When you refer to someone as White Trash what are you really saying?
Does it mean they live in a trailer? Does it mean their level of education is beneath yours? Does it mean they don't have any manners? Does it mean they are someone you would throw away? Is it a racial comment that you would never say to anyone at anytime?
Or is it self reflective? Or is it bound up anger leaking through a crack in the armor. If you use this term is it really more about you than them?
How 'white trash' is offensive
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The term "white trash" is offensive in two major ways. First it is offensive to the person who is called "white trash" and then it is offensive to people of color because they know it was coined by those who think all people of color are trash and a distinction had to be made for white people.
I have personally had this epithet used on me. In my neighborhood, as a child, we lived in the most meager home in our area. Actually, it was little more than a slum, but it was a bump up compared to the house from which we had moved. We were very poor but relatively clean. By relatively, I mean that once my siblings and I were outside for awhile on a summer day, we got pretty dirty. And, we were rambunctious and played with verve, making lots of noise.
One day, a lady from the better part of our neighborhood screamed at my mother to get her "white trash" back up on the hill where they belonged. We had been playing in a vacant lot next to her house. My mother called for us all to get back to the house that actually did sit a ways up the hill.
Since my mother responded to the lady by calling us home, I guess I then considered the epithet to be accurate. Otherwise, why would mom have called us home? I can tell you this affected me during a long period of my youth as I so often thought people were looking down on me.
Fortunately for me, I would later overcome this complex and realize that I am as good as anyone else on this earth. People who know me know that I am supremely self-confident. I can get in front of groups of people from 20-30 to hundreds and give an address or class. I think gaining knowledge may be the main thing that gets people over that hurdle of feeling down on themselves.
Later, I told this story to a black friend of mine and noticed that he got sort of a funny looks when I said "white trash." We had to discuss this. I came to realize how demeaning a term it was to him as well as me, maybe more demeaning. For people to have to coin a term that places poor whites just a rung above their black brothers and sisters is a social crime. This is what we both got from the conversation.
Still, I often hear the appellation used on TV and in life. I don't like it and never did. I have liked it less and less through the years. The difference now is that I am no longer a little boy playing on a summer day, I am a man who can put a person in his/her place for using such an unacceptable term
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Does it mean they live in a trailer? Does it mean their level of education is beneath yours? Does it mean they don't have any manners? Does it mean they are someone you would throw away? Is it a racial comment that you would never say to anyone at anytime?
Or is it self reflective? Or is it bound up anger leaking through a crack in the armor. If you use this term is it really more about you than them?
How 'white trash' is offensive
Top Article All 11 Articles 1
of 11 Write now Article Tools by Doctor Bob
The term "white trash" is offensive in two major ways. First it is offensive to the person who is called "white trash" and then it is offensive to people of color because they know it was coined by those who think all people of color are trash and a distinction had to be made for white people.
I have personally had this epithet used on me. In my neighborhood, as a child, we lived in the most meager home in our area. Actually, it was little more than a slum, but it was a bump up compared to the house from which we had moved. We were very poor but relatively clean. By relatively, I mean that once my siblings and I were outside for awhile on a summer day, we got pretty dirty. And, we were rambunctious and played with verve, making lots of noise.
One day, a lady from the better part of our neighborhood screamed at my mother to get her "white trash" back up on the hill where they belonged. We had been playing in a vacant lot next to her house. My mother called for us all to get back to the house that actually did sit a ways up the hill.
Since my mother responded to the lady by calling us home, I guess I then considered the epithet to be accurate. Otherwise, why would mom have called us home? I can tell you this affected me during a long period of my youth as I so often thought people were looking down on me.
Fortunately for me, I would later overcome this complex and realize that I am as good as anyone else on this earth. People who know me know that I am supremely self-confident. I can get in front of groups of people from 20-30 to hundreds and give an address or class. I think gaining knowledge may be the main thing that gets people over that hurdle of feeling down on themselves.
Later, I told this story to a black friend of mine and noticed that he got sort of a funny looks when I said "white trash." We had to discuss this. I came to realize how demeaning a term it was to him as well as me, maybe more demeaning. For people to have to coin a term that places poor whites just a rung above their black brothers and sisters is a social crime. This is what we both got from the conversation.
Still, I often hear the appellation used on TV and in life. I don't like it and never did. I have liked it less and less through the years. The difference now is that I am no longer a little boy playing on a summer day, I am a man who can put a person in his/her place for using such an unacceptable term
Learn more about this author, Doctor Bob.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.
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