Er, many Poles and Irish are white, middle-class adult males...
And many Poles are Jews, and some are black, and some Irish are black too.
None of this is the point.
I have always been of the school that if you don't like what is being said, no-one is making you listen.
- if you are Irish and are at a live comedy show when the comedian starts telling Irish jokes, just walk out if you are offended by it.
- if there is a movie on at the local theatre with a censors VLS content warning, and you think this will offend you, then don't buy tickets.
- if its a TV programme with the VLS content warning, then change channels or use the
off button, and if you don't want your children exposed to it, use parental control.
To be honest the only time I've heard jokes that promoted stereotypes against men and Whites is from comedians who also told stereotypes against non-Whites and women.
Exactly, and are they censured when they use the word "redneck"?
Would they be censured if they used the N word?
And this leads to the question of who you are attacking when attacking "political correctness"?
I am against anything that trivializes any part of the human condition at the expense of simply telling human truth.
I am actually deaf in my right ear (I have tinnitus) and I hate it when doctors and other danny-do-gooders tell me that I am
"hearing impaired" or
"aurally challenged".
Well, I'm not I'm
"hearing impaired" or
"aurally challenged", I am *********** deaf!
I know we are not from the same country, but in the US I hear this exact same thing all the time and it is just not true, so I am going to be dubious.
Again, I am dubious about how widespread this actually is.
Having been a teacher in a state run school, I can assure you that it is true. I have seen the introduction of the
participation at the expense of competition philosophy in the last school I was at, and I have seen it in action with kids being rotated to
"give everyone a go" in representative school teams, rather than selecting players on ability and merit. I have been instructed not to use the word
"fail" or any of its derivatives, and to use
"deferred success" or
"provisional passmark" instead.
But you're lumping the self-esteem movement with gender-neturality with anti-stereotyping humour, etc.
Yes, because they are all part of Political Correctness.
I can see why. That anecdote makes her come off as uninformed and you come off... not in a good light.
At the very least, I would expect a teacher, especially an English language teacher (which she was) to either;
a. already know that
"manage" was not a gender biased term, or
b. have taken the time to find out before making a fool of herself in from of the staff of a new school.
We tip-toe around people all the time... Well, I suppose in light of your example I should say that most people do. It is often called politeness, common courtesy, artful communication, etc. Those who cannot do this are in the DSM-IV.
I think you are getting the wrong end of the stick here.
It is possible to be polite and show common courtesy without have to worry about for example, offending a non-Christian person because you happen to ask them where they are going for the Christmas holidays. I cannot imagine any Christian or Atheist being offended if a Muslim asked them what they were going to eat during Ramadan.