There’s a clear campaign against the mentally ill with the global rise of fascism. Lots of it shows up in anti homeless rhetoric, but you can see it in the MAHA and anti vaccination movements.

There’s no reason to use the word “r-tarded” to describe someone. As someone who’s worked with the intellectually challenged, it’s an insult to them to compare them with people who are willfully ignorant.

  • nullptr@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    4 months ago

    These stupid wars on words IMHO is the reason why “liberals” were regarded as a joke prior to trump election

    Like banning “master” in github as well as dumb, regex based words filters in chats. Oh you want to mention the “beta version”? Too bad, a social justice warrior decided that “beta” is now offensive, you have to change your language so that you wont affect the hypothetic easily offendable persons

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      4 months ago

      Like banning “master” in github as well as dumb

      Master wasn’t banned. The default name was changed from master to main. Literally nothing is stopping you from choosing to use master.

      • While this is technically correct, when you say “we’re switching the default branch name from master to main to be less culturally insensitive”, you kind of imply that people who continue using master are culturally insensitive. And nobody likes being called that (generally), so it still feels like a ban to people.

        • MrSmith@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          0
          arrow-down
          1
          ·
          4 months ago

          That implication is correct?

          Look, if it’s pointed out that “x” makes some minorty uncomfortable, but you keep using “x”, you are culturally insensitive to that minority. You can choose to be, nobody would care if you’re not a person/company with milliona of followers.

          • That’s entirely assuming that there indeed is a sizeable minority that have reason to be offended and indeed are offended. In the cited example above, that wasn’t the case so there was significant controversy surrounding what was perceived as “performative activism” that benefitted noone.

            • MrSmith@lemmy.world
              link
              fedilink
              English
              arrow-up
              0
              arrow-down
              1
              ·
              edit-2
              4 months ago

              “We’re switching from master to main” was controversial? My god, people must’ve been bored out of their fucking minds.

              You know how a normal person would react to this? ‘k.’

              That’s entirely assuming that there indeed is a sizeable minority that have reason to be offended and indeed are offended. In the cited example above, that wasn’t the case

              A 1s websearch says this is false. BLM movement is definitely a “sizable minority” whatever that means.

              • You know how a normal person would react to this? ‘k.’

                I reacted like this too. But you I don’t think the opponents had invalid arguments to be honest. It was mostly:

                • Lack of an actual outcry to change it.

                • ‘Master’ in git did not have any connotations to slavery, so there was no reason to be offended by it (different from eg master/slave databases or something).

                • The change was hamfisted through without the community actually finding consensus and agreeing with the change.

                • It invalidates 15 years of git tutorials, which is confusing for newbies.

                • The defaults for git mismatched with the default in github, which as a very large player put undue corporate pressure on the git project to go along with the change.

                • Changing the branch name does have impact on users, which without a good reason to change it is unnecessary.

                • And the big one: the rename is just performative. If you want to address inequality in tech, make sure people of colour get the same access and opportunities that white people get. Github in particular was ridiculed because they pretended to be so socially conscious, but as it turns out despite having black employees, not one of them had managed to promote into a management function at the time. They put up a smokescreen but did not make any actually impactful changes that improved the position of people of colour, and in doing so abused the BLM movement for PR purposes.

                A 1s websearch says this is false. BLM movement is definitely a “sizable minority” whatever that means.

                BLM didn’t advocate for this though! Microsoft/Github sort of assumed they would, so decided to change it. But I can’t find any actual outcry that it should be changed from those who were supposedly offended by the term.

                • MrSmith@lemmy.world
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  arrow-up
                  0
                  arrow-down
                  1
                  ·
                  4 months ago

                  Fair points.

                  Weirdly, that BLM source in wikipedia led nowhere. My fault for not checking.

                  However performative it may have seen at the time, I’m glad the terms are gone. Master/slave was particularly uncomfortable to use for me personally (I mainly associate it with BDSM)