I disagree with the author and don't accept these proposals as means of fighting racism/prejudice. In my country, we have our own discussion around gendered language and people suggest using gender neutral terms. People talk about framing and how it can reinforce prejudice. Framing is the source and justification for this activism.
Ironically you proclaim to be the master of the unwashed in-eloquent slaves, that should use your idea of language and worse, your diagnosis about the mental orientation of your lab rats. The backlash is predictable and in my opinion justified and correct.
French isn't a regulated language. There are institutions which define what is considered correct, but it has to be accepted by those that speak it. There is history about that. Someone who speaks English should know about it actually. Tangential political activism here is rightfully condemned, but we see this in a lot of countries.
> Generally, people are forgiving
Heh... where? On Twitter?
> That second option is where things usually go bad. If someone tells you something you did was hurtful and you just tell them to get over themselves, this is where reciprocity ends. There is no need to respect you since you felt no need to respect them either.
Would you please give me all your money? Seriously, don't lie to yourself.
> The problem is not being ignorant of the potential harmfulness of words, it's doubling down when you learn about it.
I learned nothing from this honestly. Tell people to deal with their "micro-offenses" and you would really help them cope with difficulties in their lives. Maybe that is something you could learn.
> But if you're part of a demographic that is targeted by hate groups, a lot of your existence is spent being aware of dog-whistles about you
I am. As you might guess from my post, I prefer spending 1000 years in a free speech place with all offenses the universe can muster than 5 minutes in a sanctimonious environment where academics without significant life experience dictate the allowed vocabulary. Free speech and equality before the law are rights minorities fought with a lot of blood. Not going to throw that away because some failed parenting.
Now you learned that and you can delete your article.
3 comments
[ 6.4 ms ] story [ 23.1 ms ] threadIronically you proclaim to be the master of the unwashed in-eloquent slaves, that should use your idea of language and worse, your diagnosis about the mental orientation of your lab rats. The backlash is predictable and in my opinion justified and correct.
French isn't a regulated language. There are institutions which define what is considered correct, but it has to be accepted by those that speak it. There is history about that. Someone who speaks English should know about it actually. Tangential political activism here is rightfully condemned, but we see this in a lot of countries.
> Generally, people are forgiving
Heh... where? On Twitter?
> That second option is where things usually go bad. If someone tells you something you did was hurtful and you just tell them to get over themselves, this is where reciprocity ends. There is no need to respect you since you felt no need to respect them either.
Would you please give me all your money? Seriously, don't lie to yourself.
> The problem is not being ignorant of the potential harmfulness of words, it's doubling down when you learn about it.
I learned nothing from this honestly. Tell people to deal with their "micro-offenses" and you would really help them cope with difficulties in their lives. Maybe that is something you could learn.
> But if you're part of a demographic that is targeted by hate groups, a lot of your existence is spent being aware of dog-whistles about you
I am. As you might guess from my post, I prefer spending 1000 years in a free speech place with all offenses the universe can muster than 5 minutes in a sanctimonious environment where academics without significant life experience dictate the allowed vocabulary. Free speech and equality before the law are rights minorities fought with a lot of blood. Not going to throw that away because some failed parenting.
Now you learned that and you can delete your article.
>Now you learned that and you can delete your article.
is just rudely dismissive, and not part of good-faith debate.
There are only a few ways to react:
- Agree to make the changes
- Double-down on keeping the text as is, and dismiss the request as unreasonable