Capt. JG wrote:
"Larry" wrote in message
...
"Capt. JG" wrote in
easolutions:
"Larry" wrote in message
...
"Capt. JG" wrote in
easolutions:
Really? How so? I'm not putting him a racial class, although I'd
suggest 3rd grade... again.
--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com
Go look up Goyim in your dictionary.
Why? I never used that term. Go look up Hitler in your dictionary.
And, I suppose, you never hear that term from any Jews, right?\
Sure. So, what's your point? Because one person uses a term, all people of
that ethnic background are guilty? What about the Christian who uses it of
himself when around Jewish friends. Would he be a racist of his own race? I
think you're grasping at straws.
Is Larry so deluded that he thinks "goyim" is inherently racist? It
means "nations" (plural of "goy," which is nation in Hebrew) and is used
many times in the Bible to refer to Israel or Judah, or the "Nation of
Jews." It also means "nationals" or "citizens," and since Jews were
denied citizenship in almost every country until about 200 years ago, it
came to imply the local citizenry, or in general, non-Jews. There is no
inherent negative connotation in the Hebrew or Yiddish usage, it is
essentially the Yiddish word for "Gentile."
However, like any ethnic descriptor, it can be used in a negative way,
much like Whites using the term "Black," (or Blacks using White) can be
pejorative or neutral or positive, depending on the context.
Admittedly, in the US, the usage is often assumed to be somewhat
negative because the use of a Yiddish word in an English sentence has
special emphasis.
I've almost never heard it used in a context that I considered overtly
racist, more often I heard it in the "us versus them" usage, such as
"That yacht club is for the Goyim." Given that the yacht club probably
excluded Jews (or did in the past) its hard to call that racist.
BTW, the word "Goy" is not commonly used in modern Hebrew in Israel;
they use different words to describe non-Jews and foreigners.