• @Cypher
    link
    English
    6
    edit-2
    6 hours ago

    Removed by mod

    • @PugJesusOPM
      link
      English
      -45 hours ago

      Wow. What an amazing point he has, that… [checks notes] connotations change with time?

      • @Cypher
        link
        English
        34 hours ago

        Removed by mod

        • @PugJesusOPM
          link
          English
          -24 hours ago

          His point that whatever term retard is replaced with in the lexicon will simply go on the treadmill of slurs just like moron did.

          Okay?

          Like, I really don’t know what the two of you aim to prove here by repeatedly drawing attention to the fact that connotations of words change with time. Yes, both in the past and the future. This is my shocked face.

          The use of ‘Retard’ and its acceptability has changed due to the dual connotations it acquired (those connotations being, specifically, a derogatory insult, and the assertion of actual medical mental disability). It’s no longer acceptable. That doesn’t mean that every word which clinicians used or which schoolyard bullies used is now the equivalent of calling someone a ‘retard’. ‘Retard’ has a very acute combination of connotations, which anyone who grew up around the term understands as different from terms like ‘fool’, ‘idiot’, or ‘moron’.

          Like, fuck’s sake. How are you not grasping this?

          You are literally participating in the problem you tried to call out.

          … the problem of… not using a term widely agreed upon to be offensive in the modern day?

          • @Cypher
            link
            English
            34 hours ago

            Removed by mod

            • @PugJesusOPM
              link
              English
              0
              edit-2
              3 hours ago

              Either both are acceptable or neither is because they are synonymous, in meaning and historical context.

              Okay, you go out to your local NAACP meeting and started calling all the people there ‘colored’, or even better, ‘negros’, since that’s synonymous in meaning and historical context to ‘Black’, I’m sure it’ll go over well. Good to see that you still don’t understand what ‘connotation’ means, and apparently are too lazy to look it up.

              Fucking moron.

              • @Cypher
                link
                English
                33 hours ago

                Removed by mod

                • @PugJesusOPM
                  link
                  English
                  -13 hours ago

                  same root, usage and cultural meaning though acceptability has differed over time.

                  Yes, like ‘colored’ and ‘Black’. Yet only a fucking moron would confuse the two as equally appropriate.

                  You literally are just repeatedly demonstrating that you don’t understand connotation, and are utterly resistant to the most blatant and obvious examples of connotation possible. It’s like your eyes pass over the comparison without even reading it, glossing over with the hope of, I don’t know, showing off your ignorance on the internet? I mean, if you’re going to get into an argument about literal semantics, you should probably at least understand the elementary-school stuff, lmao.

                  • @Cypher
                    link
                    English
                    23 hours ago

                    Removed by mod