It's not just a name, it's an attitude. A good one. So it makes sense not to change it.I'd say any objective approach leads to the conclusion that most people aren't offended by it, Native American or not, but that a growing number are and a large percentage of Native Americans are and if no offense is meant by using the historically offensive term then it makes no real sense not to change it.
And, if Yankee were considered by its original meaning, support would be growing for the NY team to change its name, too.
If it isn't a horrible injustice, then its not worth putting it in a category of offense when non is intended. What you are really saying is that you want to control people for no other reason than power for politically correct. I didn't want to think that of you so I assumed there was a legitimate reason for your objection within some sort of horrible injustice.I wrote: You don't have to believe calling a Native American "redskin" is a "horrible injustice" to believe it's wrong headed and to question why anyone who says it would continue to say it once he sees the objection.
No, you don't, supra. Trying to insist I must for no real reason other than it suits your desire to be dismissive is about as fair as if I suddenly decided that you must be a racist for defending a use that would be acceptable in use by racists and which offends a goodly number of Native Americans for no good reason.
Of course it would be as silly for me to think that as it is for you to think I must be X when it needn't be and I've told you it isn't applicable to my position. I'm more in the incredulous camp, watching people try to justify a thing by pointing at anything and everything but the inescapable truth that people are being needlessly offended and those who claim to want the opposite are fighting for the right to continue to offend. lain:
And, like in your example, if 100% of the people in question object to the name then you would have a point.Demonstrably not to ten percent of the people who you claim are meant to be "complimented". This isn't complicated. If you call a woman madam and she takes umbrage, then you stop calling her that, even if and especially if you meant it positively. You don't insist that she see it your way or, if you do, what you're really saying is that you don't care what she thinks and it isn't about her to begin with, that the complimentary bit is so much smoke.
I object to the name "Yankees", so they need to change their name.
Note the "dead horse" argument he uses. Just because his ilk have been wrong about something for a very long time doesn't mean the objection is not valid.Curious. I've differed with Rex often enough and strongly on at least one subject, but I've never found him less than well considered, rhetorically and logically sound. He's also the sort who will meet a well argued difference with consideration and humor, agreement notwithstanding. I count him among those I enjoy reading around here, sometimes especially for our differences.