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A True Meaning of the N Word

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Uploaded by on Oct 11, 2009

I feel now feel validated using the N Word

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Comedy

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Standard YouTube License

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Uploader Comments (Xelanderthomas)

  • No ur the one thats ignorant my brotha.... the term nigger is what racists call blacks. Not negus... so there fore u r the ignorant one

  • @MrKoreyhendricks Once again there are people you don't get satire or sacarsm and take my video comedic videos at way too seriously at face value. The joke of video is the play on the word Negus which means King, setting up the series of phrases that normally use the word King reworded using Negus, that all it is. ...you get or don't my brotha...peace out.

  • People call me a racist because i use the word, but im not using it in a hateful way towards ANY race, I use it just as a word to say. I dont think about black people when i say it. How does this make me a racist? Because im white? No, no, THAT my friend is racism.

  • @crazynutt45 I understand your logic. To limit or judge you because of your skin color is just as racist.

    Although I do have to say, I'm not compelled to use words that are considered racial slurs to other people. Like for instances the words "kike" or "spik" or "whap" or even, since I'm living in Germany "kraut" etc...never springs to my mind to use them. I don't understand why someone has such a deep need to use them but to each his own.

  • @Xelanderthomas But I don't think those words are used when talking to a friend in Germany, like in America. It's come to be such a common thing in rap music, comedy routines, and just walking around the street it just picks up into someones vocabulary and then you just start saying it even when no one is around. It's just like a regular swear word. I know it's not a good thing to say but it's not like I mean to say it on purpose or for some type of hate reason.

  • @crazynutt45 Yeah, I know what you mean. I think a for a lot of people both black & white it's more like a swear word. Something you kind of know it's not proper to use, like you wouldn't use it around your parents or some place where you were expected to be respectable. But for others it more than that.

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  • Negus thats a good one. I always said ninja cause ninjas are black. But that word is awsome.... thanx for setting the record straight....

  • @tresckow The negus can do no wrong!

  • @SiggiNebel Yeah, 2 years, a lot of time when you're young. Still I wonder why blacks say it today. Up to a point it's certainly a provocation, maybe even a challenge (I can say it, but c'mon, will you dare?), but I think, it's also a sign of a shaky selfrespect, and an attempt to get along with it by overdoing, for facing contempt all the time is suggestive, and one may need lots of inner strength not adopt it in a way - one of the appalling traces of racism.

  • @SiggiNebel That was a while back. My thoughts and opinions have changed since i grew older. Im 20 now. I still dont say it, and dont like when other ppl say it. If i hear it, i simply address it in a joking, but serious manner. People usually respect that.

  • @ZillX  If I may ask you this question: why only "with any other race"? I don't hink this question is as naive as it might appear.

  • @astmapiippu It's doubtful b.t.w., if the name of river Niger ("Nigeria", officially "Rebublic of Niger" is only derived from it) really goes back to the Latin word "niger. The European form of name, however, might be influenced by "niger" in a kind of misunderstanding or wrong ethymology.

  • @Xelanderthomas "Neger"/"negro" was used and never felt to be offensive up to the eighties, I'd say. Martin Luther king used it, for example. After that time it got to be suspected as racist. I suspect this embarrassment. I think, people who feel embarrassed by the word, actually are embarrassed by they own hidden rasicsm. They feel like a racist when they hear it, because there's something racist deep inside them, they would not admit to themselves. So they rather ban the word.

  • @Xelanderthomas Do you feel that "kraut" is really offensive? It sure is kind of pejorative, like "Ami" in German for Americans, but I never had the impression that it's a true offense. It's strange with those kind of nicknames for foreign nations and ethnic groups. They may have rather different levels of rather friendly up or down to really hateful connotations.

  • Because knowledge is POWER ! brother !!!

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