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If this makes folks mad, sorry. It’s been bugging me since there was a conversation about it…

Someone wanted to know why, since some black people use the "n-word", everyone can’t without being identified as a racist. The short answer is easy: racists are [b]still[/b] using it.

But I don’t understand why anyone who isn’t black and doesn’t see him or herself as a racist would [b]want[/b] to use a word with such an ugly history attached to it ?

As to why some black people use it among themselves (I don’t), I know the reasoning. I don’t [b]agree[/b] with it, but I know what it is: supposedly using the word takes the "power" out of it. Newsflash: it [b]doesn’t[/b]. And that’s why the popular wisdom is, you can’t use it if you’ve never been [b]called[/b] it (in a disparaging way) yourself.

Personally, I [b]hate[/b] the word, and I wish everyone would delete it from their vocabularies. It will never mean what some people want to make it mean—not [b]any[/b] form of it.
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SW-User
I don't see the logic if it's offensive it's offensive this "pass" that people talk about doesn't make sense to me. If you directly call a black person the N word out of disrespect it's a racist gesture. If you do a handshake and say "what's up my N" is only racist if you don't have the pass?
@SW-User And it depends on who. Some people only get upset if it’s not another black person saying it—there are [b]no[/b] passes. I don’t like hearing it by [b]anyone[/b].