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It can be, but generally it is accompanied by another slur to make it a racial slur or with a cuss word, for example :fu**ing cotton pickers, or "cotton pickin ni**er"... i am only using those examples so you can get a clear idea of what a racial slur involving the phrase "cotton picker" would be like, not to offend or degrade anyone.

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17y ago

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Is cotton-picking used as a racial slur?

No - the Southern adjective "cotton-picking" is just used as emphasis, as in "wait just a cotton-picking minute!" Everyone in the South picked cotton when it was time to sell it, not just black people.


What was unusual about the Cotton Club in Harlem?

The Cotton Club was known to many people during the time of segregation, but when they went to the Cotton Club no one was treated any different as if there were never any racial issues... all their problems just went away :D ! <3


What was unusual in cotton clubs in Harlem?

The Cotton Club was known to many people during the time of segregation, but when they went to the Cotton Club no one was treated any different as if there were never any racial issues... all their problems just went away :D ! <3


What should you do if someone called you a cottonpicker You know as a racist comment Because I need someone else's opinion before I go beat someone?

Just laugh at them. In case the other person doesn't know, slavery has been over for a long time, so there are no slaves picking cotton anymore. The fact that they had to resort to names shows that you've already defeated them, and that there is nothing more you can do. Please don't go assault anyone, as it will get you in trouble, cause your life to have more difficulty, and you might even prove the racists and bigots right. Instead, please be the bigger and better person and not stoop to violence. Besides, terms like "cotton picker" do not raise to the level of insult intended by more direct racial slurs. Picking cotton was a valuable, though under-appreciated service, and it was necessary for producing clothes during that era. In some ways, terms such as that should be worn as a badge of honor, as your presumed ancestors did what other people were unwilling to do to help keep everyone clothed.


What was ironic about the cotton club where black artists played jazz?

The irony of the Cotton Club lies in its exclusive white clientele despite featuring some of the finest Black jazz artists of the Harlem Renaissance. While Black musicians like Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong performed there, they were not allowed to attend as patrons. This juxtaposition highlighted the racial segregation of the era, where the talent and artistry of Black performers were celebrated, yet they remained marginalized in society. Thus, the venue epitomized the paradox of cultural appreciation versus racial discrimination.


What do you think of the controversial issues that remain linked to the Civil War?

I think that the slavery being stopped was not a bad idea at all, especially those who used slaves for hard work. I can understand housemaids and such in a house, who are paid, and taken care of, and who are not forced to undergo hard labor, but those who were picking cotton, and other sometimes agonizing duties for the good of their master deserved better. If freedom was what they wanted, no matter what racial and social standings they were they most certainly had the right. The racial conflict between the negores and the caucasions is one that should never have occured. We're all equal...


Where does the saying bless your cotton socks come from?

George Edward Lynch Cotton, English clergyman and educator, assistant master at Rugby 1837-1852, the �young master� in Thomas Hughes's "Tom Brown's School Days". Bishop of Calcutta, 1858 where he did missionary work and established schools for Eurasian children. In requests to England he asked for donations of clothing, often emphasizing "warm socks" for the children. In fact he seems to have held the simplistic view that if the children had warm socks many of their problems, mal-nutrition, disease, racial prejudice etc. could be easily solved. Little old maiden ladies all over England spent their time knitting socks for Bishop Cotton and sending them off to India. He blessed all items used in his schools, and many shipments would arrive labeled " Socks for Cotton's blessing" and reportedly even "Cotton's socks for blessing". Cotton's socks easily became corrupted to cotton socks,The phrase is now a term of endearment for a child who has done something sweet. It is also a way of saying thank-you. Due to its association with "sweet" children and bolstered by Cotton's simplistic views it is often used ironically, thanking someone in a position of authority for suggesting a benevolent, yet simplistic even childish view or solution for a difficult situation. Sometimes just a humorous thank you like " I'll dance at your wedding with bells on."


Why did the southerners believe slavery was necessary?

Southerners believed slavery was necessary for economic reasons as it provided cheap labor for their agricultural industry, particularly in cotton production. Additionally, it was also justified through social and racial beliefs that supported the idea of white superiority over the enslaved black population.


How did the reliance on cotton production and slavery affect the south economically socially and morally?

Economic - two competing industries - industrial north vs. agrarian south - free labor vs. slave laborSocial - North sees south as aristocratic medieval country, South sees North as corrupt immigrant urban Morally- The North sees the South as morally wrong for having slavery


What was Alabama society like in the 1930s?

In the 1930s, Alabama society was deeply segregated, with Jim Crow laws enforcing racial segregation. The Great Depression greatly impacted the state, leading to economic hardship and high unemployment rates. Agriculture was a dominant industry, with cotton being a major crop, and many rural Alabamians lived in poverty.


Who was the one to start picking on the Jewish people?

Antisemitism goes back a long way in Europe and it is not possible to pick out one individual who started it. Obviously, until the 1800s the emphasis was religious, but from the 1870s on it became racial.


Why was slavery viewed as an acceptable practice in the south?

Slavery was viewed as an acceptable practice in the South due to economic dependence on slave labor for agricultural production, especially in industries like cotton and tobacco. Additionally, there were entrenched racial beliefs and social structures that justified the enslavement of Africans and their descendants. The idea of white superiority and the belief that African Americans were inferior helped perpetuate and justify the institution of slavery in the South.