Dr Tactics
Ill Brova
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2000
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Saying someone is racist or prejudiced is an argument in semantics.
Very True. Thats just how I see the word difference.
Saying someone is racist or prejudiced is an argument in semantics.
Racism is at it's roots is racial prejudice. What you were talking about is not racism in general, but institutional racism.
It doesn't matter the term, but the point is that Jill Scott's argument is one that was based on racial discrimination that point the finger at other people instead of looking at herself in the mirror and thinking about what she may have did wrong. It was nothing but propaganda for an African American women magazine to make insecure African American women point the finger at other people and feel better about themselves.
Tipping.
Little stereotype around here that waiters/bartenders are disappointed when they see who seated in their sections.
Thoughts?
http://www.hotelschool.cornell.edu/research/chr/pubs/reports/abstract-13851.html
A widespread perception in the restaurant industry is that Black patrons tip less than do White customers. As a result, many waiters and waitresses dislike waiting on tables of Black parties, resist being assigned to serve Blacks, deliver inferior service to those black customers whom they must wait on, and refuse to work in restaurants with a large Black clientele. In turn, these attitudes and behavior reduce Blacks' patronage of table-service restaurants, contribute to discrimination lawsuits against restaurants, increase costs and reduce profits of restaurants with large Black clienteles, and deter restaurant chains from opening units in predominately Black communities.
This report draws on the available research to pose and answer questions about race differences in tipping and about what servers, restaurant managers, industry organizations, and restaurant chains could do about those differences. The available research indicates the following:
Tips from Blacks are, on average, lower than those from Whites;
Black-White differences in restaurant tipping are not caused solely by race differences in socio-economic status;
Black-White differences in restaurant tipping are evident among the middle-class as well as the lower-class;
Black-White differences in restaurant tipping do not disappear when both groups get comparable service;
Blacks tip less than Whites even when the server is Black;
Blacks are much less familiar with the 15- to 20-percent restaurant tipping norm than are Whites;
Blacks tip less than do Whites in many (but not all) other service contexts; and
Asian-White and Hispanic-White differences in tipping are smaller, less robust, and have drawn less attention than Black-White differences in tipping.
The research findings suggest that restaurant managers, executives, and the industry as a whole should try to educate all of their customers about restaurant tipping norms. Such an educational campaign could involve informational brochures in restaurants, as well as an industry-wide effort promoted by trade associations.
Dear brotha,
What happened to hip hop?
very respectfully,
//signed//
knowsbleed
I'm glad I live in England where tipping isn't such a big issue.
I'm black and I always tip 15%.
Some blacks need to realize that low tipping hurts how blacks are served by waiters in general.
I think I'm a nice and generous black person partially because I'm trying to destroy negative black stereotypes for people I encounter.
Seems to me some black people pride themselves on being callous and self-centered. It's a version of "keeping it real" and it only hurts us as a race.
Hurt them before they hurt us, that is how a lot think.
I don't think a lot of them think of it as an ultimate betrayal, but if you have a hard working waiter/waitress busting their ass over demanding table of 8, and on a $198 bill and add a $2 tip?
And it's up to you know to answer all the questions lol.