Quote Originally Posted by daihashi
I'm aware of that; but the context in which you used the term was anything but friendly. Borderline derrogatory... and add ignorance to the mix and it changes it from a positive meaning (self professed rednecks... or even more similarly Black people who refer to each other as h) to something entirely negative and wrong.

Aside from that there are people of all mixes that share the views of the people you were referencing. Ignorance is not isolated to one group of people.

You can find ignorance in the Obama crowd also.

A more accurate/correct statement would've been to say "some supporters in the McCain arena seem to reek of ignorance".

You wouldn't of isolated anyone out there; and it would've reflected much better on you.

My point was the irony in your statement and you trying to display the ignorance you saw in the McCain rallies.
Gotcha.:thumbsup: Some supporters in the McCain arena seem to reek of ignorance and I found it somewhat offensive. In my opinion.
Did I go too far again? I'm good at that.:stoned:
happiestmferoutthere Reviewed by happiestmferoutthere on . What do you think? I've been reading and listening, like most of you, to all of the 'news' about how McCain rallies are growing increasingly violent, and I started to wonder about whether it really was as big a deal as they were making it. So what do y'all think? Is it John McCain or Palin's responsibility to stop their speech and correct the audience members? or do you think it's just practicing free speech when the audience yells things like 'kill him', 'bomb obama', or 'off with his head?' One thing I kept Rating: 5