• @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    The gamble was shooting through the door and possibly hitting someone in the apartment across the way.

    Hopefully that cholo got perforated and nobody else.

        • Bleeping Lobster
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          101 year ago

          Correct me if I’m wrong, but it’s a reference to a subculture, not an ethnicity. Though most cholos are probably hispanic, being a ‘cholo’ isn’t down to your racial genetics, it’s a subculture.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            It meant someone who has indigenous ancestry… ie, a racial term, since there are many American indigenous ethnicities.

            You could argue it doesn’t mean that anymore, but do you often hear it being applied to non-Hispanic people?

      • ChapolinColoradoNZ
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        61 year ago

        Always thought that this was how my fellow Mexicans called their gang members by but hey, thanks for caring about our gang member’s feelings.

          • ChapolinColoradoNZ
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            21 year ago

            Cabron! That wiki page clearly states (“gangster” in Mexico). It is a stereotype we use all the time and have no issues with. Same as you using “white men” to describe, I don’t know, caucasians? I don’t feel offended by it and so shouldn’t you on behalf of “mexican looking latino americanos who commit crimes”.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              Not really the same thing, I think. Though one could certainly note with some interest how all common slurs equating white ethnicities with crime have fallen out of style. In the 1920’s I’m sure we’d have had all kinds of ways to call someone an Irish criminal or whatever.

              The only one I can even think of is if you called some vaguely Italian crook a goombah or Guido, and the first one would probably just confuse people who didn’t watch a bunch of Mafia movies.

              And I’m not offended by the usage, just the pretense that this racial term isn’t a racial term. Not a huge fan of either intellectual dishonesty or just casual ignorance in general.

          • ChapolinColoradoNZ
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            -21 year ago

            I can only imagine the comedy-sketch-like exercise that would be you at the station trying to describe the person who robbed you.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        Might depend on the area but neither I nor any other Hispanic or Latino I know see cholo as a racial insult or slur (granted I’m a tiny sample size). It’s more of a descriptor than anything in my experience.

        Source: am Mexican with native ancestry.