You can either care about how blind people feel through your usage of language or not care.
You don't get to say they should not feel that way.
Why not take it on good faith that this work was guided by research thar asked more blind people than you have? Once you accept thar you can then decide on whether you care or not and act accordingly.
All political correctness boils down to is politeness and not upsetting other people. If you don't care how they feel, crack on with this sort of rage posting.
> All political correctness boils down to is politeness and not upsetting other people.
> If you don't care how they feel, crack on with this sort of rage posting.
Your post may be politically correct, but it is not polite. In fact you come off as quite rude compared to the person you are replying to.
> You don't get to say they should not feel that way.
If GP were to say how they should feel, clearly they would be caring how they feel. Also, why not? People discuss how one should feel in a particular situations quite often. In fact the page being discussed here seems to concern itself a great deal with what should upset people, even though most of the groups on whose behalf it appears to be judging what is offensive to them could have probably pointed these things out themselves - and I'm not sure everyone appreciates being paternalized this way (see "Latinx").
I'm legally blind myself and TBH I don't see how this politically correct language is useful. My daily experience tells me that having a disability is indeed abnormal and a negative so attempting to sweep that under the rug by cute word games is kind of condescending and offensive itself.
> Why not take it on good faith that this work was guided by research that asked more blind people than you have?
Since they propose to replace Hispanic with Latinx, a term that most Hispanics reject [1], such faith is unwarranted.
> You can either care about how blind people feel through your usage of language or not care.
I propose an alternative dichotomy: I can prioritize truth, or I can prioritize the asserted feelings of the loudest complainers.
And as a commenter pointed out, "blind" in "blind review" is a positive, not a negative! A blind review is objectively better and more socially desirable than a non-blind one (and, correct me if I'm wrong, but is becoming prevalent in academia, so it is also normal instead of abnormal). We have more than enough evidence to conclude this document is insincere.
I'm Mexican and I hate LatinX with a passion. Why is our ethnicity offensive unless you make it different? Why are clueless college Americans trying to make proper Spanish taboo?
Even Latino is a made up ethnicity obvious for anyone that has traveled just a bit. Includes vastly different ethnic and cultural backgrounds. In the US is politically convenient to put everyone in the same bland bag.
You don't get to say they should not feel that way.
Why not take it on good faith that this work was guided by research thar asked more blind people than you have? Once you accept thar you can then decide on whether you care or not and act accordingly.
All political correctness boils down to is politeness and not upsetting other people. If you don't care how they feel, crack on with this sort of rage posting.