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Originally Posted by Rafe Opsimath
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Originally Posted by livius drusus
Does everyone actually realize that "PC" is a strawman, though? I see the term bandied about so casually, and more than once people have reacted with wide-eyed shock when I questioned their use of it.
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And what was their answer?
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Variations on isn't it obvious, mainly, sprinkled with a fair number of vertically challenged strawmen. One person on another board I very occasionally post on replied when I questioned his claim that "PC thought police" had suppressed discussions of race during the OJ trial that "the politically correct thought police in fashion at the time" had as "first priority ... to bash away at the American white male in an attempt 'even the score'."
There just isn't a single part of that claim that is remotely accurate as far as I know, and the person making it was on all other topics eminently reasonable and even-tempered, and this is on a board not widely known for posters with those qualities. My questioning his assumptions about PC, though, really, really pissed him off. It was axiomatic for him, and he just couldn't figure out why I would question him unless I was looking to troll.
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In my first post I argued that there are leftists with legitimate concerns about problematizing discourse in a free society, regardless of the intended aims of the process. This isn't limited to hate speech legislation, but also the belief that words themselves have some sort of power to transform society for better or worse. The line cuts both ways: if moralists aren't allowed to assert that speech can cause corruption or degeneracy, then neither can they assert that speech alone can enslave or oppress.
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Why is enslavement and oppression the sole standard? I understand that some progressives make the argument that speech and oppression can be inextricably linked, but I haven't seen an assertion that speech
alone can enslave or oppress.
I wouldn't agree with such an assertion if I did come across it, but then again, I think respect for others and their self-determined choices, even common courtesy, are reason enough to make the effort to avoid potentially offensive usage. They're certainly reason enough to avoid calling black people "coloreds" in the name of not lowering yourself to those silly PC shenanigans.
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Like I said, I don't believe that terms themselves are racist, or that their use should be subject to an approbatory process by me or anyone else. It seems futile to try to gauge the intent in each and every case where an offensive term is used, or to assume every use of the term is intended to denigrate and oppress.
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Fair enough, but intrisic meaning is not the issue to me; respect for other people's self-descriptive preferences is.
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We need to keep in mind the aim of the struggle: to end the systematic exclusion of certain groups from the decision-making processes in society. Racism and sexism won't go away just because better terms are sanctioned for their victims.
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No argument there.
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I just don't see that the chimera of Political Correctness as utilised over the past 10 years has much to do with a genuine beef about the siege mentality of advocates for the disenfranchised.
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And thus you prove my point: even after I've made my argument, you assert that any concerns about "PC" must be motivated by right-wing paranoia.
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I made no such assertion.
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The debate has been allowed to become polarized because this benefits both extremes. Right-wingers can concoct an elaborate fantasy where the people their system disempowers are somehow controlling all public discourse, but we shouldn't console ourselves with similar delusions of persecution.
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I don't.
(I'm a woman, just for future pronoun references.

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