But guess what: So do moron and idiot.
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How dare you defend your son from me calling him the 'R' word?? YOU'RE FIRED!!!!
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Originally posted by mjr View PostWhy is it OK to use terms like "moron" and "idiot", but not the "r-word"?
From your own link:
In modern English usage, the terms "idiot" and "idiocy" describe an extreme folly or stupidity, and its symptoms (foolish or stupid utterance or deed).
In another 100 years maybe the r-word will slip back into modern English without the connotation like idiot and moron have. But at the moment its still connected to medical terminology that is falling out of fashion.
To put it another way:
When someone calls someone an idiot; All they mean is that that person is, well, an idiot. They're being stupid or acting like a fool.
When someone calls someone a retard; It carries the secondary implication that the person isn't just an idiot, but is mentally disabled.
The words idiot or moron use to occupy the same space retard currently does because they were adopted as medical terms. This is what Andara meant by the euphemism treadmill.
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Originally posted by mjr View PostSure. I understand that. I'm just saying that it seems that one disparaging term has "taken hold". All three are used as insults, but one seems to be the "big one" that you can't say.
We're also at a point where THOSE terms have been unassociated for a long time. They've been abandoned, in favor of others. Retard is just now reaching the point where that negative association is dominant."Nam castum esse decet pium poetam
ipsum, versiculos nihil necessest"
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostIt is, as Andara pointed out, the "euphemism treadmill". Terms like idiot and moron fell out of medical usage in the late 1800's early 1900s. They then slipped back into the usage of modern language without the medical angle.
But I don't think the word should be completely forbidden. Context is important, I think. I've heard of people getting offended at ANY usage of the word.
If I say, "I retarded the spark on my engine by five degrees", that is an acceptable usage of the word "retarded". Wouldn't you agree?
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Originally posted by mjr View PostIf I say, "I retarded the spark on my engine by five degrees", that is an acceptable usage of the word "retarded". Wouldn't you agree?
While I'm sure there are people out there who think any use of the term is wrong, I don't think anyone in the medical community are that extreme.
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Originally posted by TheHuckster View PostY
While I'm sure there are people out there who think any use of the term is wrong, I don't think anyone in the medical community are that extreme.
It's like the Not Always Right that I read once where Customer A had on a black shirt, and Customer B wouldn't say the word "black", because apparently that's offensive to some blacks.
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I wouldn't really hold Not Always Right to any kind of credibility. They've been known to exaggerate or fabricate stories. People who submitted stories to them tend to find they were published with a bunch of "poetic license" to make it that much more outrageous.
And truth be told, you can point to just about anything, and find at least one out of the 7 billion people on this planet who is offended by it. So, pointing out the few people who are upset that you said you retarded the spark on your engine is about as useless of an anecdote as pointing out the few people you could possibly round up if you had enough time and energy who are offended by the existence of potatoes.
It's only when someone with significant authority starts to point it out and make a beef about it that you should really perk your ears up and decide if it's justified or not.
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Originally posted by mjr View PostAs far as calling someone "the r-word", I see that point.
But I don't think the word should be completely forbidden. Context is important, I think. I've heard of people getting offended at ANY usage of the word.
If I say, "I retarded the spark on my engine by five degrees", that is an acceptable usage of the word "retarded". Wouldn't you agree?
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Originally posted by mjr View PostBut I don't think the word should be completely forbidden. Context is important, I think. I've heard of people getting offended at ANY usage of the word.
I mean cripes, I'm agreeing with Estil now so you know you're off base here. -.-
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostLike Huckster said, no one was calling for it to be completely forbidden in the first place.
I mean cripes, I'm agreeing with Estil now so you know you're off base here. -.-
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Originally posted by Estil View PostGravekeeper, if you allow me to gain some more experience here and find out more about where I stand on other issues, I think you'd be very surprised with what you might agree with me on other things.
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