Strange thing to be used by Dr King and in an oscar acceptance speech then.
And when was this mate? 1963 right? What was he supposed to do in that era, invent a word and call them by that in the hope it took off?
A label has to exist when speaking of the subject matter of race, but it has to be a mutually agreed one. We can talk of blacks and whites in the context of Ferguson, as you simply have to, and King had to use a label in that context too.
But do you know in an ordinary situation if I were trying to define a black person to a friend, you know what I'd call him? John. Or Afro-Carribean. Or British. Or that lad over there. Using the skin colour as an adjective to define someone disregards all other identifiers and characteristics of that person.








