I’ll write it however everyone wants, but I sort of thought it was some idea from the New York Times and not necessarily what the black community wants per se.
- 3 hours
It’s a political choice that some folks in the Black liberation movement choose in order to emphasise Blackness. Not all Black people do it. I don’t think anyone would tell you off for choosing to capitalise it or not. Both are quite common.
- Analog@lemmy.mlEnglish1 day
Dunno why you’d capitalize black unless it was at the start of a sentence. No one capitalizes white.
Even if you’re in America not all black people are African Americans. Black ppl come from all over the world. (Duh.)
Stupid designations about something that doesn’t matter, but they’re the best we’ve got.
- Jerkface (any/all)@lemmy.caEnglish3 hours
Same reason you sometimes capitalize deaf/Deaf. They are different words.
- 21 hours
This was a decision that I think the NY Times made to start capitalizing, and I’ve never understood why, but editors of books and articles all use it now, I saw it in a Stephen King story recently.
Language does change, a book by the trans writer Jennifer Finney Boylan about her own transition published in 2001 used transgendered through the book simply because that’s what was used then, and now it’s proper to say transgender; Jenny’s book was released for an anniversary edition and she addressed that in the foreword, that she had left it as written but with some hesitation that people would be offended, which I think would be silly because it was never a slur, it simply was the language then, and before that trans people were called transsexual, and that also wasn’t a slur. So terminology can and does evolve, but it’s just so random in the case of capitalization and nobody has ever explained why.
Steve@communick.newsEnglish
3 hoursHaven’t been to a meeting in years.
I know, they’re “mandatory”. But it’s not like anyone takes a head count. And nobody’s even noticed I wasn’t going anymore.Becides, they’re always the same bullshit. Anything actually important will be in the newsletter. It’s fine.
Wow that’s kinda fucked up. Did he really deserve to be devastated like that?
- yellerbadger@piefed.socialEnglish2 days
Am black. Doesn’t matter so long as it’s consistent (i.e. black and white or Black and White).
Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.orgEnglish
1 dayHow do you feel about the 2001 game “Black & White” by Lionhead Studios?
Ashtear@piefed.socialEnglish
1 dayFunny you say that, because the generally accepted style is Black and white. Here’s Microsoft’s style guide for another example.
Generally speaking, capital “W” White tends to have supremacist overtones in print.
- yellerbadger@piefed.socialEnglish4 hours
Funny you say that, because the generally accepted style is Black and white. Here’s Microsoft’s style guide for another example.
TIL
Generally speaking, capital “W” White tends to have supremacist overtones in print.
You got what I was getting at. It’s a sign I’ve noticed. Some commenters will make it a point to type White and black or will use constructs like “a black” or “the blacks.”
- 2 hours
I mean, I’m not complaining about the lack of a White History or Straight Pride Month
Vandals_handle@lemmy.worldEnglish
1 dayLots of generally accepted bigotry throughout society, even in the constitution
I just only seem to think it came from some idea from the NY Times, and I don’t think anyone says White, so it just seems, off kilter I guess I’d say. Of course I will say whatever is proper, but it’s just, odd.
- 1 day
I know one word I’ll never call them, capital or not. It’s also why I can’t sing along with Busta Rhymes songs, if I’m being honest.
- thermal_shock@lemmy.worldEnglish10 hours
Some of my favorite media has a lot of n words in it, like Django unchained. You’ll catch me dead before I ever say that word.
I’m a white guy, but that seems weird to me. We capitalize a country or origin (e.g., English, African), but not a description. We don’t capitalize “redhead” or “tall.”
- 2 days
We do capitalise community names though - like deaf vs Deaf.
This is the same, it’s not being used as a description of how someone looks, but to what community they belong.
- charokol@lemmy.worldEnglish1 day
We also capitalize the Native in Native American even though it’s just an adjective.
- 2 days
Never seen that anywhere before. I don’t think your ‘we’ is the same as our ‘we.’
Interesting, never heard that with respect to Deaf or whatever.
- 2 days
I agree, I would use a capital when writing about “the Black community”. Otherwise it would be lowercase (“a black person/a white person”)
Depends where you are
It’s common for Australian Aboriginals to call their community Blak
I swear no one else in the world manages to.be so obsessed with race than US… Come the fuck on…
- thermal_shock@lemmy.worldEnglish10 hours
I agree, but I also don’t think it’s bad to ask about it. Nothing wrong with learning and getting clarification.
Yeah I wonder why…
Surely nothing to do with 400 years of slavery followed by Jim Crow and permanent systemic racism.
I’m not American. I honestly just wondered because the first time I saw this used it was the NY Times saying they were doing it from now on.









