And now for the strawman.You go on interpreting the poorly designed survey in accordance with whatever political worldview you think it confirms then... — fdrake
So what on Earth are you talking about? — ssu
Besides, political correctness is far better defined as those terms above: using language that avoids offending members of particular groups in society. — ssu
Do you believe consensus building is always of vital importance in political dispute resolution?
(Yes/No)
Has there ever been a situation in which consensus building was not of vital importance?
(Yes/No)
Do you think that every human has a right to express their viewpoint?
(Yes/No)
Do you think Naziism is a viewpoint?
(Yes/No) — fdrake
I'm aware that questionnaires can be made (and often are) to further some agenda and the questions can be leading or loaded.I would like to live in a world where people seem as unaware as you are that questions can be leading or loaded, and intentionally or negligently made that way. — fdrake
What data exactly? The data that 88% Native Americans oppose PC, was it so?So what conclusions do you draw from that bit of data? — fdrake
It is obvious that certain elements on the right mock instances in which political correctness goes awry in order to win the license to spew outright racial hatred. And it is understandable that, in the eyes of some progressives, this makes anybody who dares to criticize political correctness a witting tool of—or a useful idiot for—the right. But that’s not fair to the Americans who feel deeply alienated by woke culture. Indeed, while 80 percent of Americans believe that political correctness has become a problem in the country, even more, 82 percent, believe that hate speech is also a problem.
9 out of 10 Native Americans are not offended by the Washington Redskins name, and in fact many express admiration for it,
88% of Native Americans oppose political correctness.
— NOS4A2
How about you address your dirtbag cherrypicking? You are dishonest, and when your blatant dishonesty is pointed out you just carry on as if it didnt happen.
You quoted half a sentence, and tried to pass that off as a legitimate point. It wasnt, it was a lie. You are a liar.
You owe ssu an apology, and everyone else as well since you and your dirtbag tactics make discourse more difficult on this forum.
Its staggering how self righteous you are considering how little ethic you show in discussion. Shame on you sir. You are the problem. — DingoJones
You made me to fill a questionnaire which you then explained in quite detail, so... — ssu
I once read a book about the Amos n' Andy radio show. In its earliest days, the white actors who portrayed (racially stereotypical) black characters were popular and respected among the black community. The acceptance of status quo is pretty common, but that doesn't mean the status quo should be perpetuated.9 out of 10 Native Americans are not offended by the Washington Redskins name, and in fact many express admiration for it,
88% of Native Americans oppose political correctness.
— NOS4A2
Let's assume that's true. Do you think the name should not be changed? If so, why do you want the name to remain "Redskins"? If you think it should be changed, what is your complaint? If you don't care, why make an issue of it? — Ciceronianus the White
I once read a book about the Amos n' Andy radio show. In its earliest days, the white actors who portrayed (racially stereotypical) black characters were popular and respected among the black community. The acceptance of status quo is pretty common, but that doesn't mean the status quo should be perpetuated. — Relativist
That's often true, although sometimes it refers to comments that were truly intended innocently. e.g. my wife (a special ed teacher, not of the intellectually challenged, but still worked in those circles) jumped on me a couple years ago for referring to a student as "retarded".I think the reaction against being "politically correct" is sometimes merely a half-assed way of justifying loutishness. — Ciceronianus the White
Another function of ‘political correctness’ is the distribution and reactivation of preferable subjective positions that individuals should assume and confirm. Thus, while taking part in the survey, one can re-affirm herself as a voter, a consumer, an expert, etc. Therefore, surveysThe purpose of a survey question should be to elicit someone's opinion on a matter, what that "political correctness" one did is leave any interpreter to fill in the blanks about what their opinions concerned as they like. — fdrake
Sorry to repeat this, but I don't really understand what is your problem.That's why a definition, and other caveats, would have been useful :wink: — Maw
Sorry to repeat this, but I don't really understand what is your problem.
If I remember correctly, you yourself gave the example of an Amazon worker leading a protest and then getting fired. Another example would be someone tweeting "all lives matter" and getting fired. Is there really a difference? Isn't it obvious from both examples of how utterly arbitrary the firing of people can be and how insecure employees are in the US? If all it takes what a person has said outside his work and the person gets fired?
Same really goes for the question "is extremism a problem?". The fact that just what extremism isn't mentioned simply cannot be a counterargument if people agree with the notion of extremism being a problem (or not). — ssu
I'll recap the discussion.I have no idea what you are talking about anymore, your argument is so far removed from the initial issue that 'political correctness' isn't even mentioned here. — Maw
I bet you and NOS4A2 will surely differ in your views about just what kind of extremism is really the problem, but does that change the real issue? — ssu
Yes, that undeniably changes the issue because then you can't say "80% of respondents agree that extremism is a problem" or any other aggregate judgements, because that binds myself and NOS4A2 together in an unsound and baseless way, since we don't agree on the actual content of the word 'extremism' given definitions that are detached from one another. — Maw
As I've pointed out to you before, the study in that article doesn't define political correctness, leaving the term completely open to interpretation per respondent, making the analysis useless. — Maw
except that the discussion in this one thread alone makes it abundantly clear that folk have different ideas of what political correctness is. so folk might have "a general sense," of what it means, but they sure seem to have a diversity of general senses.People have been speaking about, writing about, and have been warning us about political correctness for decades. Quibble all you need, but I wager most people understand the general sense of the term by now. — NOS4A2
I agree with this.Hate speech is a problem. But political correctness was never about hate speech. — NOS4A2
but in a pragmatic sense, I also agree with this. which is just my charitable view that you don't have to agree with me.Not everyone has categorically drawn lines between speech that is considered hateful or offensive or just unpleasant and rude, and where political correctness intersects between this and other types insults and expressions... — Maw
this is not a view I have seen expressed anywhere else, so my tendency would be to think this is not common. I'm not saying you're wrong, but this probably not the majority view.Political correctness is, in both definition and in practice, almost entirely about condemning and avoiding derogatory/hateful language and rhetoric towards particular (religious, ethnic, etc) groups. — Enai De A Lukal
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