• DirkMcCallahan@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    My boomer parents will die on the hill that it sounds “wrong” to use “they” to refer to a singular entity. And whenever they bring that up, I always remind them that the word “they” has been used in that way for AGES.

    Example: “Whose umbrella is this? Did they already leave?”

    It doesn’t seem to make a difference.

    • sebinspace@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Watched a video that addressed this in good faith, because it is a tad awkward. They brought up and old term (because this isn’t new), “thone”, short for “the one”. And I’mma be real with you, “THE ONE, DIRK MCCALLAHAN” does ring kinda hard.

    • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      7 months ago

      It doesn’t seem to make a difference.

      Most people arguing about this are coming from an emotional place, so facts and truths don’t really matter. If gender in language is important to your in-group, that’s what matters. Not the history of language. Not the dictionary. The group believes this. If you reject your group, you’ll die alone. Or that’s what the brain would have you believe. We’re all a little susceptible to social influence on belief. Some people are just unwilling or unable to overcome it.

      Belief is social.

      For many people, emotion is the only truth.

      • daltotron@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        What’s craziest to me is that people so often adopt beliefs as to belong to some sort of in group, right, but won’t necessarily adopt the set of beliefs that actually immediately benefits them, ingratiates them to their immediate surrounding environment, gives them a more functional outlook. No, it’s way simpler, people just adopt the beliefs of what they perceive in their immediate surroundings. Oftentimes this manifests more as people locking themselves into increasingly insular media environments, rather than, say, having productive conversations with their kids, or allowing themselves to be convinced by their friends, or being able to even really talk on a surface level with their co-workers. Their immediate environment, their “in-group”, can supercede physical reality.

        • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          have you tried having these conversations?

          they don’t go so well IRL than they do in your head. the conservation you want in your head requires two willing and thoughtful parties… often there is only one person with that mindset… or sometimes none.

          I had at trans friend who I did talk about this stuff with a few years ago… but now they are a radicalized nutcase and they are more focused on being ‘pronoun’ police and making every topic about ‘their suffering’ etc. oftentimes sane people become crazy people.

          • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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            7 months ago

            I’m going to ignore the bit about your friend for now.

            I have had the kind of conversation where you try to change someone’s mind. That is, distinct from the more common kind on the Internet where you’re just fighting.

            It takes a lot of time and energy. You need them to see you as a member of one of their in groups, typically.

            I have had a couple friends who would consume a lot of right wing media, but we shared some things in common. One was also working retail, both were video game nerds. I think because we had those things in common, they saw me as a friend, someone in an in-group, and thus listened to me.

            If I had just sent them a YouTube video, they probably would have rejected it. If a stranger did, almost certainly.

            Unfortunately, when I was no longer in their daily life they sort of drifted back to what their dominant groups thought.

      • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        yep.

        my entire life I got shit form grammar nazis for preferring gender neutral language. now i get shit for not asking everyone their pronoun. and my entire life I have had to put up with people’s shitty assumptions about me based on my physical appearance.

        it never ends. people just want to be angry and feel superior to others who don’t agree with them and browbeat others into submission, all the while being judgemental about how others look vs how they think they should look.

    • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      “He or she” sounds and looks so cumbersome. “They” is the superior pronoun on style/conciseness alone.

        • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Yup, either singular or plural. It’s clear from context because you always refer to them in a previous clause. The user did this, they… The class did this, they…

          The user must do this before first use, if he or she fails to… Ugh

          The user must do this before first use, if they fail to…😘👌

          They has been used like this for a long, long time.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      It was beaten into me in school that this is incorrect. “They” is to be used as a plural pronoun only. It’s commonly used in the singular, but it’s wrong according to the English teachers I had. In referring to a person, you must choose either he or she under those grammar rules.

      With that said, maybe it’s time for me to move into the future and accept that the meaning of the word has changed. I am confident those English teachers weren’t concerned about actual gender issues. Now, I think those issues are more important than the technical grammatical issues of English.

      I’ve offended people in a social setting by insisting that this is the correct usage, when truly it was just me being autistic and informal rather than political.

        • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          7 months ago

          Fascinating! I didn’t know there was an article about this.

          This use of singular they had emerged by the 14th century, about a century after the plural they.

          That’s more than official enough for me!

        • lad@programming.dev
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          7 months ago

          Singular they has been criticised since the mid-18th century by prescriptive commentators who consider it an error.

          1. Hey, it’s prescriptivists again, ruining everyone’s day
          2. Look what’s actually recent (if three centuries count as recent, but definitely more recent than seven centuries ago)
        • Dojan@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          My child dresses itself.

          “Ma, I’m a boy!”

          I adore how callous that sentence sounds.

      • audiomodder
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        7 months ago

        It used to be correct APA/MLA formatting to use “he/she” when the gender of a subject was unknown. That was changed back in the mid 00’s I think. The preferred format is now “they” over “he/she”.

        That being said, people use singular they/them all the time in casual conversation. We just aren’t used to using it when we know or think we know the gender of the person. But let’s be honest, there have always been people that have been hurt by being misgendered. Hell, it was common for some racists to use they/them with black women in an attempt to dehumanize them. So this idea that the singular they is new is absolutely ridiculous.

          • mbfalzar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            7 months ago

            “literally” being used to mean “figuratively” dates back to 3 years after the word “literally” began meaning “actually”. If this is a hill to die on, you need to use “literally” exclusively to mean “as written in the texts”. Common usage of “literally” to mean “actually” and “figuratively” both date to the 1590s

        • candybrie@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          No one uses literally to mean figuratively. They use it to emphasize regardless of if what they’re emphasizing includes figurative language. Nearly every word that means something similar to “in actual fact” undergoes this semantic drift (actually, really, etc).

          “She literally exploded at me.” is similar in meaning to “She totally exploded at me.” Not so much to “She figuratively exploded at me.”

          • Promethiel@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Nearly every word that means something similar to “in actual fact” undergoes this semantic drift (actually, really, etc).

            I looked into this for 3 minutes and found examples in multiple languages.

            Neat.

            New expression-insight remix into the human condition connected; We literally really actually feel the need to be sure we’re understood, no matter the hyperbolic lengths gone to, huh?

        • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Colloquialization. Get enough people using a new word, or existing word in a new way, and it will eventually be added to the dictionary.

          I accepted the inevitable downfall of mankind when “unfriend” was added in 2009.

      • fakeaustinfloyd@ttrpg.network
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        7 months ago

        I’m curious when and where “singular they” was taught as incorrect. Coming from the Midwest in the 80s (not exactly a liberal or forward thinking place), I was taught in no uncertain terms that singular they was appropriate in many circumstances. And my teacher was old as hell, so her education on the matter probably dated to around WW2.

        • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          7 months ago

          It must not be specifically gated on time. My instruction was rural East Coast. I’ve learned however just from the article posted in this thread that a singular third person has been in use for centuries, even recognized as such an official contexts.

        • Kalysta@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          Someone higher up this thread linked an article that singular they has been in use since the 14th century

      • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        It’s not correct though, it’s a style choice. Just like it’s not incorrect to avoid the Oxford comma.

        I know a lot of people have a hard on for Strunk & White, myself included, but this is one stylistic choice that is now outdated.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I think of that like I think of the anti ain’t and anti Oxford comma stances. They weren’t entirely correct, they were enforcing the style of the time for educated use of English. Today educated use of English still doesn’t include ain’t, but it does use the singular they for people of unknown or nonbinary gender, and it uses the Oxford comma.

        The language keeps evolving and stuff like this is part of that. Hell at one point the singular they was far less controversial than the singular you

        • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          The exclusion of the oxford comma is a really good example of grammar that’s a bit outdated. It’s far clearer to use it. Dropping it used to make sense when we used typewriters and ink, but in a digital world it makes no sense.

      • Twinklebreeze @lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Grammer rules are rooted in racism or classism pretty much every time. At least when they’re used to exclude someone instead of teach someone how to speak the language.

        • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          7 months ago

          I’ve never heard this before. Would you have an example? Because if so, I’m about to get a lot less grammatically correct.

          • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            When someone says “you sure is” instead of “you are”, or wants to “axe” you a question, we are taught to consider them wrong. But they’re not. They’re just speaking a different dialect of English. Just like people from the UK call bathrooms “the loo”, and people from India say “do the needful”. There are loads of different dialect of English, and it’s racist to consider the “black” dialect stupid or incorrect. It’s not wrong, it’s just another dialect.

            It counts as a dialect when a significant number of people use a certain version of the language.

            • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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              7 months ago

              I’m getting the sense that correctness in language is a bit of a fool’s errand. It’s a relative term.

              • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                Yep. Language is only as good as it’s ability to transfer information. English is a good language (IMHO), not because it has good rules to follow, but because it can be flexible in order to transfer new ideas. Want to steal a word from another language? Want to verb a noun? Want to create a new word by gluing two other words together? Want to add a new definition to an existing word? Yes, yes, yessir, and bet.

          • candybrie@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Well, you can start from the fact that language is a living, changing thing. The only real rules of the language are descriptions of how people are using the language. Even after they put rules to it, those rules have had to evolve as speakers change how they use English. It’s not like we still use Shakespearean English as the standard of correctness anymore.

            So, the set of rules that are written is just a description of how some people are using the language at the time. Can you take a guess which people’s use these rules are based on? You can bet it isn’t going to be the black people. And then these people can use these rules, which are just a description of how they use English, to say black people are wrong.

      • Harbinger01173430@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Yeah, if I recall the English classes from my language institute, They is only plural and the X cannot be used to neutralize masculine/feminine nouns.

    • DeviantOvary@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      It’s funny to me how easy English has it. All you have to do is use “they”, and if people think that’s awkward, they should see how difficult it is to navigate it in a language with complex verb conjugations with gendered nouns and verbs. It’s complicated to the point that non-binary people will still use their assigned-at-birth (if that’s the term?) pronouns, to save everyone - including themselves - a headache. There’s of course a movement to change the language, but it’s difficult.

    • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      They went with them and then they decided to take off and took them with them, so we met up with some friends and then got together with them even though they didn’t join because they ultimately wanted to go home.

      It’s less precise. That’s just a problem with English though. That said, just using people’s names more often isn’t that big of a deal and using gender neutral pronouns otherwise is, similarly, not hard and not a big deal. Nevertheless, I was referring to seven different distinct individuals in the above.

      He went with her, but then she decided to take off and took him with her, so we met up with some friends and then got together with him though she didn’t want to join because he ultimately wanted to go home.

      It’s still confusing, and the sentence is absurd, but you can get a better sense of how many people are involved with gendered pronouns. But no one talks that way, contextual clues would make it more obvious, and we’d use proper names in many of those instances by habit for clarification. That said, it would be easier if we just used a number-word in place of a pronoun. Thone, thwo, theree, thour, etc or something. Then we could refer to whom we mean with a numbered-pronoun to indicate agents. That would be the clearest way to differentiate agents in a sentence.

      And to be very clear, I have no problem using non-gendered pronouns, but the idea that it isn’t slightly less precise is facile. But, again, only slightly. And who cares if it makes people more comfort and seen?

      • Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        You don’t even need a convoluted sentence like that, just now on the news the reporter was talking about a trans woman’s mental health problems and said “Jane’s parents were concerned that they may harm themselves”

        It is a bit of an awkward way of speaking

        • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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          Yeah, and like in my own example, it’s easily clarified by simply saying Jane’s parents were concerned that Jane may harm theirself.

          Over and beyond gendered pronouns, the overwhelming amount of confusing sentences I read aren’t confusing because of genderless pronouns. They’re confusing because they’re poorly written.

      • hglman@lemmy.ml
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        7 months ago

        Unless the people in innane sentence are the same gender and it’s back to the same issue. You exists and it’s not an issue for anyone.

        • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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          Even then, whether “them” references a group or an individual is left unclear–as I noted. E.g., “you” vs “y’all.” Exclusively using they/them is mildly less precise, but people acting like it’s the end of the English language is silly.

          As I also explicitly stated, acting like it’s not slightly imprecise is facile. It could be worse, at least English doesn’t have gendered nouns like Spanish, Italian, etc. 😁

    • hakase@lemm.ee
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      Since nobody has mentioned the actual reason for this phenomenon yet, the difference here is usually one of known vs. unknown gender/referent. (At least for practically all older speakers of English. Some younger speakers do seem to be able to use “they” grammatically to refer to known people. Changes in progress, woo!)

      Your example is a perfect one: in a question like “whose umbrella is this?” we have no idea what gender the owner is, and so “they” is grammatical for the vast majority of English speakers.

      Once the gender/referent is known, however, for many/most speakers of English (myself included), “they” becomes ungrammatical and the speaker must switch to “he” or “she”:

      “Whose umbrella is this? Did they already leave?”

      “That’s John’s.”

      *“Oh, they need to come get it then.” (The asterisk here is the common linguistic notation for ungrammaticality. This also assumes that both speakers are familiar with who John is. You can still get grammatical “they” after responses that refer to unknown people, especially with common gender-ambiguous names like Pat.)

      So, for anyone wondering why many speakers, probably including themselves (if they’re honest enough to admit it), seem to find known-gender singular “they” to be awkward/ungrammatical when supposedly “it’s been grammatical for a thousand years”, that’s why!

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        7 months ago

        Alright, I made this comment in another thread but I’m copying it here. No, it has been used to refer to people of a known gender for centuries:

        https://www.englishgratis.com/1/wikibooks/english/singularthey.htm

        There’s not a man I meet but doth salute me / As if I were their well-acquainted friend — Shakespeare, The Comedy of Errors, Act IV, Scene 3, 1594

        'Tis meet that some more audience than a mother, since nature makes them partial, should o’erhear the speech. — Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act III, Scene 3, 1600–1602

        So lyke wyse shall my hevenly father do vnto you except ye forgeve with youre hertes eache one to his brother their treaspases. — Tyndale’s Bible, 1526

        • hakase@lemm.ee
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          I already mentioned that we can get grammatical “they” with non-definite/unknown referents (your first and third examples), and in the second example Shakespeare is clearly referring to all mothers with “them”, so none of these are counterexamples to my generalization above. I think you’ll be hard pressed to find many examples with a specific, definite antecedent (though it is possible, of course - grammaticality is a spectrum, after all).

          This distinction, as well as the fact that modern speakers are showing various innovative uses of “they”, has been well known for decades in the linguistic literature.

          It kinda grinds my gears when people intentionally (or maybe just ignorantly in this case) misconstrue linguistic data to support their political positions, and that includes all of the boneheads acting like singular “they” isn’t a thing at all for their own nefarious purposes as well.

          It doesn’t matter that English hasn’t had specific singular “they” until Gen Z. That’s just a fact of history and language, and has (or at least should have) nothing to do with the rights of non-binary people.

          Stop using bullshit linguistic data to try to justify your political positions! All of you! This is how we get Hindu nationalists justifying their oppression of Muslims with ridiculous claims that Sanskrit is the original human language. Language is just language!

          Edit: I just went and read your other thread, and it does appear that you’re just being disingenuous at this point, or at least doubling down after being proved incorrect. Your own source pointed out that Shakespeare would not have used “they” with specific individuals. Thymos is completely (and demonstrably) correct.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            7 months ago

            I already mentioned that we can get grammatical “they” with non-definite/unknown referents (your first and third examples)

            The gender is known though. What a weird distinction to make that it’s talking about an abstract gendered person rather than concrete. I don’t know why the grammar would make that distinction (nor do I think it does).

            in the second example Shakespeare is clearly referring to all mothers with “them”

            Sure, but it’s in the singular. It’s “a mother” as the subject, not mothers.

            none of these are counterexamples to my generalization above. I think you’ll be hard pressed to find many examples with a specific, definite antecedent (though it is possible, of course - grammaticality is a spectrum, after all).

            The argument that is almost always made is that “they can’t be singular.” That argument is clearly bogus. Sure, maybe it historically hasn’t been used for a particular subject, but that’s a fairly minor grammatical shift. If we’re going to argue that’s wrong because it isn’t historically accepted then we probably need to speak a totally different version of English than we do because it has made much larger shifts than that in the past.

            • hakase@lemm.ee
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              What a weird distinction to make that it’s talking about an abstract gendered person rather than concrete. I don’t know why the grammar would make that distinction (nor do I think it does).

              Then you’re gonna be absolutely gobsmacked by the other grammatical distinctions that exist across the world’s languages.

              It doesn’t matter if you know why the grammar would make that distinction or not - the distinction exists, and is widely accepted in the linguistic literature (as cited above) whether you think it does or not.

              The argument that is almost always made is that “they can’t be singular.”

              I’m not sure what that has to do with our conversation, since I’ve never made that claim (and neither did Thymos). If that’s what you’re basing your argument on here, then that’s a pretty egregious strawman of my position.

              Sure, maybe it historically hasn’t been used for a particular subject, but that’s a fairly minor grammatical shift.

              And yet it exists nonetheless, rendering your “correction” of my original comment (and your “correction” of Thymos’s comments in the other thread, for that matter) inaccurate and misleading.

              If we’re going to argue that’s wrong because it isn’t historically accepted then we probably need to speak a totally different version of English than we do because it has made much larger shifts than that in the past.

              I haven’t argued that anything is “wrong” other than your description of the historical use of English pronouns. Linguistics is descriptive, not normative, which means that the historical facts of English have no bearing whatsoever on what we “probably need” to do.

      • Chakravanti@sh.itjust.works
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        7 months ago

        “They” also refers to plurality. In the case of an individual having either both or neither and you aren’t trying to be disrespectful with “it” then it’s not confusing at all because it’s accurate.

        • hakase@lemm.ee
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          That’s not relevant to our conversation here - we’re not talking about how language should be used (which linguistics, as an empirical/rationalist science, has nothing to say about), we’re talking about how it is used.

      • Dojan@lemmy.world
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        Once the gender/referent is known, however, for many/most speakers of English (myself included), “they” becomes ungrammatical and the speaker must switch to “he” or “she”:

        I must be one of these “younger” people because I don’t get this. I have no problem referring to people as “they.” Sometimes I do so because the gender is irrelevant, sometimes to obfuscate who I’m talking about, and sometimes because they might not identify within the s/he binary.

        What I don’t get is, how can knowing the gender suddenly make it difficult to use a neutral term, if it worked before?

        • hakase@lemm.ee
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          Sometimes I do so because the gender is irrelevant

          This seems to be part of the pathway of change that has led to the widespread adoption of specific singular “they” among younger speakers, and there’s some empirical evidence supporting this.

          What I don’t get is, how can knowing the gender suddenly make it difficult to use a neutral term, if it worked before?

          This is just one of those arbitrary rules that often exist in language, like how in many languages neuter/inanimate nouns can’t act as the subject of a sentence due to what’s called an “animacy restriction”.

          For this specific phenomenon (the “older” ungrammaticality of definite singular they vs. the “younger” grammaticality of it), this recent paper argues that this is due to a difference in obligatoriness of morphosyntactic gender features. The paper is a bit technical if you don’t have a linguistic background, but the basic argument is that in older varieties of English, gender features must be obligatorily expressed in the morphosyntactic derivation if they are known, while in younger varieties, this expression seems to be optional, and therefore free variation between he/they and she/they is allowed by the grammar.

          So, “It’s John’s. They need to come get it” is ungrammatical for older speakers for not obligatorily expressing the gender feature once it’s known, while it’s perfectly fine for younger speakers for whom expressing that feature seems to be optional in the grammar.

          Maybe this analogy will help: Let’s say you meet someone, and you ask them “Do you have a cat?”. Note that you’ve used the singular here, though it’s acting number-neutral in this context. If they respond “I have two”, then it will immediately become ungrammatical for you to continue to use the number-neutral singular and ask “Does your cat like fish?”

          Once you have access to the information that there’s more than one cat, then the arbitrary rules of English grammar require that knowledge to immediately be reflected in the morphosyntactic structure of your sentences from then on. And this makes no independent, logical sense, because there are tons of languages out there that don’t have plurality distinctions. But, English does, and so to speak grammatical English (for now), you have to use plural morphology to refer to more than one entity.

          It’s the same for “older” speakers of English - just like it’s ungrammatical for you to continue to use the number-neutral singular once you know that there’s a “plural number feature” in the linguistic context, for older speakers of English it’s ungrammatical for them to continue to use the gender-neutral “they” once they know that there’s a “masculine gender feature” in the linguistic context.

          Also, it’s important to note that this term “ungrammatical” is descriptive, not prescriptive - it’s not saying that it’s not “proper” or “correct” according to some arbitrary standard that someone decided on in the 1800s, but rather that’s literally not how those speakers’ mental grammars work. While it may seem illogical (and even regressive from a modern political perspective), every natural human language is composed of arbitrary rules that often seem illogical. Like how the past tense of “go” is the completely unrelated past tense of the older English verb “to wend”, “went”. Or how the past tense of the verb “can” isn’t “could” anymore – that’s reserved for modal usage now in most English dialects – it’s the completely awkward phrase “was able to”.

          That doesn’t mean that we can’t, or shouldn’t, try to accommodate non-binary people of course, as is unfortunately often argued, but it does mean that, contrary to what I commonly see people say on the internet, doing so for these speakers does require a constant, concerted effort to consciously override their mental grammars.

          • Dojan@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Maybe this analogy will help: Let’s say you meet someone, and you ask them “Do you have a cat?”. Note that you’ve used the singular here, though it’s acting number-neutral in this context. If they respond “I have two”, then it will immediately become ungrammatical for you to continue to use the number-neutral singular and ask “Does your cat like fish?”

            This helped a lot. It is true that I do not feel this way about “they”, but it does put things into perspective. Thank you.

            That doesn’t mean that we can’t, or shouldn’t, try to accommodate non-binary people of course, as is unfortunately often argued, but it does mean that, contrary to what I commonly see people say on the internet, doing so for these speakers does require a constant, concerted effort to consciously override their mental grammars.

            This is true also when someone you’ve known for a while transitions, or changes their name (like in the case of marriage, or just a regular name-change). Most people are okay with you tripping up, it’s expected even. It’s just when it’s done in bad faith that it becomes an issue.

    • SLfgb@feddit.nl
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      When my brain interpreted ‘they’ singular to refer to a unspecified so-far unnamed person or an already mentioned group, it was definitely confusing to have it suddenly used to refer to someone who had just been referred to by name. This was definitely a novel use of ‘they’ for me at the time and I don’t understand why no-one else ever seems to have this kind of confusion. I did get used to it but I don’t think it’s as universal as some of y’all realise.

      Edit: I just learnt the term ‘indeterminate antecedent’ from the Wikipedia article someone else linked. Thanks to them, I just got a little bit smarter. ;-)

  • inb4_FoundTheVegan@lemmy.world
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    It’s important to understand that Hank is specific to say “correct prounons” and not “preferred prounons”. We as creature of civilization have to right to control our place in that creation, so when someone misgenders, it’s not that they are nessecarily showing disrespect, but being factually wrong. It’s okay to state the wrong thing if you don’t know, but if you insist that only YOUR interpretation of another person is correct, even more so than how THEY THEMSELVES interpret themselves, then you have crossed the rubicon in to bigotry.

    To see another person on the street and think you have a better view of them than they do in a mirror is just wild levels of arrogance. They know themslevss far more than you ever will.

    • Liz@midwest.social
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      7 months ago

      That’s John Green, but they’re the same person, according to the internet.

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      This is exactly the comment I was gonna leave, I strongly dislike the phrase “preferred pronouns,” because that implies that it’s a preference. Big props to John for making the distinction

      • samus12345@lemmy.world
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        The problem with “correct” pronouns is that what’s considered correct will differ depending on who’s saying it. There’s no confusion with “preferred” pronouns. Also, it is a preference, because some people use pronouns that are not the standard he/she/they ones. It’s not their gender that they chose, it’s (potentially) what pronouns they want to use to refer to said gender.

      • Hootz@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        You used they in this comment but don’t state you use they as a generic pronoun. Dude just use they

      • AItoothbrush@lemmy.zip
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        7 months ago

        From my experience most trans people are pretty clear cut. I get that they change their pronouns a lot when transitioning and coming out of the closet because it must be hard to pick a pronoun when you dont even know who you are. They are usually ok with the singular they. My problem is with tiktok queers and people who just change it for fun basically. I dont care if your pronoun is xe or idk but i do care when you dont accept if i use they(which i even use for cishet people because in my native language we dont have genders and its just generally easier).

      • magnusrufus@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Avoid “them” meaning all trans people or the handful of dipshits you were choosing to talk to?

          • magnusrufus@lemmy.world
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            Yeah painting all trans people that way is nonsense. It gets pretty close to bigotry territory. I gotta wonder where you live or what kind of choices you are making to surround yourself with that many unhinged people. Where I’m at I’ve encountered zero trans people that act like you’ve described.

              • magnusrufus@lemmy.world
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                “You can’t know if someone is a dipshit until after you interact with them, btw.” That you said that is kinda at odds with what you are saying now.

                If you are going to treat all members of a group as being the same as the worst members you have met then you are just choosing to be a bigot.

                The issue isn’t trans people as a whole. It’s also not even close to half of trans people. There is something unique about your situation.

                • Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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                  This person is either lying, or had some karen at the coffee shop go off, and is now stretching that. I have family in Boston, Including a couple that live Jamaica Plains. That has been like LGBTQ central for a while. They, and no one they know, have ever been assaulted by people over privilege, pronouns, or for being white/straight/male/cis. They said the only place they have ever seen such eruptions of behavior is online, meaning it’s just the rare karen.

                  That, or they are bigot that goes out and agitates this type of behavior. Then frames it in a manner in which they are the victim.

              • magnusrufus@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                If you are going to make substantial edits to your post like that (as opposed to small corrections) I think you should either make a new post with the follow up information and ideas or make it very clear in your original post what the added content from the edit was.

      • Ifera@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        That is a quality of life issue. This person’s issue is not their changing pronouns, it is that they are an asshole, who loves to milk the victim role.

        I am a cis, male guy, who due to some hormonal issues looked androgynous and sounded like a girl when I was in my late teens and early 20s, and was addressed as “miss” quite often, and for the most part, people would just say “Sorry” when corrected, then address me as a guy.

        This is how people should behave, the person you describe is just an asshole, whether they are aware of it or not.

        Same issue I used to have with gay people, I used to think they were all loudmouth assholes, until I found out that what I had been exposed to was a loud minority, a ton of gay people are your regular Joe and Jane, and you would never know they were gay unless they told you.

        Don’t let a loud minority sour your day, you have been doing the right thing, and the downvoted are overzealous, reactionary assholes.

        • Dojan@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I am a cis, male guy, who due to some hormonal issues looked androgynous and sounded like a girl when I was in my late teens and early 20s, and was addressed as “miss” quite often, and for the most part, people would just say “Sorry” when corrected, then address me as a guy.

          Did you ever have someone insist that you’re wrong? I looked quite feminine from childhood all the way to around 25-26 years old. I can think of several occasions where people insisted that I couldn’t be a man.

          The most positive one was when I was flying to the U.S., and ended up chatting with an elderly lady for a few hours while waiting for the check ins. She had a massive wagon with pots and pans and whatnot, and I had a tiny carry-on. Eventually we realised we’d forgotten to exchange names, so we introduced ourselves. She was like “but that’s a boy’s name”, “well that explains why your luggage is so small!” and every so often she’d say “I can’t believe you’re a man” incredulously.

          Worst time was when I was frequently swimming in my teens, and a Karen-type person walked up to me, insisting I put on a bikini because I’m too old to walk topless. It didn’t register with me that she mistook me for a girl at first; I just thought this pervert old woman wanted me to dress like a girl.

          • elephantium@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Eh, that’s different. Police officers choose the profession. Trans folks aren’t choosing the trans life, they’re discovering who they really are (maybe I should have just quipped “…the trans life chose them”, ha).

            There’s nothing wrong with trying to avoid assholes, but when you start painting with a broad brush like that, well, it does smack of bigotry. Same energy as racists who memorize arrest statistics and then say things like “It’s not racist if it’s true!”

            Also, to be clear: I don’t mean to accuse you of anything. I just see some uncomfortable parallels.

            Personally, I don’t have a lot of experience in this area. I’ve really only been acquainted with two trans people, and I don’t/didn’t know them very well (I say didn’t because I haven’t seen the one person since before covid). Both were friends-of-friends type acquaintances that I’d see at game nights and the like.

    • TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.world
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      It also never happened to me but I imagine the conversation would be something like:

      Hello X

      Please don’t call me X I don’t like it, call me Y instead

      Ok

      ~ ~The end~ ~

        • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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          My experience has been that transgendered people will correct you politely when accidentally misgendered. They get it. They don’t like it, but they get it.

          It’s the cisgendered people who get offended when they are accidentally misgendered (i.e. calling a cis-female who has masculine features “he/him”).

          No different than assuming a fat woman is pregnant or a man with a high voice is gay. And the embarrassment is felt all the same, for both parties.

      • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Okay imagine that… but with an internal crushing anxiety knowing that under best case there will be probably around five somewhat invasive follow up long answer questions either about your personal history or about trans people’s existence in general. Then an optional depressing thing people think is them being magnanimous where they say “I don’t get it but okay.” OR they look at you like you grew another head and walk swiftly away to watch/glare you with furtive long stares or try and speed run whatever brief social interaction you are participating in like you have the plague.

        Aaaaand mental picture complete!

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      People genuinely do care considering Jordan Peterson’s entire career is based on the whole “you can’t force me to use your pronouns” bullshit that no one was trying to force him to do in the first place.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              Sorry I got mad, I’m just so angry that people believe that lie because it’s turned into so much hate against trans people.

              • TBi@lemmy.world
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                Thanks for the apology. I really hate the LGBT hate. I don’t understand what’s wrong with letting people live their own lives the way they want, if they aren’t physically affecting others. Shame my original post got downvoted so much. I didn’t think it was offensive.

                Edit: also thank you for correcting my misconception over the law! I’ll make sure to correct people going forward.

          • ebc@lemmy.ca
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            7 months ago

            Wow this sounds really reasonable, wtf kinda drugs is Peterson on if he thinks it restricts free speech…

            TLDR: bill C-16 adds gender identity and expression to the list of discrimination protections, a list which already includes gender, ethnicity, religion and sexual orientation. So yeah right now you can’t fire someone for being black, under C-16 this will also apply to trans people. Ontario already has this in their provincial laws, so Peterson is already living under such a “regime”.

            • Schadrach@lemmy.sdf.org
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              Wow this sounds really reasonable, wtf kinda drugs is Peterson on if he thinks it restricts free speech…

              If I recall, Peterson’s entire idea on that was that it would result in misgendering being considered hate speech, though it’s been a while so I might be misremembering.

          • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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            lots of people are being harassed and intimidated into it though. lots of people take an absolutist stance on pronouns, and if you misgender someone or don’t ask them what their pronoun is, you are considered a ‘bad person’.

            labeling and harassing people into social conformity is being forced to do something.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              What people? I have never seen anyone get angry about being accidentally misgendered.

              No one is being “harassed” or “intimidated” into calling people what they want to be called. You’re just an asshole if you don’t do it because you’re not giving them a very basic amount of respect: the acknowledgement of the right to be who they are.

              • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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                On the contrary in fact, I’ve seen people be very forgiving if you accidentally screw up but genuinely mean well. I accidentally misgendered a friend of mine once, and when I realized it I immediately started profusely apologizing. They appreciated it but said it was all good.

                At the end of the day, everything can be distilled down to one maxim – be genuinely kind to people, and 99% of people will respond in kind and forgive mistakes.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  7 months ago

                  Sure, anyone can make a mistake. Trans people know that just as well as cis people. If you just say sorry and correct yourself, most trans people would probably be fine with it. It’s the people who do it on purpose that are the problem.

                • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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                  7 months ago

                  If someone was a jerk to you, then that person is a jerk.

                  If everyone is a jerk to you, then you’re probably the jerk.

          • refalo@programming.dev
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            7 months ago

            No one is being forced

            I think you misunderstood his hyperbole as a literal thing

            Of course people aren’t putting a gun to your head. But there are often consequences for not doing it.

              • duffman@lemmy.world
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                You sound pretty ignorant. Intentionally misgendering someone at work would get you canned pretty fast at most corporate jobs.

                There’s no reason to reason not to just refer to people their gender identity but you are either lying or very unaware of corporate culture.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  7 months ago

                  You mean harassing someone at work will get you fired. That’s true no matter what type of harassment it is. That has nothing to do with pronouns. You could get fired for repeatedly calling someone at work a panda.

              • refalo@programming.dev
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                7 months ago

                I have personally seen many instances of people getting banned or suspended from communities for either misgendering people (intentionally or not), or refusing to use their preferred pronouns.

                But due to a real concern of retaliation or getting banned here myself, I will not be providing specific examples.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  Sorry… that’s what you’re talking about? People being banned on internet forums? Big fucking deal.

        • AbsentBird@lemm.ee
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          It was made a law, it’s also a law in many parts of the US. It’s not about preventing random people from being pricks, it’s about discouraging harassment from employers, school administrations, and government officials. They’re prohibited from persistently misgendering you in the same way they’re prohibited from calling you slurs. I struggle to imagine a scenario where life would be improved by removing those sensible guard rails on civil society.

        • Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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          Nobody is “forced to use pronouns” at present but this stance misses the point. It looks at the harms of misgendering as a situation that doesn’t cause other inequities and harms.

          For the average social interaction where you are on equal terms but can walk away being misgendered is something a lot of us hate but live with like any small annoyance. It is like stubbing your toe. Not fun but whatever it’s fine that’s just “someone being a prick”. But if deliberate misgendering is allowed to happen over a long period in a workplace setting it is not something we get to walk away from. If we have to regularly interact with that person or lose our ability to feed and house ourselves then we are forced to have mental health problems because someone essentially doesn’t like being told what to do. Having to deal with panic attacks at work because you had to be locked in a room with someone hitting every trauma trigger you have exposed to the world or else you have to find a new and maybe worse job is a barrier to participation in society.

          If it’s in a medical setting where we have to balance our health outcomes knowing that if we don’t comply with the misgendering our care is impacted because a doctor holds our lives or the relief from pain in their hands. A lot of trans people become shy and don’t seek help early and often because they equate doctors visits with a sense of powerlessness and shame knowing that they can’t stand up for themselves. In that instance it’s not just “someone being a dick” you are placing someone’s complete physical wellbeing before someone’s egotistical need to be “right” about you.

          If a trans person in a social club and misgendering isn’t checked by a majority it can mean that they might not have a choice on whether or not to go. The world becomes a smaller place when you have gender related trauma.

          Deliberate misgendering in a professional setting isn’t just “someone showing you they are a prick” the burden always falls upon trans people disproportionately because our participation in society often forces us to compromise directly on our health and there are real traumas and weaknesses that underlie our transness. If someone was openly making rape jokes around someone you knew had sexual assault trauma you’d step in right? Why not the same for someone with gender related traumas?

          What Peterson is railing against is protections for participation in regular society through professional setting misgendering cases.

  • Got_Bent@lemmy.world
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    I’m getting pretty old.

    Transgender stuff is new and confusing to me.

    My only experience with it was in a bar I used to frequent in Los Angeles, though I think they were more transvestite than transgender. Pronouns never came up there. We just used names.

    It’s easy for me to use any name given when introduced. If you introduce yourself to me with a feminine name when you appear quite male, it’s no skin off my teeth.

    Pronouns are more difficult simply because of my embedded native language of English dictating gender. While difficult, it’s no more inconvenient than to slow myself down, think about what I’m saying, and try to use what’s preferred. If I should slip up, then maybe a brief, “oops, sorry about that,” is in order.

    The hardest thing for me is if I have known you as one name and now I’ve got to use a new name. This has nothing to do with gender or politics however. It’s just how my brain stores things. My sister uses a different first name in adulthood than when we were kids, and I never have been able to adapt. Since my sister is awesome and understands me, she gives me a pass on this.

    Bottom line, the linguistics can be difficult for us oldies, but that doesn’t give us reason to fear, hate, or persecute.

  • blady_blah@lemmy.world
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    I’d even go simpler than that. “If calling people by their preferred pronouns is one of the hundred biggest challenges…” Inserting “correct” into the statement just begs to get into an argument with a conservative and feels like you’re trying to force them to accept a different reality than they want to.

    IMHO it’s simply a personal preference thing. Let people live how they want to live. You don’t have to convince everyone that Sally is really a woman trapped in the body of a man, you just have to say that it’s her preference you call her as a “she”. People should have the freedom to define themselves. That’s it. End of story.

    My conservative neighbor brought up trans stuff thinking he’d use all the conservative media talking points and my answer was simply “it doesn’t really bother me. I’m a live and let live kind of guy. If they want me to use a different pronoun I’ll do my best to switch to that pronoun.” If you spin it as a freedom instead of a reality then it’s easier to accept.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      7 months ago

      I agree with most of the sentiment, but we don’t let children go around saying things (especially wrong things) that offend people just because they believe them. Why should we accept when an adult does it?

    • IzzyScissor@lemmy.world
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      There IS a correct answer, though. If someone says, “My name is John”, you don’t get to tell them, “Well you look like a James to me, so I’m only going to call you James”. That would be incorrect. You don’t get to define other people’s existence like that.

      Same thing. ‘John’ isn’t a preferred name. It’s his name. Calling him a different name would be incorrect just like using different pronouns.

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        We had a temp receptionist called Joyce at my job. She said that at her old job they called her Mama J, and indicated that she would like to be called that here as well. I guess we were all assholes who defined her existence by calling her Joyce.

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          Nicknames aren’t pronouns, they’re nicknames. If her legal name was Mama J and you didn’t call her that, yeah, that would probably constitute harassment over time and her asking you to call her by her legal name.

          What would actually be comparable is if you addressed her with male pronouns. Since the discussion was about pronouns, not nicknames.

    • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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      Yeah, let people live. But also, let me live. Let me define myself the way I want. Stop telling me what the fuck to say and do and think and labeling anything that is ‘different’ than your way of thinking ‘bad and wrong’.

    • vinaya@api.clubsall.com
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      Isn’t using \they\ is just better all around because

      • Not everyone identifies as binary, so they makes it better for everyone

      • Not everyone is willing to come out and reveal their identity, especially at workplace, so why only use correct term with those who reveal themselves. It is not relevant at work, in fact it may lead to biases

      • Specific pronouns do increase cognitive overload for everyone. Imagine trying to remember not only names but also pronouns of 100s of colleagues and friends. Linkedin has started adding pronouns? If you forget, someone will get offended.

      • Now even conferences are manufacturing pronouns pins. These pins get discarded and this just causes more waste

      \They\ is just simpler and better for everyone. I think we can even start to eliminate \he\ and \she\ to make more inclusive society.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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      That’s a fair point. When I said “choose” I meant that they did not necessarily go with what they were assigned at birth. So it was “choose” in the sense of choose to be honest about who you are. I guess saying coming out of the closet would be more accurate. Sorry for the confusion.

    • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      It’s an inherently anti conservative thing, funny enough. At least with how some conservative voters think – Keep government out of it and let people live how they want to. Respect how they want to live, as a good neighbor.

      I agree with you that spinning it as freedom is a good way to do it. You could probably put a Christian tilt on it as well.

    • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      My conservative neighbor brought up trans stuff thinking he’d use all the conservative media talking points and my answer was simply “it doesn’t really bother me. I’m a live and let live kind of guy. If they want me to use a different pronoun I’ll do my best to switch to that pronoun.” If you spin it as a freedom instead of a reality then it’s easier to accept.

      That sounds to me like he realized he couldn’t have the argument he wanted to have, not that he accepted anything. Edit - but I generally agree with your overall point.

    • Ilflish@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      Don’t stereotype people by the online facade. I’ve met maybe one weird trans person who fits the stereotype but most of the time they are normal people

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    Guarantee most of the people who argue about pronouns on the internet don’t even know a trans person.

      • raptorattacks@lemmy.world
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        I mean… I care about pronouns, so do most of my trans friends, and I’d like to think we’re all “decent” trans folks. It sucks when someone misgenders you. I would also like the conservatives in my country to stop using trans rights as a wedge issue. I can care about both of these things at the same time.

  • Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
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    What’s with the comments in this post?

    I feel like it was written by people where English is their third fifth language.

    Not knocking it. But even AI sounds more natural.

  • no_name_dev_from_hell@programming.dev
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    As a person who learned English as a 2nd language, I would like it if you could transform the language into gender neutral and end this insanity.

    I still get classic genders wrong, this whole LGBTQ movement is confusing me even more when I’m trying to type/speak.

    • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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      English is gender neutral. You have to deliberately apply a gender to something unless that word is gender specific, like cow or bitch referring to female animals.

      In my brief forays learning other languages one of the more frustrating things to learn is that you can have female refrigerators, male buses, and gender neutral roofs. That is not gender neutrality.

      So I don’t get your issue with genders, seeing as they have nothing to do with English language neutrality and everything to do with how you address a specific individual at their request.

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        7 months ago

        In one of the languages I know, there isn’t a different pronoun for each gender; there’s just one pronoun to indicate ‘they’ in the singular form. Maybe that’s what they meant.

      • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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        In what fucked up language are refrigerators female? They’re obviously male.

      • no_name_dev_from_hell@programming.dev
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        In Persian we don’t have genders for anything. No words, no pronouns, nothing. So having gendered pronouns for me is not gender neutral. I would rather call everyone equally “they” than get into this game of what are you identifying yourself because it makes the language more complex for me.

        • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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          How is it more difficult? If someone’s name is Joe Smith, you would commonly expect to refer to them as Joe. But say they ask you to refer to them as Mr. Smith. Ok, no big deal, right?

          Referring to someone by their preferred pronoun is no different. If Joe wants to be “they”, it’s no big deal.

          The apparent issue is with gender and people’s personal hang ups with it. People change how they address others all the time, formally, informally, professionally, familiar, marriage name change, etc. So all I’m getting here is resistance to what…? LBGTQ people?

      • EvilCartyen@feddit.dk
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        7 months ago

        The thing about grammatical gender is that it doesn’t really have much to do with sex or gender identity. In German, for instance, ‘mädchen’ (girl) is neuter. Gender in French is 98% assigned based on the pronunciation of the three final syllables. In Danish, living things tend to be ‘common gender’ and inanimate objects tend to be ‘neuter’.

        It’d be more accurate to call it ‘noun classes’ than gender.

        • Rozaŭtuno
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          It’d be more accurate to call it ‘noun classes’ than gender.

          And that’s exactly what they’re called in other languages like Hawaiian and Swahili.

          • EvilCartyen@feddit.dk
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            Well, yes. But not for Indo-European languages which is… mostly a historical artifact. But we’re still sticking to teaching traditional grammar using traditional terminology, which is super frustrating. Imagine if you kept teaching maths in a manner which you knew was fundamentally wrong, but it was just too much work to reeducate all maths teachers.

        • Chrobin@discuss.tchncs.de
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          Well, as a German, I wouldn’t agree. Generally, nouns describing men are masculine and nouns describing women are feminine. “Das Mädchen” is just an odd one out because it’s the diminutive (always neuter in German) of “die Maid”, which in turn is feminine.

          Yes, this doesn’t really apply to objects, but it mostly does for people.

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            Sure, there’s some correlation - but when 99% of words in a noun class can’t have a biological gender it seems weird to name it after the 1%.

            • Chrobin@discuss.tchncs.de
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              Well, you’re arguing terminology. But the original commenter’s point was about the association of grammatical gender with gender, and that is definitely a thing in German.

              Der Arzt (Male doctor) -> die Ärztin (female doctor) is an example where the grammatical gender changes with the gender of the person, and that’s almost always the case.

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            7 months ago

            Child - das Kind - grammatical gender: neuter. Referred to in context using the gender-neutral pronoun ‘es’ (it). The pronoun used correlates with the grammatical gender of the noun used, not the gender of the person referred to.

            Eg Ein Kind lacht. Es hat etwas gesehen. (transl: A child laughs. He/she/they saw something.)

            • Chrobin@discuss.tchncs.de
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              I know. But generally, the gender of the noun describing a person correlates with the gender of the person described strongly.

              • SLfgb@feddit.nl
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                7 months ago

                Ok but my point is that when it doesn’t correlate, it becomes clear how grammatical gender is independent from the person’s gender.

                It becomes even clearer when you consider all nouns by definition have a grammatical gender - inanimate objects, abstract concepts, etc, even though the thing described clearly doesn’t have a gender. Eg die Tür ist offen. Ich schliesse sie. (transl.: the door is open. I close it.) ‘Sie’ being the female pronoun used to refer to the grammatically female door.

    • WalrusDragonOnABike [they/them]@reddthat.com
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      Honestly biggest reason I list they/them is just because I don’t think we should gender language in general. Any pronouns are fine, as long as you aren’t trying to be dehumanizing with it. I use they/them a lot when referring to other people and most people don’t care, but a few cissies thought a hissy fit over singular they.

  • sweetpotato@lemmy.ml
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    7 months ago

    I mean what will they make us do next??? Ask us to call them by their names as well?

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    Yeah, kinda true, kinda whataboutism… If calling other people by their chosen pronouns being their biggest problem, is your biggest problem… I’m envious of their life and your life… Thanks, I’m fine, lets not trade lives.

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          dude, chill. it’s like 2am. that’s a good time to chirp like a cricket… 😆

      • KidnappedByKitties@lemm.ee
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        Not OP, but couldn’t “what about other, bigger problems?” be construed as whataboutism?

        Although personally I’d put it closer to ridicule, which I also believe is John Greene’s intent (judging from how he talks about the issue in other social media).

      • h3ndrik@feddit.de
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        That pronouns isn’t a legitimate problem to have, because “what about” more severe problems in life. That Green is implying to trade with the non-issue (or lesser issue) of pronouns.

    • h3ndrik@feddit.de
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      Hmm. >80% of Lemmy voters don’t like the same logic applied in reverse? Is that being hypocrites, or am I missing something?

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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        The problem with your “logic” is that Green never said it was his biggest problem. And if you can find me someone who does say that people not calling others by their correct pronouns is their biggest problem, I would be very surprised.

        I would suggest to you that if this was John Green’s biggest problem, he wouldn’t make a glib tweet about it.

        • h3ndrik@feddit.de
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          Hmmh. But I mean even that also applies in reverse. Also the “pronouns people” don’t say it’s their biggest problem. At least the ones I’ve ever met. So Greens post has the same logical shortcomings as I have.

  • Schwim Dandy@lemm.ee
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    One of john green’s tiny, ridiculous problems is that he has an ego that requires him to share his thoughts via tweets to fix the world.

    His thoughts are like mine, fairly irrelevant, reprehensible to some and an echo chamber to others. At least I have the modesty and humbleness to know that my thoughts belong in the comments section of an unknown social media platform where it will be read by, at most, 20 people.

    • wander1236@sh.itjust.works
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      Someone sharing their thoughts on the platform literally made so people can easily share their thoughts? Absolutely insane thing for John to do, you’re right.

        • WraithGear@lemmy.world
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          If that’s so, then your comments here are worse than irrelevant. I don’t know who the linked person is, but this was a very weird hole you dug for yourself.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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            He’s a novelist who is active on Twitter and I have no idea why this person has such a hate boner for him.

          • Schwim Dandy@lemm.ee
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            What a very deep pit I’ve found myself in. So deep. And dark. How will I ever find my way back from this anonymous comment debacle?

          • VaultBoyNewVegas@lemmy.world
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            He’s a popular author for young adults. Wrote the fault in our stars which was made into a massive movie. Seems like a great guy.

      • Ragdoll X@lemmy.world
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        I call people by their preferred pronouns because this is something that’s completely inconsequential and meaningless to me. But the same kind of argument can be made against you: “So you’re saying taking “no” for an answer is a great difficulty for you?”

        If I traveled to some country where a particular religion - let’s call it X - was the most common, and in X people were ascribed different pronouns based on some rules or rituals, I would call them by their preferred pronouns because as an atheist and moral anti-realist that’s just not something important to me. But if a Christian felt uncomfortable doing so because it goes against their religion their position is just as valid - arguably it’s more valid since in this example the people from X are asking the Christian to change their vocabulary, while the Christian isn’t asking anything of the people from X.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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          Some Christians feel uncomfortable treating people of another skin color as equal to them and say it’s because of their religion. I don’t really give a shit if you think your magic sky god gives you license to be rude.

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            You’re moving the goalpost as treating other races as equals and using different pronouns are not the same thing, but again the argument can be turned against you: Why are you rude towards Christians simply because they prefer to use a different pronoun when referring to you? Is taking “no” for an answer such a great difficulty?

            • KidnappedByKitties@lemm.ee
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              To be fair, you started moving the goalposts by invoking special privilege/motivation for misaddressing people.

              But to answer why I would be rude to christians for misnaming me, is because in my culture it is rude to misname people, and even more so when they’ve offered a good natured correction.

              If you say you’re William, and I call you Shirley, would you defend my right to call you Shirley?

              And why would it be different if The Almighty Bob said to surely call you Shirley?

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              Rude to Christians? They’re the ones who are saying their religion tells them that they can’t call other people what those people want to be called. That is the rude thing. How would you like it if I used a pronoun for you that was not the one you went by? You’d probably think it was rude. How about if I said it was against my religion to call you by the pronoun that fits your gender? You’d probably still think it was rude.

              And it would not be rude to tell them off for doing so.

              That said, in my experience, most trans and nonbinary people are incredibly patient with people like you who refuse to use their pronouns even though you’re being extremely rude to them.

        • IzzyScissor@lemmy.world
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          First, I would ask that ‘Christian’ why they felt the need to travel to a country they felt uncomfortable using the local language in.

          Also, in this scenario they would be asking for something from the people of X: The right to not use their language in their land.

          I know the Christians near me have specific views on when other people should speak their language when they’re on their land.

    • IzzyScissor@lemmy.world
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      He’s building hospitals/maternity wards in Sierra Leone, fighting healthcare companies to reduce the cost of life-saving medications, and creating free educational content as some of his side projects while also being a writer and consistent YouTuber. He’s doing far more than ‘sharing his thoughts via tweets to fix the world’. He’s doing the work too.

      What you’re projecting doesn’t come across as ‘modesty and humbleness’. Feels more like jealousy and bitterness.

      • Schwim Dandy@lemm.ee
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        I know what he’s done because I’ve followed his instructional video channels for years. You know, where he teaches stuff, not just ridicules groups he doesn’t agree with.

        • IzzyScissor@lemmy.world
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          Oh, you’re upset because you’re feeling called out, not because you don’t understand. Sorry to hear that this non-problem is the hill you’ve chosen the die on.

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      Goodbye, one month old account that had nothing to say in the past week until John Green suggested that refusing to use someone’s pronouns is a stupid hill to die on 👋😊

    • doctordevice@lemmy.ca
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      Sounds like you’re just jealous that John Greene has more people that care about him than you do.

      But don’t count yourself short, the votes on this comment of yours suggest more than 20 people read your comment!

    • Neato@ttrpg.network
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      And yet you’re still posting. If you posted on Twitter, no one would give a shit. That’s because people like him and find value in what he has to say. And he’s trying to help people in that tweet.

      If you think you’re posts are so valueless, couldn’t you just take your own advice and shut the fuck up?

      • Schwim Dandy@lemm.ee
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        I could but then I wouldn’t benefit from all this constructive criticism and life pro tips.

      • Schwim Dandy@lemm.ee
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        I didn’t speak about anyone’s rights. Just about egos and the need to share ridicule.

        • magnusrufus@lemmy.world
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          According to you he stepped out of line for having the audacity to post his thoughts on a platform made for posting thoughts. The truth is it’s not his ego that you have an issue with it’s that one topic.

          • Schwim Dandy@lemm.ee
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            Thank you for the keyboard psychology, it’s enlightening. You may, however, need to go back to school for some fine tuning or maybe just wipe the dust off of your magic 8 ball, however.

            It’s his small-minded ridicule on a global platform that I was making comment about. I don’t have an opinion on his chosen topic as it doesn’t effect me in any way.

            • magnusrufus@lemmy.world
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              Uh-huh. You clearly have some emotional beef with either John or the topic. Since twitter is made for anyone to share their random thoughts there is nothing out of line or arrogant of him using the platform for it’s intended purpose. So we can either accept that you are not bright enough to know what twitter is or we can very reasonably assume that what’s really got you worked up is you don’t like people standing up for trans people…or you have that secret beef with John. You want to frame ridiculing bigots as “small minded”. That’s also telling about you. You do have an opinion on the topic. That’s what caught your eye and compelled you to make your nonsense comments.

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      I like how you realized you had to hedge at the end to not look like a ridiculous hypocrite. “What I’m doing here is totally different because my audience is smaller.” You can just delete the comment if you find yourself backed into a corner like that. It’s sunk cost fallacy to go ahead with posting it.

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        Seriously.

        Gay agenda : we exist, please acknowledge our rights as people and treat us with basic human respect.

        Bigots : Can’t be done.

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        That’s the thing. While I don’t use any of the labels myself and I don’t feel personal connection to the movement, it looks to me like there’s the side of 1) reasonable human being and 2) asshole.

        • frickineh@lemmy.world
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          Ohhh, you could’ve just said you’re a total moron in your first comment. Or a pretty pathetic troll, either way. Would’ve saved everyone a lot of effort.

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      Seeing as the movement is equality and not being persecuted, I’m gonna say yes.

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          Because everything you said is wrong and bigoted. So you’re definitely a transphobe, thanks for confirming so we can all block you.

        • webadict@lemmy.world
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          Science seems to prove that gender identity and sex are seperate concepts but is inconclusive about signs of intelligent life in you.

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      That you asked that question like it makes any sort of sense tells us that you already have some specific aspect of the vast array of topics that could be covered under “the LGBTQ movement” in mind. So why don’t you tell us what exactly rustles your jimmies and then we can help you sort if you are a bigot or not.

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      If you’re not “on baord” with the Jewish movement, are you an anti-semite?