Mr. Drammeh, With all due respect, you should be the last one talking since you live in Scandinavia where your exposure or experience to bigotry have been quite limited. Talk about you experiences but you simply cannot endorse the use of the word based on one single experience. In no way did I say that the type of person that Saul described did not exist. My objection was to two things: First, the fact that he naively tried to stereotype African Americans into three groups. This was an over-simplistic naive categorization as well as a futile attempt at stereotyping. Second, after a handful of experiences with unsavory characters, he decided to call a whole section of the population the most demeaning word that was coined by whites to describe blacks. But he had no justification for the use of the word. And up to this point, he nor you, Mr. Drammeh, have been able to justify it's use. I don't expect you to be able to read between the lines and see bigotry for what it really is. But I would urge you to not only use your mind, but take a hard long look at the information in front of you before agreeing with blanket statements like the ones Saul made. To conclude, no apology is expected from you. Hope you acknowledge that we cannot generalize or make stereotypes. This type of behavior has been the cause of too many problems. Have a nice day, Mr. Drammeh. Yus ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html ----------------------------------------------------------------------------