this post was submitted on 14 Jul 2023
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Rep. Eli Crane used the derogatory phrase in describing his proposed amendment to a military bill. Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty asked that his words be stricken from the record.

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[–] fidelacchius@lemmy.world 41 points 1 year ago (11 children)

The politically correct word changes every decade. "Black people" used to be more offensive than "colored people"

[–] PolarBone@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I wasn't sure about a young guys name out here and asked someone "do you know the young black man who's new in the neighborhood? I wanted to thank him for helping someone I know the other day." After I helped host an event.

holy shit this person got mad at me. Said I needed to call them african canadian or colored. I get so confused by terms these days. Same with indigenous and native. I live in an area with many, and know some, and different ones prefer different words. I call one of them one term, and other that same one, they might get offended. I try to be as respectful as I can, gets hard.

Example, my therapist goes by indigenous, but her wife goes by native. So I thanked her wife one day for helping me at a indigenous event I was at, and she said "we call it a native event".

I'm having such a hard time the past 2 years in particular, and trying really hard with all of these changes in terms, pronouns and every time I think I understand it, apparently I don't. I have one trans friend who I see occasionally and thankfully they agree with me and makes me feel a bit less nutty.

My girlfriend is considering changing her orientation to some new wording I've literally never heard of all of a sudden now too. I just found a tonne of new things, like grey sexual, demisexual, etc. People I've been in employment/training programs with have changed their name and gender 2-3 times in the past year, and each time I see them I get confused with what to say or call them. It is oddly overwhelming.

sorry this turned into a slight vent

[–] kurwa@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

I think if you wanna make things easier you could just be more generic with your wording. If you don't know someone's gender you can say they, and unless you're doing so many events that you gotta be specific, you can just say the event.

I understand getting frustrated with the confusion, although I think if you're approaching it with good intentions then no one should be upset with you.

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