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Author Topic: Offensive couch label traced to China  (Read 814 times)
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The Smoking Man
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« on: April 23, 2007, 10:35:41 AM »

Stupid bitch should have torn off the label and not told her guests ... The only way they would have known is if SHE told them.

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Offensive couch label traced to China

By CHARMAINE NORONHA, Associated Press Writer Thu Apr 19, 11:06 PM ET

Doris Moore was shocked when her new couch was delivered to her home with a label that used a racial slur to describe the dark brown shade of the upholstery.

The situation was even more alarming for Moore because it was her 7-year-old daughter who pointed out "n----- brown" on the tag.

"My daughter saw the label and she knew the color brown, but didn't know what the other word meant. She asked, 'Mommy, what color is that?' I was stunned. I didn't know what to say. I never thought that's how she'd learn of that word," Moore said.

The mother complained to the furniture store, which blamed the supplier, who pointed to a computer problem as the source of the derogatory label

Kingsoft Corp., a Chinese software company, acknowledged its translation program was at fault and said it was a regrettable error.

"I know this is a very bad word," Huang Luoyi, a product manager for the Beijing-based company's translation software, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

He explained that when the Chinese characters for "dark brown" are typed into an older version of its Chinese-English translation software, the offensive N-word description comes up.

"We got the definition from a Chinese-English dictionary. We've been using the dictionary for 10 years. Maybe the dictionary was updated, but we probably didn't follow suit," he said.

Moore, who is black, said Kingsoft's acknowledgment of a mistake doesn't make her feel better.

"They should know what they are typing, even if it is a software error," she said. "In order for something to come into the country, don't they read it first? Doesn't the manufacturer? The supplier?"

Romesh Vanaik, owner of Vanaik Furniture where Moore bought the sofa, said it has been a best seller. He said he checked his stock but found no other couch with the offensive label.

He added that he had not known the meaning of the N-word.

"It's amazing. I've been here since 1972 and I never knew the meaning of this word," said Vanaik, a native of India.

His supplier, Paul Kumar of Cosmos Furniture in Toronto, denied responsibility and refused to give the name of the couch's Chinese manufacturer.

"It's not my fault. It's not the manufacturers' fault," he said, adding that Kingsoft was to blame.

Huang said Kingsoft has worked to correct the translation error. In the 2007 version, typing "dark brown" in Chinese does not produce the racial slur in English. But if the offensive term is typed in English, the Chinese translation is "dark brown," he said.

Moore is consulting with a lawyer and wants compensation. Last week, she filed a report with the Ontario Human Rights Commission.

Commission spokeswoman Afroze Edwards said the case is in the initial stages and could take six months to two years to resolve.

Moore, 30, has three young children, and said the issue has taken a toll on her family.

"Something more has to be done. We don't just need a personal apology, but someone needs to own up to where these labels were made, and someone needs to apologize to all people of color," Moore said. "I had friends over from St. Lucia yesterday and they wouldn't sit on the couch."

___

Associated Press Writers Rob Gillies in Toronto and Audra Ang in Beijing contributed to this report.

If she only knew what my parents called Brazil Nuts ... Nigger toes!!!

Can we say that this type of lawsuit is a 'nigger lawsuit'.
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smoker Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, if he gets angry, he's a mile away and barefoot.
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« Reply #1 on: April 24, 2007, 12:22:44 AM »

What a stupid bitch! Maybe someone should tell her niger or nigger is the Latin word for black. It's the context the word is used in that determines if it is offensive and when used in it's correct sense to describe the colour of something only a moron would find it offensive.
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The Smoking Man
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« Reply #2 on: April 24, 2007, 12:26:36 AM »

I think that she is less indignant than she is of seeing a cash cow.
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smoker Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, if he gets angry, he's a mile away and barefoot.
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« Reply #3 on: April 24, 2007, 12:55:10 AM »

There are a lot of morons like her around;

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Williams Aide Resigns in Language Dispute

The director of D.C. Mayor Anthony A. Williams's constituent services office resigned after being accused of using a racial slur, the mayor's office said yesterday.

David Howard, head of the Office of Public Advocate, said he used the word "niggardly" in a Jan. 15 conversation about funding with two employees.

"I used the word 'niggardly' in reference to my administration of a fund," Howard said in a written statement yesterday. "Although the word, which is defined as miserly, does not have any racial connotations, I realize that staff members present were offended by the word.

"I immediately apologized," Howard said. " . . . I would never think of making a racist remark. I regret that the word I did use offended anyone."

When Howard, who is white, noticed the reaction to his use of the word, he apologized to his three-member staff, which is made up of two blacks and another white. It is unclear which two employees he was addressing when he used the word.

Niggardly has absolutely nothing to do with nigger and it's etymology isn't even from the same language. The first written record of its use is from 1530 but the noun niggard, "miser", has been around much longer, having been used by Geoffrey Chaucer in 1374. Middle English also used nig for a miser or stingy person. All these words have their origin in the Old Norse hnøggr, "stingy", "niggardly"

So this guy was forced to resign because of the uneducated ignorance of his employees   Roll Eyes

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Polly
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« Reply #4 on: April 24, 2007, 11:09:26 PM »

This lady apparently has an egg-shell personality.  What is the big deal if the word is used to describe a colour, my only complaint is that it is not specific enough, exactly which shade of brown are we talking about?

Honestly people can say chink in my face or even call me chink, I will only find him funny Grin.
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Smiley Please join our forum, we are nice people.  Smokie is stationed in China, Art is Irish, Drive By is Aussie, Leon is from somewhere and Shan and I are Chinese.  We were mostly dissidents of another forum, that's how we met.  Truth interests us.  Hope to meet you soon Smiley
The Smoking Man
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« Reply #5 on: April 25, 2007, 02:40:36 AM »

Yeah, but this woman has taken the equivalent of "a 'chink' in your armour" and personally made it about the other thing.
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smoker Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, if he gets angry, he's a mile away and barefoot.
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