- Joined
- Jul 13, 2016
- Messages
- 3,144
I have pasted you a bunch of links to various medias in bahasa Indonesia all using the terms bule+ Nigeria/Afrika/Jepang/India...etc showing you that bule is not anymore a white monopoly in the modern Indonesian language.You suck as an admin.
Stfu, seriously. I don’t care if you have the power to kick me out. When COVID and other restrictions allow us to have reasonable discussions I’ll be back.
As of now, you, as as as admin are taking sides.
You’re a bule. Deal with it. The rest of us will
contend with being Expats. Corny ass mf![]()
A quick google would bring you much more and so would do a browsing of comments left by (mostly) young Indonesian on sosmed publishing articles involving foreigners from Africa, India, Japan...etc. Many of these young Indonesian would use the locution bule nigeria, bule afrika...etc It simply shows that bahasa Indonesia, as any language in the world, is alive and change. The use and understanding of the word bule is changing, has changed.
Medias are a major drive in language change and the links I pasted shows it. If papers and TV uses a term, giving him a different meaning that it once had it will be repeated and adopted. I think it should be encouraged rather than denied in the case of "bule"
20+ years ago when I first arrive I never heard of bule nigeria or any Bule+(add any nation or continent other than the "western" one). Today it isn't rare that I hear or read it in casual conversation or in medias. As much as it may sound weird or strange to anyone, it is the way bahasa is moving/has moved and I predict that in 10 or 15 years from now the word "bule only", systematically without addition of an Asian or African country, will be used to qualify any foreigner, including non white one.
Restricting the word bule to a racial connotation is simply wrong as of today. The point is that if "bule" generally means "white/caucasian" in the mind of many Indonesian, it isn't exclusively white skin people who are labelled bule anymore.
Another thing you could do to understand it is to ask to any Indonesian if Obama, Rihanna, Tiger Woods...etc are bule . Of course they are and they won't tell you they aren't. Yet they don't have the physical features of Caucasians.
I didn't check but I wouldn't be surprised that all the articles I pasted in a previous post are all less than 5 years old which highlight the fact that it is a new trend in the Indonesian language.
Personally I don't give a toss if anyone consider I am a bule. I definitely don't consider me as an expat. Most Indonesian wouldn't understand what "expat" means anyway. I am a proud immigrant, like my grandfather was 85 years ago moving from the Balkans to France. because it is the word which by far best qualifies what I am. I came here 21 years ago, took residence, have always been economically active, recognize Indonesia as my nation pof adoption and don't even remotely consider leaving. I have decided to build a family and life in this country. So what else would I be either than an immigrant? Calling me an expatriate would wrongly re-attach me to my native nation while I haven't even gone there for the past ten years and have spent more time in my life here than there.
The only reason I chimed in the thread was the fact that one of your post had received reports. As such, as a mod I have to take side and it's what I did. I am surprised that you are surprised that Mods take side. They do and in fact you may be surprise to hear that it is routine job for mods.
Moderation Note: please read it attentively @Dharma Police
Now on the topic of moderation I kindly warn you not to tell me (or anyone on this board) to shut the fuck up (stfu) or to threaten anyone, be it lightly or in a veiled manner, or telling him/her he's a piece of shit (POS). It won't do any good to your membership here and I won't kindly ask again. Albeit English language, like Indonesian, is evolving, these locutions are not yet part of the common language we want to promote in this forum.
