Albertsons Grilled Chili Tofu Skewers with Ranch Cabbage, Apple & Cucumber Slaw 568 calories | 20 minutesġ/2 (14 oz bag) shredded cabbage (coleslaw mix) Plant-based food fan? This combo looks yums. Albertsons Creamy Cauliflower Salad with Ham, Celery & Dill 345 calories | 20 minutes This article originally appeared on 02.04.19įind full instructions and shopping list here. The article was originally published by our partners at someecards and was written by Bronwyn Isacc. In the meantime, hopefully this list is helpful for navigating the racism innate in our language. Sadly, given our ugly history, there are many more words and phrases I could add to this list. Given the heaviness of this origin, it seems best to leave this word at home when looking to describe a pretentious acquaintance. So, basically, any black person who overtly stood up to racism. The word Uppity was first used by Southerners to refer to slaves who did not fall into line, or acted as if they "didn't know their place." \n"Uppity\nWord used by racist old white Southerners to refer to any black person who looks them in the eye." -URBAN /CrRQJqTyTl - LJ Rochelle Rochelle)Īs of now, the word "uppity" is often used as a synonym for "stuck up" or "pretentious" or "conceited." But the roots of the word are far more specific and racist. But white owners and racists think blacks are too uppity. MINORITIES MUST STAND UP TO ABUSE:\nKneeling to protest at games is tasteful yet effective. This heavy connotation sadly makes sense, but also makes casual use of the phrase feel way more cringe-inducing. Slaves would be taken to Louisville to be "sold down the river" and transported to the cotton plantations in states further south. For much of the first half of the 19th century, Louisville, Ky., was one of the largest slave-trading marketplaces in the country. "River" was a literal reference to the Mississippi or Ohio rivers. According to a report from NPR, being "sold down the river" was a literal reference to slavery, and the families that were torn apart in the south. While these definitions all technically apply to the origin, the root of this phrase is much more bleak. Upon first hearing, many people associate the phrase "sold down the river" with the notion of being betrayed, lied to, or otherwise screwed over. "The phrase 'sold down the river' came from Louisville, Kentucky, where the enslaved were traded in one of the largest slave markets of the 19th century."\u00a0\u2026 - Pedro da Costa da Costa) This in turn, meant many black people were unable to vote, while white people weren't held to the same standard. Meanwhile, black people were required to fill out impossible literacy tests and pay exorbitant poll taxes to vote. In modern speak, this basically meant the Grandfather Clause let white people off the hook for new voting requirements because their ancestors were already registered voters. Because the former slaves had not been granted the franchise until the adoption of the Fifteenth Amendment in 1870, those clauses worked effectively to exclude black people from the vote but assured the franchise to many impoverished and illiterate whites." It provided that those who had enjoyed the right to vote prior to 1866 or 1867, or their lineal descendants, would be exempt from educational, property, or tax requirements for voting. This is the historical definition, according to Encyclopedia Britannica: "Grandfather clause, statutory or constitutional device enacted by seven Southern states between 18 to deny suffrage to African Americans. But the literal meaning reveals the "grandfather clause" was a racist post-Reconstruction political strategy. When most of us hear the term "grandfather clause" we just think of the generalized description: a person or entity that is allowed to continue operating over now expired rules.
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