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Screenshot of a Tumblr post by indigosfindings:

imagine if someone just like started addressing you as Dipshit, like youre just talking about your day & they say “no way Dipshit, that’s crazy.” and then maybe you say to them that you would prefer not to be addressed as Dipshit & their response is “well in my major metropolitan area ‘Dipshit’ is not considered an insult. im not saying i think youre stupid when i call you Dipshit, i call my mom dipshit all the time” so you say Thats cool but please dont call Me that. and then they just repeat that it’s something they say daily, they call all of their best friends & lovers dipshits & are called dipshit in return. “my grandma calls me dipshit at the dinner table, it doesnt mean anything.” so you say Yes i understand that your friends & grandma arent bothered by being called Dipshit but i am, & i would prefer if you didnt address me as that. and they say “it’s literally not possible for me to stop calling you dipshit, and it’s not reasonable for you to ask me to, dipshit.” anyway this post is about nothing in particular

  • blind3rdeye@lemm.ee
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    16 minutes ago

    Generally being nice to other people is a good thing. It makes the world a nicer place for everyone. And in cases like this, it seems like it is pretty easy to be nice - just don’t call that person ‘dipshit’. That just seems like a very low-cost way to show the person that you respect them.

  • Trashcan@lemmy.world
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    12 minutes ago

    I understand the desire to have people use your pronouns, and as long as one can see what gender you are “presenting”, one should use those pronouns.

    If someone prefers other pronouns, then I’m sorry… Many people (me included) have a hard time remembering names… I wouldn’t have a chance remembering a large set of different pronouns if I can’t even remember the names of that person. A pronoun is a non specific way of addressing someone and a break life saver like “you”…

    To to switch to an all inclusive them/they for everybody seems overreaching.

    If it’s not obvious what pronouns someone prefers, then they shouldn’t be annoyed if someone makes repeatedly mistakes.

    And this makes it hard to distinguish a mistake from an insult…

  • Azzu@lemm.ee
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    15 minutes ago

    I think both is problematic.

    If you know that dipshit is not meant in a harmful way by the other person, then why do you care being called it?

    Same on the other side, if you know the other person wouldn’t like to be called dipshit, why would you call them that?

    I really think they both have problems that they need to address within themselves.

  • Fleur_@aussie.zone
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    1 hour ago

    I mean just get over yourself right. Forcing someone to change their authentic self because it makes you uncomfortable seems antithetical to the trans experience.

    • rosahaj
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      30 minutes ago

      I’d posit that a core part of the trans experience is being able to have authority over how you wish to be refered to, actually.

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      2 hours ago

      My first thought was “queer.” I know people who hate being called queer, but others still call them that anyway because they’re “taking back the word” or something like that

    • Chloé 🥕OP
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      10 hours ago

      the way i interpreted it is that it’s about the “but dude/man/bro is gender neutral!” thing, when someone expresses that they don’t like being referred to using masculine terms

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        9 hours ago

        Edit: this is tangential to the real point of the post, which is just to not call people things they don’t like.

        Bro is harder to argue for sure.

        And man, unless it’s more, “oh man, that’s rough” as an excalamatory rather than “good to see you man” is still gendered.

        But dude has never been gendered. It was mostly used by guys towards guys, but the origins of that usage (rather than dude ranches or the derogatory term related to that) it was applied to everyone. Dudette came along later but was essentially created because the usage was male dominated, not because dude was gendered. It’s one of the rare gender neutral, inclusive slang terms. So much so that when dudette was thrown around, it got rejected as unnecessary, and was sometimes taken offensively. Same with dudina and dudess.

        Mind you, the era where it was mostly an underground slang used in African American circles is murkier, since it was underground, less written at the time, and after it got “borrowed” by white kids lost its popularity there.

        But when surfer culture picked it up, and it spread via movies, female surfers were called dude, and used it the same way as female surfers. They were just such a minority that the association didn’t stick in pop culture because what got seen was Spicoli, and the association with it as being used by guys about guys got absorbed as the primary usage.

        There was no gender division in that origin, nor was there a need for it. There simply wasn’t a female specific alternative to dude.

        Since it is still used inclusively far more than it isn’t, it’s usually better to assume the best rather than the worst. Someone duding someone in a casual and friendly way is unlikely to be using it as a gendered term. It’s more like buddy, or pal, or even mate than something like bro that started gendered and is still predominantly used that way.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          7 hours ago

          Yeah, dude doesn’t really bother me, but the others, as well as “guys,” do. Bro has a natural feminine version: “sis.” So does man: “woman” or “girl.” Likewise for guys: “gals” or “girls.” Making them gender neutral just causes confusion IMO, we should instead just use different terms w/o any gender association, such as “fellow,” “friend,” “home slice/skillet” (the 90s kid in me really wants that to come back), or the others you mentioned.

          But yeah, dude is totally fine as a gender-neutral term due to surfer culture taking it over. But the others are a lot harder sell for me.

          But yes, be excellent to each other. If your female friend wants to be called “bro,” go nuts.

          • rosahaj
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            27 minutes ago

            I’d really like to find a nice, neutral term for referring to people myself, but I haven’t yet found something that feels right for me yet. I’ve never said fellows, since I seem to lean back towards ‘fellas’, which kind of remakes the issue at hand.

            And as cool as homeslice or skillet are, I’m not sure those are quite ‘me’ lol. Guess there’s only one way to find out.

            See ya, homedawg.

          • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Sorry for the mostly tangent, but I guess I’m also more sensitive about terms than I realized.

            My sister got married after dating her husband for about six months. On the day of the wedding, my new BIL started calling me “sis” even though it was the third time we’d met.

            I actually like him quite a lot now and I’m very glad that they’re married, but woof did that rub me the wrong way. I don’t think anyone has ever called me sis before or since with the exception of drunk women in the bathroom (and I have, all told, eight siblings, step siblings, and siblings in law).

          • SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            Not to poke, but the other day at work I walked up to a group of women and just casually said, “hey guys” without even thinking about it. The reaction was absent. It was just a simple response back, “hey how’s it going?”

            After I said it, I was like in my own head, “huh, that was odd.”

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              6 hours ago

              Yeah, it’s more acceptable these days among younger women (i.e. a recent grad at my work says “hey guys” all the time), but not as much with older women. So maybe it’ll eventually be fine for pretty much everyone, but for now, I think it’s still weird, and I’m a little sad that it’s being repurposed (i.e. “going out w/ the guys” isn’t as clear any more).

        • salvaria
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          9 hours ago

          I think that your intentions are good, but you’re missing the point. If someone doesn’t like what you’re calling them, just don’t call them that. I don’t think if someone was called dude and didn’t like it, that they would assume the worst, they would just ask you to please not call them that.

          • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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            9 hours ago

            Sure, I probably should have specified I was going on a tangent rather than commenting on the post directly. Gonna edit that in. Thank you :)

      • TTH4P@lemm.ee
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        10 hours ago

        I do actually call my mom bro, but if like, a friend or coworker said “don’t call me that” I just wouldn’t do it.

        • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          I call my husband bro, and while he is a dude, he’s definitely not my brother (also he calls me bro and I’m a woman ish).

          But yeah, talking to people in a way they dislike is making the world unhappier for no reason.

        • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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          7 hours ago

          Yeah, I definitely see those as contextually non-gendered, but the moment someone asks me not to call them a certain thing… I just don’t call them that again, and apologize if I do. It takes almost 0 effort to use a different word.