this post was submitted on 11 Apr 2025
14 points (79.2% liked)
Fedigrow
1233 readers
101 users here now
To discuss how to grow and manage communities / magazines on Lemmy, Mbin, Piefed and Sublinks
Resources:
- https://lemmy-federate.com/ to federate your community to a lot of instances
- [email protected] to organize overall fediverse growth
- [email protected] to keep tabs on where new users might come from :)
Megathreads:
- How (and when) to consolidate communities? (A guide)
- Where to request inactive or unmoderated communities? (A list)
Rules:
- Be respectful
- No bigotry
founded 11 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I usually use POC, seems more encompassing that BIPOC, I guess BI is there to highlight the US specific history
Personally i don't any of those terms at all. If i want to refer to non-westerners, i just say "africans/asians/latinos/etcetc" or "the global south" (which covers most). I never liked the terms BIPOC or BAME (speaking as one, just in case ofc) mostly because of how it kind of implies we're secondary. Beyond the contexts of US/europe the terms really don't make any sense, it's basically unheard of here.
I see where you come from, but they were indeed created to give visibility for those minorities in those context. Someone can be a US citizen and a POC, or a German and a POC at the same time, they are not exclusives. In those context the those names make sense.
Of course outside of those context the words don't really make sense.
Yeah that's fair, thanks.
That's interesting because the c term is inappropriate in the UK
It is interesting that "person of colour" is appropriate while "coloured person" is not, as they are linguistically nearly identical. Obviously the two terms have very different historical contexts.
Difference in offense can be interesting. I was surprised to hear that "kaffir" was a slur in south africa, since in arabia (and the middle east in general), it's an arabic word meaning "infidel". Apparently it's considered very, very offensive and racist (i don't know about the stance in america/europe on the word) and i think can get consequences? Idk, it's just a term here lmao.
Interesting indeed!