Anonymous wrote:That was very interesting. Thank you for sharing it!
I didn't know about "rule of thumb" before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not saying ‘American’ to refer to people from the US is not new. It does rankle all others on our continent. I learned this in the early 80s.
Also calling anyone not from the US ‘foreign’ is a uniquely US phenomenon, as in foreign students. Better to say ‘international’ student.
+1, also remember this being taught in the 80s. It's a distinction between everyday speak and accurate writing. We'd also be dinged if we referred to the Soviet Union as Russia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong with American. We are the united states of America. Mexico is actually the United States of Mexico and no one says the first part. I do speak Spanish and realize the problem that they think they're Americans too, but it's our country's name, just their continent's name.
No Canadian is calling himself an American because he lives in North America.
They are Americans, too. Just like people from France and Germany are Europeans.
Anonymous wrote:There is nothing wrong with American. We are the united states of America. Mexico is actually the United States of Mexico and no one says the first part. I do speak Spanish and realize the problem that they think they're Americans too, but it's our country's name, just their continent's name.
No Canadian is calling himself an American because he lives in North America.
Anonymous wrote:I have a practical question.
Scenario. I am in the grocery store. The person (who appears to be a female to me) in front of me drops a dollar bill. Before I saw this list, I would say "Ma'am, you just dropped this dollar bill." So now am I supposed to say "Person, you just dropped this dollar bill."
Because even though the person looks like a female to me, I'm supposed to use inclusive language and if I don't I'm considered non-inclusive?
Anonymous wrote:I have a practical question.
Scenario. I am in the grocery store. The person (who appears to be a female to me) in front of me drops a dollar bill. Before I saw this list, I would say "Ma'am, you just dropped this dollar bill." So now am I supposed to say "Person, you just dropped this dollar bill."
Because even though the person looks like a female to me, I'm supposed to use inclusive language and if I don't I'm considered non-inclusive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://collegian.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Inclusive-Language-Guide_10_30_18.pdf
This is another instance where I have to remind myself that, as bad as this sounds, the VAST majority of people I know in real life are not this stupid/radical left/intolerant. In fact, I can't actually think of one person I know who wouldn't call this list total BS. Still disheartening that a college would print it.
That's why Donald Trump uses "sad" so often!