• NONE@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    As long as you don’t “correct” or act like you know better that minorities, you will be a good Ally.

    Don’t say “I will help you!”, instead ask “how can i help you?”

    • ThatWeirdGuy1001@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      It’s funny because I’m constantly seeing minority groups telling white people not to ask how to help and to just figure it out and help or get out of the way.

      It’s kinda frustrating hearing so many different takes on white people trying to help because it feels like a large portion don’t want us to help at all

      • NONE@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        The thing is, to us, what you can do to help is so obvious that it feels like we’re being asked how to breathe.

        Help your community, volunteer for a cause, don’t get involved in acts of hatred disguised as moralism or the defense of a national or ethnic identity, educate yourself by reading authors who are part of the minority you want to support, confront and accept the reality of privilege, etc.

        But also, often the question “How can I help?” masks the real question: “How can I be a hero to your people?”. So I suppose that before one ask how to help, one should first ask oneself “Do I really want to help?” and be honest about it.

        EDIT: Always relevant video about this

      • NONE@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        That’s the question from which fucked up shit start to happen, but let’s take it at face value.

        In that case, you can look for a segment of the minority group that aligns with your ideals (because not all of us think the same way, we’re not a collective mind) and offer them your support.

        Do you encounter, say, Latinos who support Trump? Leave them alone and offer support to Latinos who are critical of Trump; We’ll know how to use your help to take actions that benefit all of us, including those who are “wrong.”

          • NONE@lemmy.world
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            14 hours ago

            Nop! Not a single bit!

            I doesn’t fit the pronunciation rules of most latinamerican countries, not even Brazil. I mean, How do you “say” that? what sound does the X represents? It’s like “LatinEx”? That sounds so silly! Like a Kingdom Hearts Villain or something.

            If you want to be inclusive / non-binary, you better use “Latine” (La-ti-ne). That’s how the “inclusive language” works here.

            Although, I argue that “Latino” is OK either way, since you’re talking about the collective from “LATINO-America”.

            • orlyowl@piefed.ca
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              11 hours ago

              Are there still more than like 5 people trying to make Latinx a thing? I thought that one kind of died out early on, but I’m not a member of that community.

            • U7826391786239@piefed.zip
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              14 hours ago

              thank you. i’m not latino, but it always struck me as WTF when all of a sudden “let me be offended for you” people decided they needed to “fix” an entire language’s “sexist” word that none of its speakers were ever offended by

          • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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            13 hours ago

            It is important to understand the context of who defined it.

            It was mainly defined by queer people in various Latin communities as a self descriptor. LGBT acceptance within the various Spanish speaking communities in general is nowhere near universal, which explains why adoption of Latinx isn’t a thing.

            I’d only use the descriptor if I knew that a lot of people there within earshot wanted to use that description.