CanadaMommy, they meant that they thought the typo was in the original post, i.e. "kike" was meant to be "like". It has nothing to do with you "life is too short" message.
@amyann2 wrote:
CanadaMommy, they meant that they thought the typo was in the original post, i.e. "kike" was meant to be "like". It has nothing to do with you "life is too short" message.
@wrosie wrote:
You can always block seeing posts by certain people if they offend you. I just can't remember how to do it. However, you will see their posts if they are quoted by someone else in a reply.
@BusyBeeBuzzBuzzBuzz wrote:
To me, "kike" is definitely offensive and akin to the N-word for Blacks or the C-word for females. However, the original quote was "Don't work for food 7.50 and $ 5.00 payment! it is kike slavery in the old days." I agree with Ken that it was probably a typo for "like."
Even if there had not been a typo, the comparison to slavery was nonsensical and offensive. I don't think that is something to report to the moderators, though.
@sandyf wrote:
@BusyBeeBuzzBuzzBuzz wrote:
To me, "kike" is definitely offensive and akin to the N-word for Blacks or the C-word for females. However, the original quote was "Don't work for food 7.50 and $ 5.00 payment! it is kike slavery in the old days." I agree with Ken that it was probably a typo for "like."
Even if there had not been a typo, the comparison to slavery was nonsensical and offensive. I don't think that is something to report to the moderators, though.
Just to qualify my original post saying this was offensive I have never heard anyone say k*** slavery just as I have never heard anyone saying some of the phrases people make up to illustrate something about other ethnic groups or religious groups. Having grown up on the east coast and in a family that came to this country at the very beginning of the 20 th century I did hear stories of the sweatshops in nyc where not only the jewish employees but others were treated like slaves with low and missing wages, long hot hours in dangerous factories and basically an inability to get out of the slave like life it felt like to them. In fact my mother told me that when her mother came here in 1904 or so she and my mom's baby brother had to stay on the ship in port for many days until Sunday as her father's boss would not allow him any time off to go and accept her into the country.. And to top it all off his boss was an uncle of his. During that time they had blue laws in NYC so work places were closed on Sundays so that people could attend church. And even when I was growing up there was still redlining in neighborhoods where my parents could not move in, many jobs where they did not hire jewish people and strict quotas in most but the public colleges on the east coast. So to imagine someone might reference k*** slavery to make a point was not a stretch.
@mystery2me wrote:
I Googled "k*** slavery," just to be sure, and it is not a thing or phrase anyone uses, Obviously a typo.
This thread has gone far afield, and is now closed.