable given the last two sentences:
The most startling revelation for me is that many Americans apparently tip 20% when they go into a restaurant.

That’s quite odd.
Perhaps one is supposed to tip less in Canada.

(no subject)

Date: 2008-02-01 01:51 pm (UTC)
ext_99415: (llama)
From: [identity profile] woodwindy.livejournal.com
My parents, who are perhaps a tad less than ideally open-minded, have been using "Canadian" for a while -- ever since they started worrying too many people might recognize "schwartzer," I think. :(

They're pretty good tippers, though... :)

(no subject)

Date: 2008-02-01 02:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] digitalemur.livejournal.com
I'm amazed they went that long thinking people might recognize "schwartzer," cuz dude, that's pretty transparent on the eastern seaboard with so much Yiddish floating around. (Or maybe I just read "The Color of Water" where the Polish rabbi immigrant father uses it a lot....)

Gives that Avenue Q song a whole new meaning

Date: 2008-02-01 03:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marmota.livejournal.com
Canadian? Whuh? That makes about as much sense to me as getting a
'code word' going to call racists 'Martians'. Which, thinking about it
now, could actually be kind of fun.

I broke my parents of that kind of nonsense ages ago, back when I was
a teen; among similar thoughtless slurs, they referred to going out
for chinese food as "ordering some Chink's"... this gave me the
opportunity to bug the hell out of them every time they went out to a
deli by referring to it as "oh, so we're going out for Kike's,
then?". Your mileage may vary considerably on application of this
technique.

Re: Gives that Avenue Q song a whole new meaning

Date: 2008-02-01 05:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] digitalemur.livejournal.com
Last night on the phone my mom was talking about one of her students, whose mother had come in for parent conferences, and how this lady was talking about her adopted son and how he developed some of the same personality disorders as his biological mom. Except mom kept saying "real mother" and I would say "biological mother, mom" and mom would then mention the "other mother" and I would say "adoptive mother, mom." The irony? Recklessness, the tendency to sniff any and all food carefully before eating, and general lack of responsibility for anything or anyone else, were the traits this adoptive mother was seeing popping up in her son, who had been abandoned (along with his 3 other siblings) by his biological mom when only a few months old.

I mean, I didn't bear my mother any ill-will, but I really needed to point out the ironic and the funny about her choice of terms. Also, she needs to have learned appropriate nomenclature before I become an "other mother" someday.

Somewhat OT

Date: 2008-02-01 06:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] meepodeekin.livejournal.com
My absolute favorite piece of writing of all time (dramatic, I know) is a short story by Ursula Leguin called "The Fisherman of the Inland Sea." (Read it, you'll see why. It's beautiful, thought-provoking, and heartwarming.) It's set in an alien culture where the standard marriage involves 4 people-two men and two women. There are four supposedly sexual relationships in the marriage--the two homosexual and two of the heterosexual, and the other two heterosexual relationships are supposed to be sibling-like. (This is a very rough description--read the story!) Anyway, your comment made me think of that, because in this set-up the non-biological mother of any given child is called their "other mother." And in that setting it's a lovely, warm term for the relationship. I have often thought that if this type of setup could become established in the here-and-now it would make our family values problems vanish.
Edited Date: 2008-02-01 06:47 pm (UTC)

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