来,此ID说N word 可以说,这也算证据了 express77 发表于 2020-07-15 12:18
不要再卖弄你的无知了,美国黑人从来没有认为这个term offensive,wiki就有词条 美国黑人民权领袖都在用。 House negro (also house nigger) is a historical term for a house slave of African descent. Historically, a house negro had a higher status and standard of living than a field slave or "field negro" who worked outdoors, often in harsh conditions. House negro is also used in the 2010s as a pejorative term to compare a contemporary black person to such a slave. History The term "house negro" appears in print by 1711. On May 21 of that year, The Boston News-Letter ran an advertisement that "A Young House-Negro Wench of 19 Years of Age that speaks English to be Sold."[1] In a 1771 letter, a Maryland slave-owner compared the lives of his slaves to those to "house negroes" and "plantation negroes", refuting an accusation that his slaves were poorly fed by saying they were fed as well as "plantation negroes", though not as well as the "house negroes".[1][2] In 1807, a report of the African Institution of London described an incident in which an old woman was required to work in the field after she refused to throw salt-water and gunpowder on the wounds of other slaves who had been whipped. According to the report, she had previously enjoyed a favored status as a "house negro".[3]Margaret Mitchell made use of the term to describe a slave named Pork in her famed 1936 Southern plantation fiction, Gone With the Wind.[4]African-American activist Malcolm X commented on the cultural connotations and consequences of the term in his 1963 speech "Message to the Grass Roots", wherein he explained that during slavery there were two types of slaves: "house negroes" who worked in the master's house, and "field negroes" who performed outdoor manual labor. He characterized the house negro as having a better life than the field negro, and thus being unwilling to leave the plantation and potentially more likely to support existing power structures that favored whites over blacks. Malcolm X identified with the field negro.[5] Contemporary use The term has been used to demean individuals,[6][7] in critiques of attitudes within the African-American community, especially against politically right-leaning African-Americans, [8] and as a borrowed term in contemporary social critique.[9] In New Zealand in 2012, Hone Harawira, a Member of Parliament and leader of the socialist Mana Party, aroused controversy after referring to Maori MPs from the ruling New Zealand National Party as "little house niggers" during a heated debate on electricity privatisation, and its potential effect on Waitangi Tribunal claims.[10] In June 2017, comedian Bill Maher used the term self-referentially during a live broadcast interview with US SenatorBen Sasse, saying "Work in the fields? Senator, I’m a house nigga [...]. It’s a joke!"[11] Maher apologized for the comment.[12] In April 2018, Wisconsin State Senator Lena Taylor used the term during a dispute with a bank teller. When the teller refused to cash a check for which there were insufficient funds, Taylor called the teller a "house nigger". Both Taylor and the teller are African Americans.[13]
US House Report 116-246 - STOPPING HARMFUL INTERFERENCE IN ELECTIONS FOR A LASTING DEMOCRACY ACT https://www.congress.gov/congressional-report/116th-congress/house-report/246/1
不要再卖弄你的无知了,美国黑人从来没有认为这个term offensive,wiki就有词条 美国黑人民权领袖都在用。 House negro (also house nigger) is a historical term for a house slave of African descent. Historically, a house negro had a higher status and standard of living than a field slave or "field negro" who worked outdoors, often in harsh conditions. House negro is also used in the 2010s as a pejorative term to compare a contemporary black person to such a slave. History The term "house negro" appears in print by 1711. On May 21 of that year, The Boston News-Letter ran an advertisement that "A Young House-Negro Wench of 19 Years of Age that speaks English to be Sold."[1] In a 1771 letter, a Maryland slave-owner compared the lives of his slaves to those to "house negroes" and "plantation negroes", refuting an accusation that his slaves were poorly fed by saying they were fed as well as "plantation negroes", though not as well as the "house negroes".[1][2] In 1807, a report of the African Institution of London described an incident in which an old woman was required to work in the field after she refused to throw salt-water and gunpowder on the wounds of other slaves who had been whipped. According to the report, she had previously enjoyed a favored status as a "house negro".[3]Margaret Mitchell made use of the term to describe a slave named Pork in her famed 1936 Southern plantation fiction, Gone With the Wind.[4]African-American activist Malcolm X commented on the cultural connotations and consequences of the term in his 1963 speech "Message to the Grass Roots", wherein he explained that during slavery there were two types of slaves: "house negroes" who worked in the master's house, and "field negroes" who performed outdoor manual labor. He characterized the house negro as having a better life than the field negro, and thus being unwilling to leave the plantation and potentially more likely to support existing power structures that favored whites over blacks. Malcolm X identified with the field negro.[5] Contemporary use The term has been used to demean individuals,[6][7] in critiques of attitudes within the African-American community, especially against politically right-leaning African-Americans, [8] and as a borrowed term in contemporary social critique.[9] In New Zealand in 2012, Hone Harawira, a Member of Parliament and leader of the socialist Mana Party, aroused controversy after referring to Maori MPs from the ruling New Zealand National Party as "little house niggers" during a heated debate on electricity privatisation, and its potential effect on Waitangi Tribunal claims.[10] In June 2017, comedian Bill Maher used the term self-referentially during a live broadcast interview with US SenatorBen Sasse, saying "Work in the fields? Senator, I’m a house nigga [...]. It’s a joke!"[11] Maher apologized for the comment.[12] In April 2018, Wisconsin State Senator Lena Taylor used the term during a dispute with a bank teller. When the teller refused to cash a check for which there were insufficient funds, Taylor called the teller a "house nigger". Both Taylor and the teller are African Americans.[13] fitzroy 发表于 2020-07-15 12:20
不要再卖弄你的无知了,美国黑人从来没有认为这个term offensive,wiki就有词条 美国黑人民权领袖都在用。 House negro (also house nigger) is a historical term for a house slave of African descent. Historically, a house negro had a higher status and standard of living than a field slave or "field negro" who worked outdoors, often in harsh conditions. House negro is also used in the 2010s as a pejorative term to compare a contemporary black person to such a slave. History The term "house negro" appears in print by 1711. On May 21 of that year, The Boston News-Letter ran an advertisement that "A Young House-Negro Wench of 19 Years of Age that speaks English to be Sold."[1] In a 1771 letter, a Maryland slave-owner compared the lives of his slaves to those to "house negroes" and "plantation negroes", refuting an accusation that his slaves were poorly fed by saying they were fed as well as "plantation negroes", though not as well as the "house negroes".[1][2] In 1807, a report of the African Institution of London described an incident in which an old woman was required to work in the field after she refused to throw salt-water and gunpowder on the wounds of other slaves who had been whipped. According to the report, she had previously enjoyed a favored status as a "house negro".[3]Margaret Mitchell made use of the term to describe a slave named Pork in her famed 1936 Southern plantation fiction, Gone With the Wind.[4]African-American activist Malcolm X commented on the cultural connotations and consequences of the term in his 1963 speech "Message to the Grass Roots", wherein he explained that during slavery there were two types of slaves: "house negroes" who worked in the master's house, and "field negroes" who performed outdoor manual labor. He characterized the house negro as having a better life than the field negro, and thus being unwilling to leave the plantation and potentially more likely to support existing power structures that favored whites over blacks. Malcolm X identified with the field negro.[5] Contemporary use The term has been used to demean individuals,[6][7] in critiques of attitudes within the African-American community, especially against politically right-leaning African-Americans, [8] and as a borrowed term in contemporary social critique.[9] In New Zealand in 2012, Hone Harawira, a Member of Parliament and leader of the socialist Mana Party, aroused controversy after referring to Maori MPs from the ruling New Zealand National Party as "little house niggers" during a heated debate on electricity privatisation, and its potential effect on Waitangi Tribunal claims.[10] In June 2017, comedian Bill Maher used the term self-referentially during a live broadcast interview with US SenatorBen Sasse, saying "Work in the fields? Senator, I’m a house nigga [...]. It’s a joke!"[11] Maher apologized for the comment.[12] In April 2018, Wisconsin State Senator Lena Taylor used the term during a dispute with a bank teller. When the teller refused to cash a check for which there were insufficient funds, Taylor called the teller a "house nigger". Both Taylor and the teller are African Americans.[13] fitzroy 发表于 2020-07-15 12:20
不要再卖弄你的无知了,美国黑人从来没有认为这个term offensive,wiki就有词条 美国黑人民权领袖都在用。 House negro (also house nigger) is a historical term for a house slave of African descent. Historically, a house negro had a higher status and standard of living than a field slave or "field negro" who worked outdoors, often in harsh conditions. House negro is also used in the 2010s as a pejorative term to compare a contemporary black person to such a slave. History The term "house negro" appears in print by 1711. On May 21 of that year, The Boston News-Letter ran an advertisement that "A Young House-Negro Wench of 19 Years of Age that speaks English to be Sold."[1] In a 1771 letter, a Maryland slave-owner compared the lives of his slaves to those to "house negroes" and "plantation negroes", refuting an accusation that his slaves were poorly fed by saying they were fed as well as "plantation negroes", though not as well as the "house negroes".[1][2] In 1807, a report of the African Institution of London described an incident in which an old woman was required to work in the field after she refused to throw salt-water and gunpowder on the wounds of other slaves who had been whipped. According to the report, she had previously enjoyed a favored status as a "house negro".[3]Margaret Mitchell made use of the term to describe a slave named Pork in her famed 1936 Southern plantation fiction, Gone With the Wind.[4]African-American activist Malcolm X commented on the cultural connotations and consequences of the term in his 1963 speech "Message to the Grass Roots", wherein he explained that during slavery there were two types of slaves: "house negroes" who worked in the master's house, and "field negroes" who performed outdoor manual labor. He characterized the house negro as having a better life than the field negro, and thus being unwilling to leave the plantation and potentially more likely to support existing power structures that favored whites over blacks. Malcolm X identified with the field negro.[5] Contemporary use The term has been used to demean individuals,[6][7] in critiques of attitudes within the African-American community, especially against politically right-leaning African-Americans, [8] and as a borrowed term in contemporary social critique.[9] In New Zealand in 2012, Hone Harawira, a Member of Parliament and leader of the socialist Mana Party, aroused controversy after referring to Maori MPs from the ruling New Zealand National Party as "little house niggers" during a heated debate on electricity privatisation, and its potential effect on Waitangi Tribunal claims.[10] In June 2017, comedian Bill Maher used the term self-referentially during a live broadcast interview with US SenatorBen Sasse, saying "Work in the fields? Senator, I’m a house nigga [...]. It’s a joke!"[11] Maher apologized for the comment.[12] In April 2018, Wisconsin State Senator Lena Taylor used the term during a dispute with a bank teller. When the teller refused to cash a check for which there were insufficient funds, Taylor called the teller a "house nigger". Both Taylor and the teller are African Americans.[13] fitzroy 发表于 2020-07-15 12:20
不要再卖弄你的无知了,美国黑人从来没有认为这个term offensive,wiki就有词条 美国黑人民权领袖都在用。 House negro (also house nigger) is a historical term for a house slave of African descent. Historically, a house negro had a higher status and standard of living than a field slave or "field negro" who worked outdoors, often in harsh conditions. House negro is also used in the 2010s as a pejorative term to compare a contemporary black person to such a slave. History The term "house negro" appears in print by 1711. On May 21 of that year, The Boston News-Letter ran an advertisement that "A Young House-Negro Wench of 19 Years of Age that speaks English to be Sold."[1] In a 1771 letter, a Maryland slave-owner compared the lives of his slaves to those to "house negroes" and "plantation negroes", refuting an accusation that his slaves were poorly fed by saying they were fed as well as "plantation negroes", though not as well as the "house negroes".[1][2] In 1807, a report of the African Institution of London described an incident in which an old woman was required to work in the field after she refused to throw salt-water and gunpowder on the wounds of other slaves who had been whipped. According to the report, she had previously enjoyed a favored status as a "house negro".[3]Margaret Mitchell made use of the term to describe a slave named Pork in her famed 1936 Southern plantation fiction, Gone With the Wind.[4]African-American activist Malcolm X commented on the cultural connotations and consequences of the term in his 1963 speech "Message to the Grass Roots", wherein he explained that during slavery there were two types of slaves: "house negroes" who worked in the master's house, and "field negroes" who performed outdoor manual labor. He characterized the house negro as having a better life than the field negro, and thus being unwilling to leave the plantation and potentially more likely to support existing power structures that favored whites over blacks. Malcolm X identified with the field negro.[5] Contemporary use The term has been used to demean individuals,[6][7] in critiques of attitudes within the African-American community, especially against politically right-leaning African-Americans, [8] and as a borrowed term in contemporary social critique.[9] In New Zealand in 2012, Hone Harawira, a Member of Parliament and leader of the socialist Mana Party, aroused controversy after referring to Maori MPs from the ruling New Zealand National Party as "little house niggers" during a heated debate on electricity privatisation, and its potential effect on Waitangi Tribunal claims.[10] In June 2017, comedian Bill Maher used the term self-referentially during a live broadcast interview with US SenatorBen Sasse, saying "Work in the fields? Senator, I’m a house nigga [...]. It’s a joke!"[11] Maher apologized for the comment.[12] In April 2018, Wisconsin State Senator Lena Taylor used the term during a dispute with a bank teller. When the teller refused to cash a check for which there were insufficient funds, Taylor called the teller a "house nigger". Both Taylor and the teller are African Americans.[13] fitzroy 发表于 2020-07-15 12:20
Admins: Please clarify if the N word is allowed to use on this platform? It is clearly hate speech and prohibited on mainstream social media such as Twitter and Facebook. https://help.twitter.com/en/safety-and-security/offensive-tweets-and-content
no one needs you to take the offense on his/her behalf. i personally think it’s offensive, but other ppl have their rights to make decisions for themselves, they don’t need your interpretation.
呵呵 Paranoid personality disorder (PPD) is a mental illness characterized by paranoid delusions, and a pervasive, long-standing suspiciousness and generalized mistrust of others. People with this personality disorder may be hypersensitive, easily insulted, and habitually relate to the world by vigilant scanning of the environment for clues or suggestions that may validate their fears or biases. They are eager observers. They think they are in danger and look for signs and threats of that danger, potentially not appreciating other interpretations or evidence.
呵呵 Paranoid personality disorder (PPD) is a mental illness characterized by paranoid delusions, and a pervasive, long-standing suspiciousness and generalized mistrust of others. People with this personality disorder may be hypersensitive, easily insulted, and habitually relate to the world by vigilant scanning of the environment for clues or suggestions that may validate their fears or biases. They are eager observers. They think they are in danger and look for signs and threats of that danger, potentially not appreciating other interpretations or evidence. 姑逢獙獙 发表于 2020-07-15 13:01
来,此ID说N word 可以说,这也算证据了
我不是台湾人,但版上经常见到有些id咒骂台湾人,比如某id,说过核爆美华,核平台湾,版主是否认为在海外的台湾人香港人也算海外华人?这种咒骂是不是也应该按违反版规处理?
这个以前就有规定的,现在嘛,上次用公马写政治贴的,举报了也没动静,楼搭多高了也看不到,最后也不知道删贴了没有,违规ID罚了没有。所以我强烈要求版主们把处罚贴在版面上,有理有据,免了网友误会,也能增加透明度,更容易执行班规
比如南京菜农,经常在回帖里小黄人的骂,投诉过几次,没人管
不要再卖弄你的无知了,美国黑人从来没有认为这个term offensive,wiki就有词条 美国黑人民权领袖都在用。
House negro (also house nigger) is a historical term for a house slave of African descent. Historically, a house negro had a higher status and standard of living than a field slave or "field negro" who worked outdoors, often in harsh conditions. House negro is also used in the 2010s as a pejorative term to compare a contemporary black person to such a slave.
History The term "house negro" appears in print by 1711. On May 21 of that year, The Boston News-Letter ran an advertisement that "A Young House-Negro Wench of 19 Years of Age that speaks English to be Sold."[1] In a 1771 letter, a Maryland slave-owner compared the lives of his slaves to those to "house negroes" and "plantation negroes", refuting an accusation that his slaves were poorly fed by saying they were fed as well as "plantation negroes", though not as well as the "house negroes".[1][2] In 1807, a report of the African Institution of London described an incident in which an old woman was required to work in the field after she refused to throw salt-water and gunpowder on the wounds of other slaves who had been whipped. According to the report, she had previously enjoyed a favored status as a "house negro".[3] Margaret Mitchell made use of the term to describe a slave named Pork in her famed 1936 Southern plantation fiction, Gone With the Wind.[4] African-American activist Malcolm X commented on the cultural connotations and consequences of the term in his 1963 speech "Message to the Grass Roots", wherein he explained that during slavery there were two types of slaves: "house negroes" who worked in the master's house, and "field negroes" who performed outdoor manual labor. He characterized the house negro as having a better life than the field negro, and thus being unwilling to leave the plantation and potentially more likely to support existing power structures that favored whites over blacks. Malcolm X identified with the field negro.[5] Contemporary use The term has been used to demean individuals,[6][7] in critiques of attitudes within the African-American community, especially against politically right-leaning African-Americans, [8] and as a borrowed term in contemporary social critique.[9] In New Zealand in 2012, Hone Harawira, a Member of Parliament and leader of the socialist Mana Party, aroused controversy after referring to Maori MPs from the ruling New Zealand National Party as "little house niggers" during a heated debate on electricity privatisation, and its potential effect on Waitangi Tribunal claims.[10] In June 2017, comedian Bill Maher used the term self-referentially during a live broadcast interview with US Senator Ben Sasse, saying "Work in the fields? Senator, I’m a house nigga [...]. It’s a joke!"[11] Maher apologized for the comment.[12] In April 2018, Wisconsin State Senator Lena Taylor used the term during a dispute with a bank teller. When the teller refused to cash a check for which there were insufficient funds, Taylor called the teller a "house nigger". Both Taylor and the teller are African Americans.[13]
和现在reddit, twitter...一个样,你不同意我,就不允许你有说话的权利。 啧啧,又b, 又l。
你支持kungflu的回复我还存着呢,以身作则一下吧
https://www.congress.gov/congressional-report/116th-congress/house-report/246/1
那你們扭曲言論, 造謠的帖子和ID 怎麼不封?
你們亂造謠 川普要給80萬黑戶公民這種詆毀美國總統的帖子跟ID 就應該封, 如果不封, 我會向美國相關部門舉報!
这个id我记得从来只在政治贴出现吧?按版规是不是要封id?
你会看英文吗?黑人内部可以说,其他人不可以说。
这的确是非常不好的暴力言论。
在美国只有黑人可以自称自己是Nword,别的族裔说就是racism,这是常识。
我哪句话支持了?你就是那种多个马甲还指责别人有马甲,有变形虫的ID,自己好好照镜子
所以你一口一个Kung flu, chinese virus。
纯技术讨论: 1.要钱维护。大家可以众筹这个倒是不太麻烦,但是 2.如果owner有在中国的家人,被人恐吓一下很容易,最后还是一个下场。如果能把2解决其他都不是问题。
这不是Nword,这是一个词,搞清楚。
天灭中共的言论算违规,亲身经历
你去挖挖坟,我一口一个哪里来的?说话要有证据。你的证据我有
呵呵,我贴出来你们又要集体举报我大字报,我可领教过了。你们这个团体会做什么,这些新规不都说的很清楚了吗
有华人管理层这种气魄和胆量的,我还真没见几个。现在这气氛下,国内有关部门给爹妈叫去喝次茶,估计大都怂了。
哈哈哈,从你说的这句话,我真的怀疑你来自于在哪里,连基本的常识都缺乏
你贴出来的我一个字都没有支持。你就不要污蔑人。我请版主来查查我们两个,看谁有几个马甲,谁没有。哦对,这个ID和CW时常一起攻击一些ID,也请版主查一下
这个版规,最终只让亲工的人说话。
所以过去几周的变化大家要理解。因为真实生活中没人想做martyr.
有同样的质疑
Admins: Please clarify if the N word is allowed to use on this platform? It is clearly hate speech and prohibited on mainstream social media such as Twitter and Facebook.
https://help.twitter.com/en/safety-and-security/offensive-tweets-and-content
这个帖子是讨论版规的,疯狗一样乱咬的请出去。
一个词也是在非裔community 里可以用,你读不懂吧
同意。如果服务器在美国,应该要遵守美国的法律
就是,对于身在美国,甚至是美籍华人,也要要求他们一定要支持中国共产党,反对共和党和美国总统,国务卿,这是不是违反美国法律?
Negro和Nigger,前者有条件可以说,后者不可以。你有黑人同事自己去问问就知道了。虽然现在普遍认为前者带有攻击性,但是和后者区别还是很大的。
你现在就上街找个黑人说一下,平安无事回来的话算你赢。
倒不见得是论坛的立场,但是几个管理员各有立场能看出来
请不要故意歪曲我的话。我的意思是,华人管理层,有气魄,有胆量,敢和专制独裁叫板,我佩服,我做不到,我也不认为一般人能做到。
你这种有意歪曲,让人觉得sick!
N word单独说不允许 但是House N 自从黑人民权领袖
? 我说的就是一般人不会去做。
你的战友说的是后者,呵呵
呵呵,黑人内部可以说,你出去说说吧,支持你
哈哈,spin到姥姥家了。
站务请澄清 huaren.us是否是在美国注册的? huaren.us是否有服务器在美国? huaren.us管理人员是否有在美国境内的?
如果三条中有任何一条,huaren.us就受美国法律约束。我没有说huaren.us已经违反了美国法律,我只是提醒huaren.us须遵守美国法律。我也不是干涉站务工作,而是希望本网能够严格自律,避免踏入法律灰色甚至红色地带。
还有对香港人,海外华人,ABC的各种的咒骂 。。。
这些都应该处理
注意这是讨论House N一个特定历史名词。不是单纯N word。
N word单独说不允许 但是House N 自从黑人民权领袖
如果一个黑人极其讨好白人,攻击黑人种族, 骂她House N绝对没问题。 我们在大学seminar讨论时就直接用到这个词指黒奸, 你大惊小怪,把它和N word等同起来,说明你英语一窍不通,也不读美国文化。或者就是在偷换概念。
没问你问,问站务呢。你是站务吗?
well,this is a good question
黑人可以骂,你骂试试看,你有啥权利骂黑人
技术上讲是这样的,所以普通网友应该注意保护自己隐私。
I want to know too.
这话就是一个老黑朋友告诉我的。不需要跟你们抬杠。我说了有条件前提可以说,取决于关系。你同事关系好有人喊你chinaman跟马路上有人喊你chinaman能一样?
你自己看美国主流媒体怎么定义这个词的 https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/03/arts/television/bill-maher-n-word.html
我也mark一下(虽然原帖被封了)
按照版规举报,但是超版不执法怎么办? 请看 https://m.huaren.us/showtopic.html?topicid=2563997
你定的版规再好,如果不能公平执行。最后来一句“任何事情都不是绝对的,版主也会筛选” 来偏袒某些违规行为,那也没有公信力。
建议改成 面对中国以及美国国内造成严重生命和财产损失的自然灾害以及事故(洪水,地震,飓风,枪击,新冠等),公开表达“天谴中国”“天谴美国““求仁得仁“及相关诅咒报应论的,在华人版面上公开宣传、认可并支持“Chinese Virus”“美国放毒”说法的,一律永久销号处理。欢迎广大网友积极举报。
I have the same question.
赞同限制马甲。其实网霸就那么几个,掐断源头,网站的整体氛围就会好很多。
抱歉我只是一个路人,战友这种东西只有那些疯狂注册马甲拉群id才有。说谁谁知道,看看哪些人对新版规跳脚就行了
你问的驴头不对马嘴,故意偷换概念,你应该问“House N”能不能说。Nword不能说根本没有异议,那还问什么?
😂😂😂
谢谢,欢迎补充。会转交给管理团队讨论。
切换时别切错了
华人川粉为了挺川普,不惜攻击自己种族是virus。不断重复,这是很恶劣的。自己下一代天天在校园被人追着骂virus。 名为捍卫华人利益,其实捍卫川普利益,出卖华人利益
不是战友帮他解释?我不过帮着版主举报ID你眼里就是跳脚,真好笑。一说查马甲你就不敢来
那请你解释为什么chinese virus是对自己种族的诋毁,所以必须被封。但是黄皮二等公民,这个就没有相应的惩罚?不是对全世界华人,而是只针对国外华人(尤其是美国华人),可以接受,不算恶劣行为?
The term has been used to demean individuals,[6][7] in critiques of attitudes within the African-American community,
你看得懂吗?
no one needs you to take the offense on his/her behalf. i personally think it’s offensive, but other ppl have their rights to make decisions for themselves, they don’t need your interpretation.
超版要执法封号可以,但监督应该是双向的,所有的删帖封号应该有个版面公示,哪一位版主以什么理由封谁。
呵呵 Paranoid personality disorder (PPD) is a mental illness characterized by paranoid delusions, and a pervasive, long-standing suspiciousness and generalized mistrust of others. People with this personality disorder may be hypersensitive, easily insulted, and habitually relate to the world by vigilant scanning of the environment for clues or suggestions that may validate their fears or biases. They are eager observers. They think they are in danger and look for signs and threats of that danger, potentially not appreciating other interpretations or evidence.
既然你这么爱替站务回答问题,那你就直接回答,你到底有没有说过N word?有就是有,没有就是没有,至于你是对是错,不是你自己可以评判的。
呵呵,这段话送给你,污蔑人是你擅长的,你那些侮辱人的图片还在呢。你们几个ID集中在意见版的也在
管理层的态度就是辱骂北美华人随便骂,只不过换个没人的版面骂就好了的意思?
https://forums.huaren.us/showtopic.html?topicid=2573368&fid=384
就像一开始,我记得版规是“发布重大新闻必须要有source,否则删帖”。 还真有版主蹲点,什么30秒内不回复source就删贴。 这当然是病毒在中国传播的时候,后来传到美国版主突然就不管了,假消息随便放。
然后又来出一个新规定,说注册不超过两年不准发政治话题,趁机禁言了一大批人。 然后到现在,基本上就是那几个廊坊新ID在发政治贴,每天一个刷版,有人投诉了,版主反问:“发的好,讨论热烈,为什么删?”
现在又有新规定,什么Chinese Virus 一律永久销号。 之前“美华吃核爆”好像又没人管了,有网友投诉了近一个礼拜,仅仅是删帖了事。
教科书的双标,然后被质疑,就封id了事。
请站房对说美军投毒的, 公布官方立场, 要不网友是否有权举报华人网站房帮助国内政府散布谣言?
这个帖子从头到尾歧视华人都没事?反过来的话永久封ID了!
支持你。。
支持######