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In reply to the discussion: Politically correct or intellectually rude?? [View all]loyalsister
(13,390 posts)43. Exactly
When I used "climate change," my RW cousin asked if that was the new politically correct term for global warming.
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You'd be amazed at the many shades of meaning of a smile accompanied by the words,
freshwest
May 2013
#1
the thing is, when polite people notice something that's socially considered a flaw -- like being
HiPointDem
May 2013
#22
But we do refer to people with diabetes as 'diabetic,' to people with disabilities as 'disabled,'
HiPointDem
May 2013
#21
In my world, people can be tired, handsome, a dancer, diabetic, young, and deaf, all at the same
HiPointDem
May 2013
#46
as i'd already said i try to call people as they chose to be called, not sure why the lecture is
HiPointDem
May 2013
#48
As I've already explained, there's nothing in the language itself that categorizes them in limited
HiPointDem
May 2013
#52
I recall "politically correct" beginning as a left wing term meaning the person referred to has so
byeya
May 2013
#35
It sometimes *is* difficult, because different people take offense to different things, and
HiPointDem
May 2013
#23
I love that example. It's very much like something my father told me one day when I was puzzled.
freshwest
May 2013
#44
Same feeling and logic. Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching and Alan Watts influenced me as a teenager.
freshwest
May 2013
#60
If asked to describe a person's height I think it's better to say "about"5'1" or 4'11" whichever
byeya
May 2013
#37
I would, and have, filled out reports and said "Shorter than the average man, approx, 5'6" and I do
byeya
May 2013
#39
I don't think asking for body shape is an appropriate question even for an accident report.
Cleita
May 2013
#40