So if you're trying to argue a paradigm shift then make your case?
Provide supporting data relative to employment job descriptions, dress codes, analogous social norms and customs snd the like.
Did I miss something or have you provided that somewhere?
Yep. It's not politically correct to do so. It's common sense.
Would you like me to repost my justification? Otherwise you have not provided any justification for it being appropriate and suitable or proper for the circumstances.
I'm waiting....
How do you square that circle and make it objectively true that all public officials should wear sexually-charged t-shirts during public speaking engagements?
Talk about thread-drift. I don't like the expression "quantum supremacy" because it implies no further scientific progress is likely in computing. Not because of PC, which I endured for years at the college level. How did this devolve into muscle-shirts? :brow:
And so you would tell your children that correct?
I will discuss the second part of the topic no problem. But the first part I'm confused with your logic.
On the one hand you're saying you would not endorse a president wearing a sexually-charged t-shirt at all his/hee public speaking events. And so you would, in our analogy, go ahead and tell your children that it would be inappropriate for the president to do so.
On the other hand you're not willing to concede to the inappropriateness of the astronomer's sexually-charged t-shirt.
Did I get that right,?
(Again we're talking about what is appropriate for the venue. )
So are you conceding that the astronomer's sexually charged t-shirt was inappropriate for the venue?
Okay let's take it to the next level how would you defend that in the face of your children watching TV when the president of the United States wears a sexually-charged t-shirt at a public speaking event. Tell me how you would defend that.
Okay should the president of the United States wear a wife beater tank top and a public speaking event?
let me get this straight are you saying wearing sexually-charged attire is appropriate for most wedding pictures?
Are you saying that if a woman wore trousers with sexually charged graphics that that would be appropriate?
Dude, it has nothing to do with morality. It is political correctness. Do you get that?
Where the complaint and the president veer apart is on what the events mean. The whistleblower writes: Trump "is using the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. election." That’s also how House Democrats have framed it in the first article of impeachment.
Republicans dispute that interpretation of Trump’s call. They point out that there is no explicit mention of either 2020 or the re-election campaign in the White House summary of the Trump-Zelensky call. They say the whistleblower made a sensational leap in word choice (none more so than "Trump pressured") that unfairly shaped media coverage of Trump’s handling of Ukraine.
Given the history of corruption in Ukraine and Hunter Biden’s involvement there, Trump asking about it was legitimate.
Political correctness is used as a pejorative, yes. But it does also mean that language or policies are used with the intention to avoid offense or disadvantage to members of particular groups in society. Or then in a more general definition: something that is correct from a certain political viewpoint, but not universally accepted to be so.
The concept of political correctness was invented as satire by the left, adopted by conservatives lacking the self-awareness to realize they were being mocked, and finally appropriated by reactionaries to justify their victomhood complex. The only people decrying political correctness - i.e., the absolute minimum that you can do, as a human being, to accommodate your fellow citizens - are right-wing ideologues seeking to justify existing systems of inequality. Your bigotry is pretty transparent.
Most members of the “exhausted majority,” and then some, dislike political correctness. Among the general population, a full 80 percent believe that “political correctness is a problem in our country.” Even young people are uncomfortable with it, including 74 percent ages 24 to 29, and 79 percent under age 24. On this particular issue, the woke are in a clear minority across all ages.
Youth isn’t a good proxy for support of political correctness—and it turns out race isn’t, either.
Whites are ever so slightly less likely than average to believe that political correctness is a problem in the country: 79 percent of them share this sentiment. Instead, it is Asians (82 percent), Hispanics (87 percent), and American Indians (88 percent) who are most likely to oppose political correctness.
What evidence do you have to ground this suspicion?
So they're admitting to being partisan hacks who care more about protecting the Republican party than holding the President accountable for misbehaviour.
The act promotes respect for human rights at all levels of government by enabling the US executive branch to apply targeted sanctions on any individual involved in a human rights violation, from senior officials to low-level officers and even nongovernment associates. These sanctions can take the form of asset freezes for funds held in US banks and bans on visas for coming to the US.
The Global Magnitsky Act functions as a deterrent, forcing foreign officials at all levels who would use unlawful violence or corruption to consider repercussions from the US government. The act also provides incentives to foreign governments to improve their own accountability mechanisms. By cooperating with the US on Global Magnitsky investigations, foreign leaders can show that they will not tolerate human rights abusers in their own countries.
Obviously a token gesture.
