Actually no, it shows that a social group – black Americans – has been able to assert a lot more power and success in demanding equal rights. That success has included shining a light on denigrating words and imagery as applied to them, a form of success that indigenous people have yet to achieve (for some obvious reasons). IOW, the reason most people have a harder time now even typing “the n-word” than they do the s-word or the r-word when they apply to indigenous people is because black people have had much more success in getting people to recognize how insulting, degrading and harmful racist bigotry is, including the terminology that expresses it. The s-word and the r-word, and related imagery, associations and so on are just as destructive; the rest of us just haven’t been made to understand that yet.
Sigh.
For all the assertive verbiage you type here, you sure are good at simply ignoring counterarguments that you apparently can’t find a way to refute. You just go on repeating yourself, over and over again. It’s pretty boring.
