BossDj@lemm.ee to Politics@beehaw.org · 2 years agoRepublican congressman from Arizona referred to Black Americans as 'colored people' on House floorwww.azcentral.comexternal-linkmessage-square17fedilinkarrow-up125arrow-down10file-text
arrow-up125arrow-down1external-linkRepublican congressman from Arizona referred to Black Americans as 'colored people' on House floorwww.azcentral.comBossDj@lemm.ee to Politics@beehaw.org · 2 years agomessage-square17fedilinkfile-text
Notably ironic as he was speaking in support of an amendment to ban inclusivity training requirements for military members.
minus-squareRaeyin@beehaw.orglinkfedilinkarrow-up13·edit-22 years agoYes, “people of color” is considered respectful. And you’re right, language can change pretty fast. I’ve seen plenty of respectful words become slurs. I’ve even seen slurs be reclaimed by communities. Don’t even get me started on person-first vs identity-first language.
minus-squareargv_minus_one@beehaw.orglinkfedilinkarrow-up6·2 years ago“Black people” is not a slur, but “blacks” is. So is “negro people”, even though “negro” literally means “black”. Bigots ruin everything, including language.
Yes, “people of color” is considered respectful.
And you’re right, language can change pretty fast. I’ve seen plenty of respectful words become slurs. I’ve even seen slurs be reclaimed by communities. Don’t even get me started on person-first vs identity-first language.
“Black people” is not a slur, but “blacks” is. So is “negro people”, even though “negro” literally means “black”.
Bigots ruin everything, including language.