In other words: "sticks and stones ..."I no longer listen to what people say, I just watch what they do. Behavior never lies. — Winston Churchill, British imperialist politician
As a Black man, I wonder what you mean by "progress" ... specifically "progress" of what and for whom?postpone progress? — GTTRPNK
My opinion is that no words are inherently bad or harmful,only bad actors. — GTTRPNK
A constant barrage from the same angle will wear anyone down. You will start to crack and it will become a weakness. Bullying tactics 101.I am openly not straight and being insulted for it doesn’t bother me because I’m not ashamed. — AmadeusD
I am guessing you haven't been bullied enough to form cracks yet, or that you have an iron will. — mentos987
:up:I am openly not straight and being insulted for it doesn’t bother me because I’m not ashamed. — AmadeusD
Ooof. A lot to unpack here — AmadeusD
The problem is much broader: in that the issue is framed as a matter of "offending people or hurting their feelings", rather than as a matter of morality.There are words so dehumanizing that we refer to them only by the first letter of the word, as to not cause offense to our fellow members of society.
/.../
Is there any potential current or future harm being done? — GTTRPNK
The foundation for a proper, moral use of language should be much more substantial than merely a consideration of what might "hurt another person's feelings." — baker
I'm giving advice based on MY experience, but I acknowledge that your experience may be that your overwrought assumptions outweigh what others bring to the table. — LuckyR
When i said 'you', read it as the abstract use of 'one'. It was not aimed at you personally - And i do not carry assumptions of this kind (or, more accurate, i immediately, by way of years of habit-forming, jettison my assumptions upon meeting/interacting with someone). I wait until someone actually tells me something of substance, instead of reading into things. — AmadeusD
The point being that some word usage doesn't leave much doubt as to where people stand, and you have to realize that the words you hear are probably modified to your sensibilities until the day you stumble into somewhere you've been misread. — Hanover
We told him we were from Atlanta, and he told us he had been there and that it had so many black people he couldn't believe it. — Hanover
he already committed a faux pas — Hanover
I don't see a faux pas in pointing out a demographic unfamilar to you. Doesn't seem to contain any opinion on it - just that it was unusual for that guy. I think in this case, your friend/her husband aren't being reasonable - but this, I think goes to my point. Id want to hear more, in any situation. — AmadeusD
P.S have spent some time in Georgia, near the coast. Lovely, flat, welcoming place but its super-creepy to drive past plantation after plantation — AmadeusD
I find this utterly preposterous, and a symptom of looking for enemies, unfortunately. Thems might be the rules, but they're ridiculous, if so. — AmadeusD
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.