You weren't being racist IMO, because you weren't impeding her progress, exploiting her, nor oppressing her rights.
But were you being nosy?
Yeah, a bit.
Frankly, someone else's heredity and/or ethnicity is really none of our business, just like many other personal questions I would never deign to ask a stranger.
Is this a racist question?
Jennifer McDermott
2012/06/11 23:32:58
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I asked a girl if her baby was mixed because he has those beautiful eyes that mixed babies seem to always have. Was I being racist?
She jumped all down my back because I was being racist. Yet she was saying things like "I dont like it there because they have a lot of blacks and mexicans." and "People from West Virginia all look like inbreds."
I appreciate any feedback on this.
She jumped all down my back because I was being racist. Yet she was saying things like "I dont like it there because they have a lot of blacks and mexicans." and "People from West Virginia all look like inbreds."
I appreciate any feedback on this.
Top Opinion
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Melizmatic 2012/06/12 17:34:16other (comment)



















Does any random stranger that you don't know from a can of paint have the "right" to come up to you and start asking you personal questions?
Nope.
Just. Wow.
First of all, 'freedom of speech' pertains to the government not restricting the voice of the people via laws or threat of punishment; it has nothing to do with personal interactions.
If you think it does, please find that portion of the Constitution which states clearly that you have the "right" to just ask any private citizen anything you want, and link it.
Don't worry, I'll wait.
Next, you make some serious assumptions;
You can't dictate what anyone should or should not "expect" of others because of free will.
Not everyone thinks and behaves like you do.
Lastly, what "facts"?
This post is all hearsay, based upon a second-hand account of a social interaction, and it was posed from the author's point of view. None of us were there to witness it, and we havent heard the other person's side of the story.
You're just automatically assuming that everything the author said was accurate and true, without having a single shred of proof that was actually how it happened.
That speaks volumes about how your personal analytical process works.
SMH
I have no reason to believe anyone would post this if it were not true. What proof do you think you have that it isn't true? Seems like an honest question to me.
The person posting this was involved first hand, so what he is relating is not hearsay. Based on that assumption, I can draw conclusions from the facts given.
While I cannot "dictate" what this person should or should not expect of others, what I suggest is quite reasonable for any intelligent person to "expect."
Care to disect anything else?!
No one stated you couldn't ask; it's just rude and not really a compliment at all.
It amazes me how some people seem to think that things which are not public info and don't affect them at all are somehow still 'their business.'
Talk about 'no home training.'
Yes. Constitutionally, but anyone with half a brain knows you don't do it.
Same with asking if a child is mixed race. Its just about as stupid as the above example.
You have the right to say whatever you choose. They have the right to tell you to go kick rocks for being a nosy BiAtch. Simple as that.
If you are this nosy in real life you wont have many friends.
think-about-it.
Nice eyes, to bad the kid's mixed? lol
Yes; backhanded.
What a lame thing to ask. You should've just said your baby has beautiful eyes, and if she cared to elaborate she would.