Rep. Eli Crane used the derogatory phrase in describing his proposed amendment to a military bill. Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty asked that his words be stricken from the record.

  • @Ensign_Crab
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    13511 months ago

    Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty asked that his words be stricken from the record.

    Keep the words in the record. Posterity should know.

      • @bleeps
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        3611 months ago

        Just fyi, it’s short-sighted.

        • @[email protected]
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          2011 months ago

          Ohh snap. Normally I’m the one correcting people! Thanks for telling me, I hate saying the wrong words lol

    • @afraid_of_zombies
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      011 months ago

      Reps are timed when they talk so they can amend the congressional record, because they might have wanted to say something but weren’t given enough floortime. I am not a 100% but I think Senators are not allowed to amend the record.

  • TheRealGChu
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    11911 months ago

    Word choices aside, the more telling quote is this, “You can keep playing around these games with diversity, equity and inclusion. But there are some real threats out there. And if we keep messing around and we keep lowering our standards…”

    For those that can’t read between the lines, POCs, LGBTQIA+, women, and anyone else that’s not a white male, are “lowering…standards”.

    • @Klypto
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      11 months ago

      OK then.

      Let’s sit down and read the actual amendment instead of taking out of context a section of some news quote which is likeky already out of context by said news before you shortened it.

      https://www.congress.gov/congressional-report/118th-congress/house-report/142

      1. An Amendment To Be Offered by Representative Crane of Arizona or His Designee, Debatable for 10 Minutes

      At the end of subtitle G of title X, insert the following:

      SEC. 5__. PROTECTION OF IDEOLOGICAL FREEDOM.

      Section 2001 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:

      © Protection of Ideological Freedom.–(1) No employee of the Department of Defense or of a military department, including any member of the armed forces, may compel, teach, instruct, or train any member of the armed forces, whether serving on active duty, serving in a reserve component, attending a military service academy, or attending a course conducted by a military department pursuant to a Reserve Officer Corps Training program, to believe any of the politically-based concepts referred to in paragraph (4).

      (2) No employee of the Department of Defense or of a military department, including any member of the armed forces may be compelled to declare a belief in, or adherence to, or participate in training or education of any kind that promotes any of the politically-based concepts referred to in paragraph (4) a condition of recruitment, retention, promotion, transfer, assignment, or other favorable personnel action.

      (3) The Department of Defense and the military departments may not promote race-based or ideological concepts that promote the differential treatment of any individual or groups of individuals based on race, color, sex, or national origin, including any of politically-based concepts referred to in paragraph (4).

      (4) A politically-based concept referred to in this paragraph is any of the following:

            (A) Members of one race, color, sex, or national 
          origin are morally superior to members of another race, 
          color, sex, or national origin.
      
            (B) An individual, by virtue of his or her race, 
          color, sex, or national origin, is inherently racist, 
          sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or 
          unconsciously.
      
            (C) An individual's moral character or status as 
          either privileged or oppressed is necessarily 
          determined by his or her race, color, sex, or national 
          origin.
      
            (D) Members of one race, color, sex, or national 
          origin cannot and should not attempt to treat others 
          without respect to race, color, sex, or national 
          origin.
      
            (E) An individual, by virtue of his or her race, 
          color, sex, or national origin, bears responsibility 
          for, or should be discriminated against or receive 
          adverse treatment because of, actions committed in the 
          past by other members of the same race, color, sex, or 
          national origin.
      
            (F) An individual, by virtue of his or her race, 
          color, sex, or national origin, should be discriminated 
          against or receive adverse treatment to achieve 
          diversity, equity, or inclusion.
      
            (G) An individual should feel discomfort, guilt, 
          anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on 
          account of his or her race, color, sex, or national 
          origin.
      
            (H) Such virtues as merit, excellence, hard work, 
          fairness, neutrality, objectivity, and racial 
          colorblindness are racist or sexist, or were created by 
          members of a particular race, color, sex, or national 
          origin to oppress members of another race, color, sex, 
          or national origin.
      

      (5) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed as compelling any individual to believe or refrain from believing in any politically-based concept referred to in paragraph (4) in their private and personal capacity.‘’.

                                ----------
      
    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Or you know, he’s talking about actually lowering the standards which is the policy being discussed. Whether or not you think it’s worth lowering admittance standards to allow more women, LGBT, POCs to join and improve diversity, at least be honest with what’s being argued.

      There’s been ongoing debate on lowering standards, mostly for allowing more women into combat roles. While barring these groups entirely from certain roles is obviously wrong, changing and lowering requirements doesn’t seem right either.

      • @[email protected]
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        3111 months ago

        No one is lowering standards. Affirmative action means that when all other things are equal, prefer the candidate who is underrepresented in the field.

        • @Archpawn
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          111 months ago

          How often do they get two candidates that are exactly equal? If they’re giving a benefit to people underrepresented, it needs to be worth something.

          And we’ve been constantly lowering standards, unrelated to affirmative action. There was a time when being a high-school graduate meant something. Now it’s easy to get through college, and completely necessary because if you don’t people will assume you’re the sort of person who can’t even get through college.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          This is not about affirmative action. There are efforts to lower standards, separate from affirmative action. Maybe not for LGBT or POC but women are held to different physical standards in the military.

          Edit: For Ranger School, standards were lowered so women could graduate. For some positions who cares, but pushing people through positions they aren’t capable for in the name of equality is dangerous both for them and their fellow soldiers

          • Flying Squid
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            -311 months ago

            but women are held to different physical standards in the military.

            When women can hold combat positions, that might matter.

            • @[email protected]
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              1911 months ago

              Women have been allowed in combat positions since around 2015. It’s been a slow integration and there’s very few, because of the exact point I made that the physical standards and training are very difficult for most women.

              • Flying Squid
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                211 months ago

                So they are held to the same physical standards when it’s a combat position? I’m not seeing the problem then.

                • @[email protected]
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                  1311 months ago

                  As of right now they are. There are efforts to lower standards to raise numbers, and that is what I’m saying is wrong.

                  If they’re held to the same standards, of course that’s not an issue.

        • arcturus
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          411 months ago

          perhaps they can do more than that, even

      • @DiachronicShear
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        1011 months ago

        If you find yourself agreeing with a bigot, maybe reexamine your rhetoric

  • @NounsAndWords
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    10911 months ago

    “My amendment has nothing to do with whether or not colored people or Black people or anybody can serve,” said Crane, who is in his first term. “It has nothing to do with any of that stuff.”

    I’m gonna give him the benefit of the doubt and say he’s just a normal idiot racist who has a hard time thinking on the spot and got mixed up between “black people,” “people of color,” and trying really hard not to say the n-word as he would in his usual crowds.

    • @[email protected]
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      2911 months ago

      Are we really going to act like “people of color” and “colored people” are wildly different terms that could never be confused? He listed “black people” separately so I’d have to guess he meant to say people of color and mixed up the terms

      Not saying he’s not racist for other reasons, but this is gotcha journalism

      • @assassin_aragorn
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        3611 months ago

        Linguistically, very little difference. Contextually, when we bring in history? Huge difference.

        • @lemming007
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          911 months ago

          Just wait 10-20 years. It seems what’s acceptable to say changes all the time.

          20 years ago “queer” was offensive.

          • @assassin_aragorn
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            1011 months ago

            Of course. Society is constantly changing, as is the composition and education of society. And as a result, language changes. This is the same philosophy I take with someone’s preferred pronouns – it costs me nothing to use the right words. So long as unintentional mistakes are overlooked, and I’ve never seen someone get angry about unintentionally misgendering, I’m totally fine with it.

            It comes down to this. If someone is uncomfortable with something you’ve done, and it’s something as simple as word choice, why not accommodate them? Why not let them be comfortable at no cost to you? The exact same principle goes for what’s acceptable and what isn’t.

            It really isn’t that much work for someone to say “gay person” or “LGBTQ people” instead of queer. Changing your terminology every 20 years isn’t rocket science. Look at it this way, if Eminem can censor himself and apologize for saying f*g, I think the rest of us can make the effort too.

            (Eminem’s thoughts are actually really interesting here. He points out he doesn’t mean it as a slur at all, and that while he was growing up it was a general insult in rap, not constantly used as a slur. All the same, he’s still used it less and less over the years. )

            • @Reliant1087
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              411 months ago

              Honestly the problem is actually getting a chance. I’m not American and English is not my first language either.

              I had people get very angry with media from my home country for characters in a movie wearing black coloured makeup and was called racist for trying to tell them that blackface is not a thing in our culture and you can’t judge foreign media based on your own cultural norms.

              I’m dyslexic and make a word salad almost all the time, without even being aware of it most of the time. Would people honestly give me a chance if I accidentally mix up the order of people and colored? It seems like they wouldn’t, given my interactions.

          • @Laticauda
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            11 months ago

            Yes, that is the nature of language. We don’t speak like Shakespeare anymore either, imagine that. Queer people was offensive 20 years ago because it was mostly used as a slur then by bigots. It’s not as offensive now because queer people reclaimed it and it is mostly used by them to refer to themselves. They have generally expressed that they are more comfortable with it because of that. “Coloured people” is still used mostly by racists, while “people of colour” is commonly used by non-white people to refer to themselves. In each example an important factor is how the group being referred to feels about a particular term. Most black people have made it pretty clear that they don’t like being called “coloured people”, especially not by white conservatives, but they generally don’t mind the term “people of colour”. So if you have to use one or the other, the one that you know they don’t like is probably not the safe bet.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          I’d absolutely agree, but I don’t think that was his intention. As a politician, he should know better. This seems like another senator tried to score some political points on accidentally using the wrong term though, instead of actually arguing policy

          • @Snapz
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            111 months ago

            You don’t think that was his intention, huh? Based on what?

            “As a politician he should know better” - now, more than ever, “politician” doesn’t speak to any basic standard met or level of qualification. A person who isn’t a racist doesn’t use that phrase today casually because they understand the negative connotation.

            • @[email protected]
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              111 months ago

              Based on him listing “black people” separately, and when called out asking to change it to people of color

          • @assassin_aragorn
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            111 months ago

            Oh sure, yeah. I could believe that. His reaction now to the story should confirm it.

        • @Skaryon
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          111 months ago

          Non native speaker here. I assume colored people was a term for slaves then?

          • @BURN
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            411 months ago

            It was the “correct” term for POC towards the end of slavery and through the Jim Crowe era. Bathrooms, Pool, Water Fountains, etc. were often labeled “Whites” and “Coloreds”. Segregation is a major part of history most of this country tries to forget, and absolutely doesn’t broadcast.

      • @[email protected]
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        1911 months ago

        Are we really going to act like “people of color” and “colored people” are wildly different terms that could never be confused?

        In a vacuum, those are similar terms.

        In the real world, one is a term used in Apartheid South Africa and in Jim Crow America that has huge racist and white supremacists connotations, while the other one is the preferred term used by the community to refer to themselves.

      • @DiachronicShear
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        011 months ago

        Yes we are. They are very different. One is racist, the other is not. And it’s been that way for decades. There is no excuse.

      • @Ludo
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        11 months ago

        deleted by creator

      • @[email protected]
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        1111 months ago

        I am 37 and grew up in an unincorporated town in Wisconsin. Never in my life was it considered socially acceptable to use this term. Don’t be a fucking moron.

      • @Monkeyhog
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        1111 months ago

        No it fucking wasn’t. And if it was where you are, then you’re surrounded by racists.

  • @Coach
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    6311 months ago

    Cue all the “First Amendment absolutists” who believe it’s their right to call people whatever they want, as long as it’s not the pronoun they prefer.

    • Kit Sorens
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      3411 months ago

      It does not protect them from social consequence, just government reprisal.

    • @Laticauda
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      811 months ago

      To be fair, when talking about issues involving more than one group vs systemic racism that uniquely benefits white people above all other groups, then it’s pointless to try and specify every group that isn’t white and is harmed in some way by systemic racism separately. If you want to discuss a common issue shared by various other groups, then using shorthand to refer to those groups as a collective isn’t inherently bigoted. What matters is the history of the term you use and whether said collective generally prefers it or not. A lot of non-white folks use poc/woc/etc and like that it’s a unifying term that implies solidarity with other non-white groups. Some non-white folks don’t like the term, and that’s fine, but it’s still considered better than “coloured people” because “coloured people” actually has a history of bigoted use, hence why it’s viewed as offensive.

    • @nednobbins
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      611 months ago

      I get kind of annoyed at how non-black people are selectively included or excluded from “people of color”.
      When someone is trying to sound inclusive, anyone who isn’t white is a “person of color”.
      But the second we try to assert some rights we suddenly basically white people.

  • 🔻-_AnoN_-🔻
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    4311 months ago

    I don’t get how people of colour is any better lmao

    • @asteriskeverything
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      3811 months ago

      The logic behind this change is that it puts the PERSON first. You’re first and foremost a person, and then after that you’re using a descriptor. Usually this terminology is used to be collective of anyone not white, because it’s used in context of the unique experiences that anyone not white has to navigate all their life, at least in US. Examples such as people of color are more likely to be pulled over by police, people of color have a harder time finding makeup that suits their skin tone, etc.

      If you’re just talking about an individual or a group without that context it’s much more common to hear them just referred to as black, or whatever ethnicity they are, if its even relevant.

      I know it can all feel arbitrary when words are suddenly not okay anymore, but I think it is because these acceptable terms for marginalized people eventually get used so often in a hateful context, they may try to adopt a new term. I mean many women now cringe hard and go on alert for red flags whenever they see women referred to as female, maybe can’t even stand it anymore despite the context, because it has been so consistently used by a very specific type of person.

      • @I_Fart_Glitter
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        2511 months ago

        I appreciate and agree with all you’ve said here, just one small thing- “female” is fine when used as an adjective, I don’t think anyone is bothered by that. “The female staff member,” “the author is female” etc. is not problematic. It’s when it is used as a noun that flags are raised- “That female over there,” “the author is a female.” Then it sounds like you’re talking about some other kind of creature, not a human woman.

        • @asteriskeverything
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          711 months ago

          Sure and that’s a really great response! It’s also kind of adapting the same point I was trying to make. Obviously something as complex as race relations in America is going to not have such clear boundaries with what is acceptable language and why, but saying colored people makes it a description of the noun. People of color is taking that noun and putting it first.

        • sharpiemarker
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          611 months ago

          Rule of acquisition 31 states, “Never make fun of a Ferengi’s mother. Insult something he cares about instead.”

      • @snailtrail
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        111 months ago

        Language changes over time. Sometimes it’s a slow gradual adoption of new terms, sometimes it’s a cool new slang, and sometimes it’s word policing. I understand that, historically, a certain type of person would use the word “females” instead of “women”, but I can see a shift happening where there number of people using the word “female” is on the increase. Let’s say you’re having a conversation and specifically want to refer to female people - you can’t actually use the word women, which used to imply “female” but now includes males who transition. So depending on context, and what you need to communicate, the word female can be absolutely critical, whereas the word woman may not suffice.

      • @dudebro
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        11 months ago

        That’s really splitting hairs, but okay.

        How do you refer to white people?

        • @yowhat
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          1311 months ago

          People of whiteness of course

          • DrSleepless
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            11 months ago

            People of whiteness are people of rightness my uncle used to say

          • @Gunrigger
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            111 months ago

            Ah yes, the natural counter to the widely used “People of blackness”

        • @Elelith
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          111 months ago

          Melanin deficient.

      • @[email protected]
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        -411 months ago

        In that case, I expect to be referred to as a “person of whiteness” as I was unaware that I was being insulted all this time when called a “white person” since “person” isn’t the first word.

        I wasn’t mad about it when I didn’t know people meant to dehumanize me by saying those words in that order rather than the reversed order, but now that you have informed me, I am.

        Same with “male,” the term is “man,” “male” is dehumanizing as well since we use it to describe animals that produce sperm. In fact, sperm is dehumanizing because animals have it too, so I expect human sperm to be renamed so that it doesn’t share any commonality with nature that could suggest I’m also part of nature. Also, some people I don’t like have called me “male,” so I don’t like it. While I’m at it some of those people have called me a sarcastic asshole, and so instead I’d like to be called a sardonic sphincter since it has alliteration and nobody I don’t like has called me that yet.

          • @[email protected]
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            211 months ago

            Yes, and if I could convince enough people that my ridiculous shit above was a good idea, it would become one. It would still however be just as ridiculous.

            What’s more, at one time not too long ago homophobia and racism were social norms, so maybe clinging to that notion that “societal norms” are somehow an arbiter of goodness isn’t always necessarily true. Just because enough people say something, that doesn’t mean they’re right, and just because the minority or even only one person is saying something that doesn’t mean they’re wrong, either. One has to evaluate an argument (or whatever) by the argument itself, not by how many followers its speaker has nor by what one’s friends think of the speaker or his words.

    • @surewhynotlem
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      2911 months ago

      The good news is that you don’t need to understand. You just need to accept that this is the case because the people it hurts say so.

      You can also go learn about the history and understand if you want, but I’m also all for being lazy and just trusting the people who are impacted.

      • @[email protected]
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        811 months ago

        this logic is so flawed honestly

        people can choose to “be hurt” by literally any word and it’s entirely subjective and ephemeral because what upsets them today may not tomorrow and what is ok changes just as easily

        word policing is just a losing battle no matter how you try and justify it and the massive sensitivity towards words just makes people look ridiculous

        • @MrPewp
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          1511 months ago

          That would only be true if we gave every single hurt feeling equal weight, but PoC in America have a long history of pretty blatant discrimination, specifically using the term “colored people”, so I don’t see much wrong with not using the phrase because they’ve asked you not to. It’s not like we’re entertaining every person that wants to be referred to as a “Hylian Deku scrub” or something.

        • @[email protected]
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          611 months ago

          Cuts both ways. You’re right now word policing by saying that phrases like “people of color” doesn’t conform to how you want words to be used and it upsets your sensibilities.

          And what’s the point of communicating if you aren’t going to make considerations about the people you’re communicating with? Just like to hear the sound of your own voice, or think the words you’re writing look pretty on your screen? If you want people to care about what you’re saying you need to make an effort to learn how to use words effectively. It’s not up to the rest of the world to conform to your word preferences.

        • cheesepotatoes
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          311 months ago

          So then why don’t you stop word policing and refer to groups based on their preferences?

          Or is the reality here that you’re annoyed that you can’t say bigoted, offensive things with impunity?

          • @[email protected]
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            111 months ago

            When are we going to realize that these groups are not homogenous groups full of people with different opinions and different sensitivities

            I think activists often take things way further than the affected people themselves even want

        • sharpiemarker
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          11 months ago

          Hey look, it’s someone who doesn’t have a horse in the race and who can’t recognize their privilege.

    • @Laticauda
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      2611 months ago

      Because it has a different connotation. It’s generally used by a different demographic, often to refer to themselves, and doesn’t have the unfortunate history that “coloured people” has. Just because they’re similar that doesn’t make them the same. Most people I’ve seen using the term “coloured people” aren’t exactly known for being not-racist. Most people I’ve seen using “people of colour” are, well, people of colour. We sometimes need a shorthand for people who aren’t white but may or may not be black, and personally I tend to go with whatever the people being referred to generally prefer.

    • @PapaTorque
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      2011 months ago

      It puts the “people” part first. This can be seen as prioritizing them as being people first and their skin color second.

      • @Beliriel
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        11 months ago

        That sounds awfully hair splitting to me but sure if the issue can resolved by adding “people” in the front…
        It just makes me think in 2-3 years the expression “people of color” is derogatory and we evade to something else like “variety ethnic” or some such. It’s dumbing a complicated issue that should be talked about down to senseless nitpicking and in-groups, which just makes the problems worse for edge case racist population groups, which should be educated and not humiliated. And being arrogant and saying “but they can educate themselves” is just as much part of the problem than the ones closing their eyes and ears and refusing to learn. But seriously we had like 5 different expressions within the past 10 years and keeping up with whatever the newest fad expression is is slowly becoming cumbersome. To me it’s just like I stopped caring about the + in LGBT+. It too much hassle and really not worth it for me. If someone really cares about it then I’m open for a discussion but frankly there’s enough else going on in my life than having to spend time on the problems of 0.1% of the population. Hell. some medical conditions have a higher incidence rate.

        • @PapaTorque
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          111 months ago

          I definitely agree. But someone publicly speaking on the subject should probably look into it first or at least their team should give them a heads up.

          I feel the same way when politicians fuck up talking about tech stuff. If I’m talking with my friends about encryption and I fuck up the terminology I don’t really care. If I’m a politician talking about it in a house floor debate I’m gonna make myself look retarded to anyone who knows anything about encryption and ruin my own credibility in the process.

    • @jerdle_lemmy
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      1211 months ago

      Because it’s all signalling, there’s nothing really there to get. The reason “people of colour” is okay and “coloured people” isn’t isn’t because of any real difference between the phrases, but because people who use the former are generally supportive of them, while people who use the latter aren’t.

      • @Laticauda
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        11 months ago

        I think a major aspect that seems to be ignored pretty often is that “people of colour” is used a lot by non-white people, while “coloured people” isn’t as much. Sometimes we need a shorthand for people who aren’t white but may or may not be black, and I generally think that going with the version that the people being referred to prefer is usually the more respectful choice.

    • @sheilzy
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      311 months ago

      I get that activists like “people-centered” language nowadays, but in essence, it is kind of weird. Maybe it’s just because I have NVLD that I’m always analyzing these language things. Like in a community with which I’m more aligned, the autistic community, “person with autism” doesn’t sound any better to me than “autistic person.” Of course, as someone with NVLD, you’re not always described as autistic to begin with. I prefer the word “minorities” to “people of color” but what are currently minority communities now are on track to become a majority in some communities, and maybe the country at large one day too, so that term may likely be rendered inaccurate soon. Of course “colored people” had been an acceptable term a few decades ago so maybe this guy is just behind on the times. Still, I do find it weird how society often tires of some words and phrases over a few generations.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        An accepted term by who? Why does that matter? It’s not now and you’d have to be pretty far up your own butt to miss that. Either way they should know this as politicians representing all kinds of people. There’s no excuse. The fact that he said it so casually is pretty damning. People that aren’t actually racist and that care about those they’re discussing would never make this slip.

        • @sheilzy
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          111 months ago

          I’d seen speeches of Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, etc and other civil rights leaders use the term before. But it is out of fashion now. Yeah, I guess being a politician and not knowing language stylistics is dumb. But political rhetoric and legalese is filled with antiquities. Between stuff like this and politicians who don’t know know how new technology works is frustrating and embarrassing. Sometimes I try to think wishfully about it but when they repeated make the same mistakes it can be hard.

    • @Archpawn
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      211 months ago

      It’s nothing inherent to the word. Words mean what people use it to mean. If racist people said “African American” and non-racist people said the n-word, then saying “African American” would basically be announcing you’re racist.

    • @80085
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      211 months ago

      I think it’s just because “colored people” is an outdated term associated with more racist times. POC is “poeple first.” Many would argue that POC is also white-centric. I like the term “minority,” but I guess that isn’t skin-color specific.

    • @DiachronicShear
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      011 months ago

      The fact that this racist-at-best, woefully-ignorant-at-worst comment is at +40 votes right now is pretty telling to me. Guess the userbase of lemmy.world is pretty bigoted.

      • @irotsoma
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        611 months ago

        I don’t know. I mean it is a relevant comment. Is Lemmy supposed to be like Reddit where you only upvote relevant content that contributes to the conversation and downvote irrelevant comments, trolling, etc. It doesn’t mean up/downvote on whether or not you agree. So in that case it’s a matter of interpretation. If you think this person really doesn’t know, then it’s relevant. If you think they’re trolling, then downvote. But even if they are racist, it does contribute that to the conversation and allow for education. Just my opinion on the workings of the community, but that’s how a lot of communities worked in Reddit and was the originally intended functionality if not how it was always used.

      • arcturus
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        11 months ago

        tbf, it’s definitely a thing that is genuinely being discussed about in a non-“why can’t I just say the slur” way

        edit: and by “discussed” I mean people who aren’t white discussing it

        • @DiachronicShear
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          111 months ago

          lol that’s now how I meant it but I can see how it could be interpreted that way. I meant that the comment is clearly racist so “at worst” meaning like the OP didn’t MEAN to say something super racist but now everyone thinks they’re racist.

        • @feedum_sneedson
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          711 months ago

          It’s aggressively libbed out, what are you talking about? I’ve seen literally nothing right wing.

        • @finkrat
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          211 months ago

          This is going to be natural with the federated nature of Lemmy, some instances are going to enable far right rhetoric. Block instances, communities and users you dislike. You have more power here to adjust your feed than Reddit.

  • @fidelacchius
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    3911 months ago

    The politically correct word changes every decade. “Black people” used to be more offensive than “colored people”

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Euphemism treadmill.

      In any sensitive, socially fraught context, terminology will just change faster than in other areas of life.

      That’s why we no longer use terms like idiot, retard, cripple, imbecile, etc. as neutral, objective terminology. Instead, terms that where initially used as objective, clinical terminology are now exclusively used as slurs and insults.

      It’s just that when it comes to race, some people (and it’s often people not affected by it) have a hard time accepting that concept.

      • @Chalky_Pockets
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        1811 months ago

        To be fair, if I heared someone say “colored people” I would not be at all surprised to later hear them say “retard” in the same setting.

        • Fugicara
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          611 months ago

          An easy way to pick out racists in the modern day is if they just casually call black people “blacks.” It seems to be one of the words that, although it’s not used by non-racists, hasn’t been phased out by some of the less explicit racists yet in the way “colored people” has.

          • @Chalky_Pockets
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            111 months ago

            Yeah, dead giveaway, they saw “black people” and removed “people” in their head so the verbiage is bound to follow.

      • @FiFoFree
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        811 months ago

        As we’ve seen over the past decade (well, past few decades, tbh), changing the word only moves the objectionable meaning onto the new word. The goal is to address the meaning, but it feels like so much energy is being spent on addressing the words themselves that the meaning never gets dealt with…

        …which I guess is understandable for those who have given up hope of the meaning being addressed, but then why spend the effort on the word?

        • @[email protected]
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          1211 months ago

          As we’ve seen over the past decade (well, past few decades, tbh), changing the word only moves the objectionable meaning onto the new word.

          It’s been going on for much longer. Just look up all the clinical terms that came into use in the Victorian era. There’s been an ongoing effort to come up with better terminology. Words came into existence in an effort to have neutral terminology to refer to certain symptoms or conditions or to categorize people or chronic illnesses or ethnicities etc.

          It’s just that we no longer use terms like “moron” or “lunatic” or “retard” or “fool” or “insane” or “Mongol” as neutral, objective, clinical terminology.

          I think many people get used (and attached) to the terminology that they learned when growing up, unaware that this terminology has been changing at a rapid pace for centuries now, and then get all bent out of shape when they’re being told that the words they were taught as kids are no longer the preferred way of referring to certain conditions/ethnicities/demographic groups etc.

          And of course, then there are people who use those expressions with the full intention to insult and malign, only to feign ignorance when called out: “But that’s the word people have always been using! Why are you getting so upset?”

      • TeoTwawki
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        11 months ago

        It would help if people would stop being aholes and turning terms into offensive ones by intentionally using them insult. “autism” is being used online sometimes in place of “retard” now as an insult. Won’t be long before those of us on the spectrum need a new term because of these clowns.

        Every insult word to call someone stupid was once a clinical term (including stupid). I am not kidding look it up that’s quite a long history of doing this, people suck.

    • @PolarBone
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      911 months ago

      I wasn’t sure about a young guys name out here and asked someone “do you know the young black man who’s new in the neighborhood? I wanted to thank him for helping someone I know the other day.” After I helped host an event.

      holy shit this person got mad at me. Said I needed to call them african canadian or colored. I get so confused by terms these days. Same with indigenous and native. I live in an area with many, and know some, and different ones prefer different words. I call one of them one term, and other that same one, they might get offended. I try to be as respectful as I can, gets hard.

      Example, my therapist goes by indigenous, but her wife goes by native. So I thanked her wife one day for helping me at a indigenous event I was at, and she said “we call it a native event”.

      I’m having such a hard time the past 2 years in particular, and trying really hard with all of these changes in terms, pronouns and every time I think I understand it, apparently I don’t. I have one trans friend who I see occasionally and thankfully they agree with me and makes me feel a bit less nutty.

      My girlfriend is considering changing her orientation to some new wording I’ve literally never heard of all of a sudden now too. I just found a tonne of new things, like grey sexual, demisexual, etc. People I’ve been in employment/training programs with have changed their name and gender 2-3 times in the past year, and each time I see them I get confused with what to say or call them. It is oddly overwhelming.

      sorry this turned into a slight vent

      • @kurwa
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        311 months ago

        I think if you wanna make things easier you could just be more generic with your wording. If you don’t know someone’s gender you can say they, and unless you’re doing so many events that you gotta be specific, you can just say the event.

        I understand getting frustrated with the confusion, although I think if you’re approaching it with good intentions then no one should be upset with you.

    • @_cerpin_taxt_
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      711 months ago

      I’ve been calling black people black people for 30+ years. They never liked the term “African-American” much either, in my experience. That term was made up by white people that overcorrected their racism. I have never had a single black person get offended or upset, because why should someone be offended by their own skin? I interchange “brown people” but that’s more of a catch-all term for everyone that’s not a shade of printer paper like myself.

      • @solstice
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        11 months ago

        I know black people who aren’t from anywhere near africa (caribbean) and white people from south africa. Also met plenty of black brits who are neither african nor american! POC is definitely an upgrade from than absurdity. But they drilled it into us for so long it’ll take a while for society to drop it.

  • @canthidium
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    2611 months ago

    Disgusting, but I don’t really see the point in having it stricken from the record. Keep it on record so it’s part of Crane’s legacy. I mean, why hide that he’s a racist?

    • ivanafterall
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      111 months ago

      Unfortunately, the chamber’s usually pretty empty when it’s time for floor speeches.

  • EvilZionistEatingChildren
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    2311 months ago

    Not a native English speaker here. I had to scroll comments to even understand what’s the problem. i still don’t understand what’s that “mega substantial difference” between “colored people” and “people of color”. That’s like, literally, grammatically the same. Sorry guys you are just trying hard to set yourself apart from that moron.

    • @ShunkW
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      2911 months ago

      It’s because of historical context. When it was no longer ok to call black people the N word, they switched gears. In and of itself, the phrase isn’t that bad, but you have to understand the context.

    • @MicroWaveOP
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      2511 months ago

      It’s really about context and nuances.

      “Colored people” is a specific term that was used during the time of racial segregation in America, so it carries a lot of negative connotations beyond its literal dictionary meaning. It’s now considered outdated as well, so it was a bit shocking for a politician, especially one who identifies as white and conservative, to utter it.

      • @btaf45
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        11 months ago

        “Colored people” is a specific term that was used during the time of racial segregation in America,

        And after segregation up to this very day. It is neither a ‘slur’ nor ‘shocking’, merely old fashioned.

        NAACP - National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People.

        • @BURN
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          511 months ago

          The NAACP predates modern terminology and I believe chose to maintain the name out of historic context.

          It’s frequently used as a replacement for the N-word, and ignoring that is just being willfully ignorant.

          Old Fashioned is not an excuse for racist language. This isn’t something that a younger person uses by accident. If this was some 80 year old white man I’d maybe believe that he got it mixed up. But it hasn’t been an accepted term for the majority of his lifetime and it’s not wrong to expect our representatives to not use racist language to describe their constituents.

          • @btaf45
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            -111 months ago

            It’s frequently used as a replacement for the N-word, and ignoring that is just being willfully ignorant.

            It’s not at all like the N-word, and pretending that it is is just being willfully ignorant.

        • rustydomino
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          111 months ago

          think of it like the N-word. You (assuming you’re not black) can’t say it. I can’t say it. But there are those who can. Ice Cube explained it really well. He said, “It’s OUR word. You don’t get to use it.”

          • @btaf45
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            011 months ago

            It’s not the N word. It is one of the politically correct terms.

    • @[email protected]
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      In recent times we generally think we should use the nomenclature that an ethnic group chooses for itself.

      Yeah, it’s not a precise thing because an ethnic group isn’t just one person and so there will be disagreement within that group itself.

      “Colored people” was a term applied to an ethnic group by others outside that group and is generally looked up unfavorably. It was commonly used during a time period where there was segregation, and brings up some bad memories.

      “People of color” was a term chosen by that group so should be used.

      It’s a respect thing. Sort of like if I deliberately mispronounced your name just to put you in your place. I may be saying all the syllables, maybe just emphasizing the wrong ones. Everyone understand what I mean, so where’s the problem? The problem is that if I know the proper way to say your name and intentionally don’t to disrespect you, well that’s an asshole move isn’t it?

    • @jerdle_lemmy
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      1011 months ago

      That’s exactly the point. The reason “coloured people” isn’t okay is precisely because people like that moron use it.

    • Xerø
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      911 months ago

      You just admitted that English isn’t your native language, and you probably aren’t an African American. So this is one of those things you are just not going to get. It comes down to more than just the language, it’s the shared history that gives those words the weight they carry. And you can choose to privately be insensitive to that history, but publicly you don’t have to say everything you think.

      • @solstice
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        -611 months ago

        The term is POC now you insensitive clod. I have white friends from south africa and black friends from the caribbean so it’s inaccurate to call either of them african american. Ever met a black british person? Try calling them african american and you’ll get laughed out of the country.

        • @Daisyifyoudo
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          611 months ago

          He’s referring, very specifically, to understanding the difference in the US betweenthe terms poc and colored people.

          “You’re probably not African American” meaning you’re prob not a black person in America descended from slavery directly impacted by this incident and therefore don’t understand the exact argument here.

          He wasn’t saying all black people are African Americans 🙄

          • @solstice
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            11 months ago

            deleted by creator

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          People of Color sounds suspiciously like Colored People. Where I’m from it’s just Black, Latino, and Asian. African/Asian/Latin American if you are patriotic.

          • @solstice
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            211 months ago

            Yes, I would very much like to simply use those descriptors and move on with our lives. This whole discussion is so absurd.

        • Xerø
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          011 months ago

          Say again.

          I was born in London to Jamaican parents. Age of five I moved to Jamaica and lived there for eight years before moving to the States. I am now a black American. You came at the wrong guy with that bullshit Sonny Jim. Plus I get to block your dumb ass.

          • @solstice
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            211 months ago

            …so you are NOT an african american and we agree. I don’t understand what the conflict is.

    • @solstice
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      11 months ago

      It’s just very dated and has come to be seen as a non-politically correct slur, even though originally it WAS the politically correct language. I agree with you personally and feel like there are much bigger things to worry about than someone using an outdated politically correct euphemism. There have been so many, it’s easy to get confused: negro, colored, minority, people of color, etc. I don’t feel strongly about any of this and just say whatever I’m told is acceptable now, so it’s not a big deal to me. I do think it would be cool if we could just say black white/asian/hispanic/whatever.

      • @Tigerfishy
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        611 months ago

        Problem is, when you let people like him slide when he’s playing his little games, the games keep getting a little more grand. That’s all it is to him. And now he gets to go “What??” When knows damn well semantics matter. He knows the little republican signals matter. They all know what they’re doing.

        Stand back and stand by

        • @[email protected]
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          411 months ago

          Yup.

          It’s really bizarre how we all know what’s going on here, but people insist on playing dumb about it.

          “Please explain to me why using terminology that brings back memories about segregation is bad when the other terminology refers to the same group of people? I Just don’t get it! It’s not logical!”

      • @btaf45
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        It’s just very dated

        Exactly. It used to be the common politically correct terminology. I don’t see how it can suddenly be called a “slur” any more than ‘black’ is a slur.

        NAACP - National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People

        • @kewjo
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          311 months ago

          context matters, a white congress person is using a phrase in Congress that historically was used in Congress to deny people’s rights. these politicians want to “make America great again” they want to undo civil rights.

          • @btaf45
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            011 months ago

            A word does not deny anybody’s rights. “Coloured Person” is just as politically correct as “black” or “African American”. In fact “Coloured Person” is the most accurate of the 3 politically correct terms.

            • @kewjo
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              111 months ago

              deleted by creator

              • @btaf45
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                011 months ago

                Just because racist used a thing does not make the thing itself bad. Racists used phones also. So phones are bad?

          • @snailtrail
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            011 months ago

            It’s such an odd word. Not like “fuck” or “cunt” or something like that. You are literally not allowed to write it or say it. I’m not even sure people let themselves think it, instead thinking “n word” inside their heads. I can’t think of any other word that is so much like actual god-fearing blasphemy. And yet, you can buy a random rap album and the word will be all over it. It’s even used as a term of endearment between black men who grew up together.

            Can anyone think of any other word that is treated almost as if it has magical powers?

        • @dudebro
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          -611 months ago

          People suffering from neuroticism make up things to get angry about.

    • @Laticauda
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      11 months ago

      The difference is the history of the terms and which demographics use them. “coloured people” has historically been used in a derogatory way by racists. “people of colour” has historically been used by English speaking non-white people or allies of non-white people and is generally preferred by non-white people. Just because they’re grammatically the same that doesn’t mean they were used the same. At one point the word retarded was just a synonym for slow. But it doesn’t matter what the word meant, what matters is how the word was used.

      • @btaf45
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        11 months ago

        “coloured people” has historically been used in a derogatory way by racists.

        Nope. Racists of 100 years ago used the N word or the C…n word. Historically “coloured people” was the politically correct term used by non racists. The proof is that NAACP, the famous civil rights organization, chose to use the word when it was formed and still proudly uses the word.

    • @snailtrail
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      It’s just word policing. It’s a bigger thing in America because that country is basically split down the middle into two groups that fucking hate each other. Republicans think Democrats (or “liberals”) or morons who don’t believe in biology (eg: sex) and they want to abolish the police, but yet they are fascists who want to police your thoughts. Democrats think that Republicans (or “nazis”) are morons who don’t believe in biology (eg: evolution) and they want everybody to own 100 automatic weapons and infinite ammo, but don’t believe climate change is real.

      Pretty much everything that everybody in America thinks and says it’s polarised by this filter. If you accidentally say something remotely centrist, both sides will call you a fascist and throw you into the bin. People are desperately trying to signal membership of their group, so they latch onto bullshit like “Which word-de-jour do you use to refer to dried crickets?” (Wait for the answer to this question, pitchfork in hand). You hesitated! You are a literal Nazi!

      You can see it throughout this thread. People kinda admitting that they’re just words and that they change over time BUT don’t use the wrong one or else.

      Unfortunately this bullshit has worked it’s way into other countries, even those that don’t have the same underlying political polarising filter.

    • Muchtall
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      -1911 months ago

      It’s because liberal politicians here in the U.S. love to play games with words. When a word or phrase doesn’t fit their political motives, they change the word or the definition of the word. There are literally words that we can’t say in the US due to “politically correct” pressures, but if you were in any other part of the world, the same words would be perfectly acceptable. The “negative connotations” are completely overblown by the same people who wield the power of cancel culture.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        Yeah! Kinda like how those liberals try to cancel people for wearing make-up and putting on a wig! Or for kneeling! Or for playing Dungeons and Dragons! Or reading Harry Potter! Or going to the bathroom! Or eating mustard! Or wearing beige suits!

        These damn liberals!!!

        • Muchtall
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          -311 months ago

          Oh. I didn’t realize the term for pedophilic perversion had changed to “wearing makeup”. My bad. I wasn’t keeping up with the latest terminology. Please don’t cancel me.

      • @[email protected]
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        011 months ago

        people who wield the power of cancel culture

        You couldn’t have possibly typed that with a straight face.

  • @Sterile_Technique
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    1811 months ago

    TIL “colored people” is offensive. Seems pretty benign to me…?

    • @dezmd
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      1711 months ago

      Context and intent is important. Faking ignorance about knowing if it was offensive is an equally important consideration.

    • gullible
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      Honestly, this has more nuance than you’d immediately think. Dude’s lived through at least a few iterations of euphemisms that turned into pejoratives, and keeping it straight can be difficult. Depending on the time period, negro, colored, African American, and black could all be considered kind or harsh. That said, definitely racist as hell given he continues with…

      “The military was never intended to be, you know, inclusive. Its strength is not its diversity. Its strength is its standards”

      • @Sterile_Technique
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        11 months ago

        “The military was never intended to be, you know, inclusive. Its strength is not its diversity. Its strength is its standards”

        Ah, yeah he’s a racist piece of shit. And also, unsurprisingly, 100% wrong. Speaking as a veteran (US), the diversity of our military is a HUGE source of its strength. This dumbass is literally advocating for weakening our military for the sake of being racist.

        That’s not just stupid, that’s dangerous stupid.

      • @dudebro
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        211 months ago

        Is he saying people should be denied access to the military even if they meet the miliary’s standards?

        • @Gullible
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          111 months ago

          Forgive my brevity. Yes. Generally, and subconsciously, people prefer to see themselves in those they put in leadership positions. This policy will exclusively make military officers paler as a result, not better. The military has been promoting people of color to higher positions in line with racial enlistment proportions for like 50 years without issue. Reduced potential for bias is always welcome.

        • gullible
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          111 months ago

          To paraphrase, he doesn’t want all of those diverse sorts, just the good ones. It’s a dog whistle at an octave that even octogenarians can hear.

      • @crossal
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        11 months ago

        How is the last bit racist? Sounds like he’s saying it’s purely based on measurable standards, that race/ethnicity is not a factor

        • gullible
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          111 months ago

          To paraphrase, he doesn’t want all of those diverse sorts, just the good ones. It’s a dog whistle at an octave that even octogenarians can hear.

    • @victron
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      • @maniclucky
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        1911 months ago

        It was a term du jour back in the Jim Crow (read: hyper racist) era. That particular phrasing has baggage.

        • @victron
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        • @Sterile_Technique
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          111 months ago

          I do hate how history can muddy language like that. Terms like “colored people” should mean literally people who are colored… and nothing else. I’ve never been one to actually use that term because it’s so non-specific; but I never knew it had a derogatory connotation either.

    • @DiachronicShear
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      311 months ago

      It’s been racist for several decades, and it’s not benign at all.

      • @Sterile_Technique
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        111 months ago

        Noted. As other posters have mentioned, it carries a lot of historical connotation… I’ve either never run into it or never noticed it before (again, seems benign, barring the historical context). Thankfully I’ve also never used it, cuz it’s kind of a shitty descriptor - not specific at all.

    • @ProffessionalAmateur
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      111 months ago

      As a non-American I’m perplexed by this. I remember growing up and hearing the accepted euphemism ‘coloured person’ instead of black person. I’d worry about myself if I ever visited that I’d accidentally cause insult. PC seems to be gone nuts

      • @_cerpin_taxt_
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        211 months ago

        Do you call white people non-colored people? No? Then why would you call a black person colored? Lol

        • @ProffessionalAmateur
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          011 months ago

          You never let me answer before your smarmy remark. But beleive it or not back then, yes you could. Are white people actually ‘white’? Are black people actually ‘black’? It was a means to denote race the same as black and white is these days. My point was I didn’t realise this term was an actual insult now but it’s good to know. Have off with your lol

  • @_cerpin_taxt_
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    1711 months ago

    I had several coworkers at Best Buy that called black people colored. I got into so many arguments. Like dude, that’s racist as fuck. The sad thing is most folks at that store didn’t see the problem with it.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      What is the difference between term “coloured people” and “black people”? For a foreigner.
      Because they sounds similar for me: both describe a group of people by their skin colour

      • @Crashumbc
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        2411 months ago

        The issue comes from context. Historically, in the US, “colored people” WAS the term used to discuss black people in a derogatory fashion. Especially during segregation “no colored people allowed” for bathrooms, or for the the water fountain blacks were allowed to use. “Colored people allowed”

    • @dudebro
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      -211 months ago

      “Colored people bad”

      “People of color good”

      • @_cerpin_taxt_
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        411 months ago

        Hey look everybody, this guy doesn’t understand nuance!

        • @atomdmac
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          011 months ago

          This is a good user name :) TMV forever!

          • @_cerpin_taxt_
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            011 months ago

            Thank you! Caught them last fall finally, and seeing them again in September!

          • @boeman
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            -411 months ago

            What a coincidence, that’s what my ex-wife called my…

            You know what, I’m not doing this. This isn’t reddit, it’s time to turn over a new leaf and make intellectual posts instead of a bunch of karma farming innuendo.

  • @[email protected]
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    1511 months ago

    You can tell that he knows he shouldn’t say it because he immediately self-corrects and says, “black people”. It’s just that the slip already happened and he knows it can’t be undone, so he keeps going to try to minimize the impact.

  • @thefloweracidic
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    Its not just pedantic semantic, word choice matters. Language is fluid and mutable, acting like the meaning and context behind one phrase is the same as the other is ignorant to the current state of the US and its history.

    For example, each of these sentence read differently depending on each word you emphasize, but the all say “the same thing”.

    I have a cookie, not you.

    I have a cookie, not you.

    I have a cookie, not you.

    I have a cookie, not you.

    I have a cookie, not you.

    I have a cookie, not you.

    Back in the Jim Crow days there were plenty of “Colored People” signs, but no “People of Color Signs”.

    Word choice matters.

    I’m not reading the responses. Sorry not sorry.

    • @[email protected]
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      1211 months ago

      Off topic but my go to sentence for showing how emphasis changes the meaning is “I never said she stole my money”. Emphasizing any word gives a unique meaning.

  • @paddirn
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    1411 months ago

    Openly saying what they’ve been saying behind closed doors.

    • @Ensign_Crab
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      1411 months ago

      As though what they’re saying behind closed doors isn’t much, much worse.