Zuky: The Greatest Cliché: The Unexamined Propaganda of “Political Correctness”
Of course not everyone that identifies as Black also identifies as African-American, etc, but I do not think that is what Zuky is implying.
(via racismfreeontario)
Posted on Monday, 13 February 2012
The phrase “politically correct” can be used in two distinct ways: either with its original literal meaning, or with the mocking sarcasm that’s common these days. I’ll get to the former in a moment, but I’ll begin with the latter. As it’s commonly used, “PC” is a deliberately imprecise expression (just try finding or writing a terse, precise definition) because its objective isn’t to communicate a substantive idea, but simply to sneer and snivel about the linguistic and cultural burdens of treating all people with the respect and sensitivity with which they wish to be treated. Thus, the Herculean effort required to call me “Asian American” rather than “chink” is seen as a concession to “the PC police”, an unsettling infringement on the free-wheeling conversation of, I suppose, “non-chinks”. Having to refer to black folks as “African Americans” rather than various historically-prevalent epithets surely strikes some red-blooded blue-balled white-men as a form of cultural oppression. Having to refer to “women” rather than “bitches” lays a violent buzzkill on the bar-room banter of men preoccupied with beating on their chests and off other body parts.
Zuky: The Greatest Cliché: The Unexamined Propaganda of “Political Correctness”
Of course not everyone that identifies as Black also identifies as African-American, etc, but I do not think that is what Zuky is implying.
(via racismfreeontario)
278 notes
As it’s commonly used, “PC” is a deliberately imprecise expression (just try finding or writing a terse, precise...
Yes, this. If we hew to the original definition of political correctness, one of the most PC things you can do in this...