That makes no sense. Instead of complaining about it they should be encouraging it and selling all the true Native things they can make. Turning it into a race thing is like saying every white kid that dresses "hip hop" is in black face. A native style poncho or baggy jeans do not make you a raciest.
I think it is a great question. People choose what job they take so asking tells you what they are interested in. Sure there are other questions but what you do for 40+ hours a week is a good start.
My mom grooms dogs clearly she likes animals, my brother in law is and electrician and is great at working with his hands, my best friend works in a bank and as kids she would add the tax before checking out just to see if she could get it right.
You can learn a lot about someone by asking what they do for a living.
Anyone else reminded of the cruse ship level in Mario Kart? The one where you have to drive through the dinning room at the right time or the tables slide and hit you.
If I was a child that was in and out of hospitals all the time I would like it. As a one time use a needle is a needle no matter how you dress it up but if I had to get hundreds of needles then the cats would make me smile.
I worked in retail and people would complain if the mannequins were nude. We had to use bags as clothing on them between outfit changes. I took a shirt of one because it was the last size and a lady wanted to try it on and skipped the bag since we were busy. In those 10 min we had 2 complaints. It is mostly little old ladies with nothing better to do making sure things are "proper".
Turning it into a race thing is like saying every white kid that dresses "hip hop" is in black face. A native style poncho or baggy jeans do not make you a raciest.
Seriously though I am excited to use the new money I think it looks great.
My mom grooms dogs clearly she likes animals, my brother in law is and electrician and is great at working with his hands, my best friend works in a bank and as kids she would add the tax before checking out just to see if she could get it right.
You can learn a lot about someone by asking what they do for a living.