Vote TWICE!

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
LOL, maybe you should go look at some history.

The main premise behind my comments was that life was simpler.

Yes, I was younger, but not an infant.

We grew up before the internet, there were still political issues, but the bottom line is this: I've had friends & family from all races and walks of life, I treat everyone the same.

The REz? Is slang, obviously. Even the natives call it as such.

When you live in an area for 30+ years and can comment on the locals, please do. Otherwise, have a great day!
I’m 54 years old and live with Seminoles in Florida. Never heard it before. Sounds crass.
 

Nefrella

Well-Known Member
I’m 54 years old and live with Seminoles in Florida. Never heard it before. Sounds crass.
Wow. Well maybe its a mid-west thing, shrug.

rez
(also res)
Pronunciation /rez/ /rɛz/
NOUN

informal North American usually in singular
  • A North American Indian reservation or reserve.
    More example sentences
    • ‘he is a Navajo who grew up on the rez in Ganado’
    • ‘When I visit the rez, I am an outsider ... so I get treated with some suspicion.’
    • ‘Ian lived here in Missoula for a few years while he did his research on his book, The Rez - about Indian reservation life (perhaps one of the few natural resources still remaining in this state).’
    • ‘Father Stone drove the twenty miles from the nearest off-rez town, eastward on the spruce- and swamp-lined two-lane county road that dead-ended at the rez.’
    • ‘But despite all of this - or perhaps because of it - basketball is played on the rez and played very well.’
    • ‘More than escapism, it provides youth with a sense of belonging and camaraderie, a means of achieving some sort of victory, an opportunity to explore life off the rez.’
    • ‘It's hard to imagine reservation life if you've never been to a rez yourself, and images from films like Smoke Signals only provide snapshots of places thousands of young Native Californians call home.’
    • ‘We have oil on our land and casinos, but on the Rez back home, most people who get money don't do anything with it.’
    • ‘Real Indian humor is something in your community or your home, and the funniest people are maybe your uncle, or a cab driver, or someone on the rez.’
    • ‘The day before my last at the res, I got to do a traditional sweat.’

Doesn't sound too crass to me...it's a word in the dictionary.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
LOL, maybe you should go look at some history.

The main premise behind my comments was that life was simpler.

Yes, I was younger, but not an infant.

We grew up before the internet, there were still political issues, but the bottom line is this: I've had friends & family from all races and walks of life, I treat everyone the same.

The REz? Is slang, obviously. Even the natives call it as such.

When you live in an area for 30+ years and can comment on the locals, please do. Otherwise, have a great day!
would you believe your IQ was the highest the day you were born..?
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Wow. Well maybe its a mid-west thing, shrug.

rez
(also res)
Pronunciation /rez/ /rɛz/
NOUN

informal North American usually in singular
  • A North American Indian reservation or reserve.
    More example sentences
    • ‘he is a Navajo who grew up on the rez in Ganado’
    • ‘When I visit the rez, I am an outsider ... so I get treated with some suspicion.’
    • ‘Ian lived here in Missoula for a few years while he did his research on his book, The Rez - about Indian reservation life (perhaps one of the few natural resources still remaining in this state).’
    • ‘Father Stone drove the twenty miles from the nearest off-rez town, eastward on the spruce- and swamp-lined two-lane county road that dead-ended at the rez.’
    • ‘But despite all of this - or perhaps because of it - basketball is played on the rez and played very well.’
    • ‘More than escapism, it provides youth with a sense of belonging and camaraderie, a means of achieving some sort of victory, an opportunity to explore life off the rez.’
    • ‘It's hard to imagine reservation life if you've never been to a rez yourself, and images from films like Smoke Signals only provide snapshots of places thousands of young Native Californians call home.’
    • ‘We have oil on our land and casinos, but on the Rez back home, most people who get money don't do anything with it.’
    • ‘Real Indian humor is something in your community or your home, and the funniest people are maybe your uncle, or a cab driver, or someone on the rez.’
    • ‘The day before my last at the res, I got to do a traditional sweat.’

Doesn't sound too crass to me...it's a word in the dictionary.
ooh, getting defensive now are we, Karen?
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Wow. Well maybe its a mid-west thing, shrug.

rez
(also res)
Pronunciation /rez/ /rɛz/
NOUN

informal North American usually in singular
  • A North American Indian reservation or reserve.
    More example sentences
    • ‘he is a Navajo who grew up on the rez in Ganado’
    • ‘When I visit the rez, I am an outsider ... so I get treated with some suspicion.’
    • ‘Ian lived here in Missoula for a few years while he did his research on his book, The Rez - about Indian reservation life (perhaps one of the few natural resources still remaining in this state).’
    • ‘Father Stone drove the twenty miles from the nearest off-rez town, eastward on the spruce- and swamp-lined two-lane county road that dead-ended at the rez.’
    • ‘But despite all of this - or perhaps because of it - basketball is played on the rez and played very well.’
    • ‘More than escapism, it provides youth with a sense of belonging and camaraderie, a means of achieving some sort of victory, an opportunity to explore life off the rez.’
    • ‘It's hard to imagine reservation life if you've never been to a rez yourself, and images from films like Smoke Signals only provide snapshots of places thousands of young Native Californians call home.’
    • ‘We have oil on our land and casinos, but on the Rez back home, most people who get money don't do anything with it.’
    • ‘Real Indian humor is something in your community or your home, and the funniest people are maybe your uncle, or a cab driver, or someone on the rez.’
    • ‘The day before my last at the res, I got to do a traditional sweat.’

Doesn't sound too crass to me...it's a word in the dictionary.
are you Native?

I'm from the area of South Florida where Miccosukee and Seminole have reservations..out of respect, one would never, ever refer to their homes as 'the rez', I never even heard of any Native say that word in Florida and yes, I did have business with Native Americans.
 
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