Canāt believe I had to have this conversation again today, with someone who should know better. You canāt just un-racist a word because it makes you feel bad man.
Edit to add more context:
Rice burner is a pejorative term originally applied to Japanese motorcycles and which later expanded to include Japanese cars or any East Asian-made vehicles. Variations include rice rocket, referring most often to Japanese superbikes, rice machine, rice grinder or simply ricer.
Riced out is an adjective denigrating a badly customized sports car, āusually with oversized or ill-matched exterior appointmentsā. Rice boy is a US derogatory term for the driver or builder of an import-car hot rod. The terms may disparage cars or car enthusiasts as imposters or wanna-bes, using cheap modifications to imitate the appearance of high performance.
The term is often defined as offensive or racist stereotyping. In some cases, users of the term assert that it is not offensive or racist, or else treat the term as a humorous, mild insult rather than a racial slur.
Iād like you to read this from a guy whoās father is from the Philippines. His mother is American. Then have a good think about it. Actually think about it for a day or so.
Palting: (reenlist forums)
*When you call a car a āricerā, you are saying that it is not a nice car, possibly even an atrocious car. I donāt believe you will ever hear a statement like āLook at that gorgeous ricer!!ā So, in response to the question, is it derogatory, the answer is that the term ricer is most definitely derogatory.
The question then becomes, is it racist? The term āricerā was coined to denote the cars that were made in Japan or Korea that were subsequently modded and are obnoxious to the observer. You can ask 100 people what car brand comes to mind when you say āricerā and 100 of them will come up with an Asian brand. Ask those same 100 people what country or race comes to mind, and 100 will say some Asian country. We can safely say that āricerā would indicate the Asian culture where rice is the staple food. We can define a term racist if the term pertaining to a race or a raceās cultural character is considered derogatory. Therefore, the term ricer is most definitely racist.
If, lets say, one of the African nations built a car, would you call it a ā******ā? The term āricerā most definitely belongs in the same category as ******, slant-eyes, gook and what have you. Shame on anyone who uses the term and who does not realise it is very definitely racist.
My mother is from the USA, my father is from the Philippines. I was born and raised in the Philippines. I am a Filipino. I am not a āhalferā, nor āmestizoā, nor anything other than a Filipino national who chose to reside in the US as an American citizen.*
Because thatās not really how language and culture work. I donāt get to decide how a word is used any more than you do.
You donāt get to have it both ways. Either slurs can shift and be used despite it causing harm, or they canāt. Someoneās gonna have to be brave and start that semantic shift, it doesnāt just spontaneously happen.
If one dumbass decides they think a word should have a different meaning and starts using it, nothing changes.
If an entire subculture shifts their use of a slang term over time, the meaning of that slang term changes. Over time.
Language is not fixed. It evolves. But it also isnāt prescribed (except in cases including but not limited to jargon or technical definitions).
This isnāt a difficult concept.
Wow sweetheart, youāre so clever, you get a gold star! š
The word is still used as a pejorative when referencing a car. That hasnāt shifted, itās still used specifically to denigrate cars from Japan, Korea and other asian countries.
Sorry ā I think this concept requires thinking about two things at once, and thatās going to stump a lot of entry level civilians.
Itās not a binary, friend. This is not a strong argument. A better one is that there is no evidence of people reclaiming the slur in this case.
The shift to non-racist usage of āricingā happened without people intending it to happen or consciously noticing that it happened at all (in the IT context, at least; it seems that the racist connotation persists in the car community at least in part).
A bunch of, mostly white, computer users donāt get to decide that a word is no longer racist. That just isnāt how slurs work. FWIW, I think that usage also traces to the Hpyrland community, which certainly has its share of issues when it comes to bigotry.
Wordsā meanings arenāt ādecidedā (particularly not on the basis of someoneās race) but established through usage, gradual and largely unconscious change.
I had to google what that is. The first release is from 2022, but Iāve seen āricingā in IT context like a decade ago.
Except many slurs have had their usage ended by conscious effort to stop using a term that causes people harm and offence. Itās not really that complicated in my opinion.
Ah okay, I hadnāt heard it in that context until recently. In any case, the usage came from car modification, which is racist. Itās not possible to sever that history.