Offensive term to be replaced as first step towards more changes in unprecedented reform of nomenclature rules
Archived version: archive.ph/ppR98
Submitted 3 months ago by BrikoX@lemmy.zip to globalnews@lemmy.zip
Offensive term to be replaced as first step towards more changes in unprecedented reform of nomenclature rules
Archived version: archive.ph/ppR98
Language continues to evolve. And while I get annoyed at some of the changes, I understand it means something to others.
For example - we don’t call it a bumming a fag anymore. And honestly, the whole master-slave term in hardware was fucking weird.
I feel the same… While some words are best avoided, I find the obsessive focus on language ridiculous sometimes, especially in the anglosphere. That gives us Voldemort/Yahweh words, controversy around master/slave, ““latinx””, censorship with asterisks that doesn’t fool anyone…
But I also remember that it’s not the big deal Twitter rightoids make it seem to be. I have rarely seen anyone get seriously offended over just a word in real life, even when talking with fellow progressives. What triggers people in real life in my experience is arguments and ideas. Social media is not the real world in that regard.
Sometimes, I worry that the language puritanism might be offputting when defending progressive ideas, because it makes it seem that feminists/antiracists are shallow and only about dictating newspeak, but I found while talking with people not onboard with these causes that they were smart enough to make a distinction between Twitter pedants and a genuine defense of feminism/antiracism.
Til botanists have too much free time.
I mean when is the last time a new plant was discovered? Surely the discoveries must be dwindling by now.
Reverendender@sh.itjust.works 3 months ago
Saved you a click
tyler@programming.dev 3 months ago
Why is caffra insulting? I’ve never even heard the word before except in plant names.
lengau@midwest.social 3 months ago
In South Africa, we’re vaguely aware of the n-word and its meaning in American culture, but the k-word (after which this plant was named) is highly offensive.