Ted Hughes wrote:Florida Blue wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:Florida Blue wrote:I have a very good friend who is a Jewish Spurs supporter, so I just called him and asked him about. On one hand it is expected because it is something that he and his dad have heard all their lives. On the other hand it is both offensive to him and shows the ignorance of a lot of people who use it, as it is a very derogatory term, and people just aren't sensitive.
I mentioned to him what john@staustell had said about what Paki is to Pakistanis, and while similar, he said that refers to ethnicity, whereas "yid" is a religious slur. For anyone to call it overly PC, maybe it is, but to a lot of Jewish people it is clearly a sensitive term.
I don't get the 'religious' reference at all.
Pretty simple actually... Yids is short for Yiddish which is a German based language spoken by Jews. So if you carry it through the logic, it is a religious reference.
It is used as a derogatory term by racists to describe Jewish people & has no religious connotations whatsoever for the users. Many won't even know it represents a language. It is just the same as the words used against black & asian people as in the example you gave him.
Ok explain this to me, what does the term "Jewish" describe??? Jewish is not a people, it is a a religion, therefor it is a religious epithet. Jewish isn't a nationality, and this is where there is a disconnect. There are French Jews and French Catholics, there is no such thing as a Jewish Jew. Black and Asian describe ethnicity, there are black Jews, white Jews, etc. There are Asians that are Buddhists and some that are Christian.