Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Words get retired because of stigma and a new term is adopted until it also eventually becomes stigmatized.
Hobo, bum >>>>homeless>>>>unhoused>>>>???
Yes. Congratulations. Welcome to language.
moron --> retarded --> learning disabled
Same thing happened with the "n-word" and other combinations of letters and sounds that had or took on derogatory meanings. That is what language does, then the people who use it care about the effects of words.
Moron, retarded, idiot are all medically conceived words.
Anonymous wrote:To me these sound like the same thing. I want to understand the push towards “unhoused”. I feel like ultimately if we aren’t doing anything to help these people, why are we harping on words?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Words get retired because of stigma and a new term is adopted until it also eventually becomes stigmatized.
Hobo, bum >>>>homeless>>>>unhoused>>>>???
Yes. Congratulations. Welcome to language.
moron --> retarded --> learning disabled
Same thing happened with the "n-word" and other combinations of letters and sounds that had or took on derogatory meanings. That is what language does, then the people who use it care about the effects of words.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same thing, different name. Virtue signaling with language - indicates one is in the “in-group”.
+1. Using terms like "unhoused" indicates that the speaker/ writer is aware of changes in the common vocabulary that have occurred in the last 30 minutes, but that we are all expected to be thoroughly versed on. Also a great tool to be used for judging others.
I love your answer. It's all about superiority over those less in the know.
Thank you. It's not only less in the know, it's posed superiority over those who refuse to go along with the left's "new vocabulary" on many topics.
Funny that the only superiority and judgment here is coming from the people who dislike the term unhoused.
I hear both and tend to use homeless (because it's how I hear the homeless families I work with identify themselves), and I've never once gotten pushback for it (and again, I work with homeless families professionally)
+1
Any reason to pose as a victim, but never a reason to look a little deeper at how language can shape a call to action.
Ohhhhh.... so now you're actually admitting it! Language is no longer used simply to communicate; it's now a purpose to "shape a call to action." Whose action? Who decides what the action is?
There you have it, folks. The left's thinking on perfect display.
DP. Are you against the evolution of language? Would you prefer we still use the N-word? I bet you do not think it’s ok.
Morality policing at its finest. Please let's let false equivalency rule the day.
How is the use of a degrading, derogatory slur on the same level as describing a factual situation, especially when there is very little difference actually between homeless and unhoused? Person first would be a person without a home, putting emphasis on the individual's humanity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same thing, different name. Virtue signaling with language - indicates one is in the “in-group”.
+1. Using terms like "unhoused" indicates that the speaker/ writer is aware of changes in the common vocabulary that have occurred in the last 30 minutes, but that we are all expected to be thoroughly versed on. Also a great tool to be used for judging others.
I love your answer. It's all about superiority over those less in the know.
Thank you. It's not only less in the know, it's posed superiority over those who refuse to go along with the left's "new vocabulary" on many topics.
Funny that the only superiority and judgment here is coming from the people who dislike the term unhoused.
I hear both and tend to use homeless (because it's how I hear the homeless families I work with identify themselves), and I've never once gotten pushback for it (and again, I work with homeless families professionally)
+1
Any reason to pose as a victim, but never a reason to look a little deeper at how language can shape a call to action.
Ohhhhh.... so now you're actually admitting it! Language is no longer used simply to communicate; it's now a purpose to "shape a call to action." Whose action? Who decides what the action is?
There you have it, folks. The left's thinking on perfect display.
DP. Are you against the evolution of language? Would you prefer we still use the N-word? I bet you do not think it’s ok.
Anonymous wrote:Words get retired because of stigma and a new term is adopted until it also eventually becomes stigmatized.
Hobo, bum >>>>homeless>>>>unhoused>>>>???
Anonymous wrote:To me these sound like the same thing. I want to understand the push towards “unhoused”. I feel like ultimately if we aren’t doing anything to help these people, why are we harping on words?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same thing, different name. Virtue signaling with language - indicates one is in the “in-group”.
+1. Using terms like "unhoused" indicates that the speaker/ writer is aware of changes in the common vocabulary that have occurred in the last 30 minutes, but that we are all expected to be thoroughly versed on. Also a great tool to be used for judging others.
I love your answer. It's all about superiority over those less in the know.
Thank you. It's not only less in the know, it's posed superiority over those who refuse to go along with the left's "new vocabulary" on many topics.
Funny that the only superiority and judgment here is coming from the people who dislike the term unhoused.
I hear both and tend to use homeless (because it's how I hear the homeless families I work with identify themselves), and I've never once gotten pushback for it (and again, I work with homeless families professionally)
+1
Any reason to pose as a victim, but never a reason to look a little deeper at how language can shape a call to action.
Ohhhhh.... so now you're actually admitting it! Language is no longer used simply to communicate; it's now a purpose to "shape a call to action." Whose action? Who decides what the action is?
There you have it, folks. The left's thinking on perfect display.
DP. Are you against the evolution of language? Would you prefer we still use the N-word? I bet you do not think it’s ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same thing, different name. Virtue signaling with language - indicates one is in the “in-group”.
+1. Using terms like "unhoused" indicates that the speaker/ writer is aware of changes in the common vocabulary that have occurred in the last 30 minutes, but that we are all expected to be thoroughly versed on. Also a great tool to be used for judging others.
I love your answer. It's all about superiority over those less in the know.
Thank you. It's not only less in the know, it's posed superiority over those who refuse to go along with the left's "new vocabulary" on many topics.
Funny that the only superiority and judgment here is coming from the people who dislike the term unhoused.
I hear both and tend to use homeless (because it's how I hear the homeless families I work with identify themselves), and I've never once gotten pushback for it (and again, I work with homeless families professionally)
+1
Any reason to pose as a victim, but never a reason to look a little deeper at how language can shape a call to action.
Ohhhhh.... so now you're actually admitting it! Language is no longer used simply to communicate; it's now a purpose to "shape a call to action." Whose action? Who decides what the action is?
There you have it, folks. The left's thinking on perfect display.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same thing, different name. Virtue signaling with language - indicates one is in the “in-group”.
+1. Using terms like "unhoused" indicates that the speaker/ writer is aware of changes in the common vocabulary that have occurred in the last 30 minutes, but that we are all expected to be thoroughly versed on. Also a great tool to be used for judging others.
I love your answer. It's all about superiority over those less in the know.
Thank you. It's not only less in the know, it's posed superiority over those who refuse to go along with the left's "new vocabulary" on many topics.
Funny that the only superiority and judgment here is coming from the people who dislike the term unhoused.
I hear both and tend to use homeless (because it's how I hear the homeless families I work with identify themselves), and I've never once gotten pushback for it (and again, I work with homeless families professionally)
+1
Any reason to pose as a victim, but never a reason to look a little deeper at how language can shape a call to action.
Ohhhhh.... so now you're actually admitting it! Language is no longer used simply to communicate; it's now a purpose to "shape a call to action." Whose action? Who decides what the action is?
There you have it, folks. The left's thinking on perfect display.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same thing, different name. Virtue signaling with language - indicates one is in the “in-group”.
+1. Using terms like "unhoused" indicates that the speaker/ writer is aware of changes in the common vocabulary that have occurred in the last 30 minutes, but that we are all expected to be thoroughly versed on. Also a great tool to be used for judging others.
I love your answer. It's all about superiority over those less in the know.
Thank you. It's not only less in the know, it's posed superiority over those who refuse to go along with the left's "new vocabulary" on many topics.
Funny that the only superiority and judgment here is coming from the people who dislike the term unhoused.
I hear both and tend to use homeless (because it's how I hear the homeless families I work with identify themselves), and I've never once gotten pushback for it (and again, I work with homeless families professionally)
+1
Any reason to pose as a victim, but never a reason to look a little deeper at how language can shape a call to action.
Anonymous wrote:Homeless implies the individual did or didn't do something that resulted in their not having a home.
Unhoused implies that society did or didn't do something that resulted in the individual not having a home.
How you approach solving a problem depends on how you define the problem.