Why not just propose one bill listing all established nouns that are in practicality gender-neutral but have masculine origins, such as fisherman, with a disclaimer that clarifies that all state law in reference to said terms are required to be administered and implemented with a gender-neutral disposition?
One of the unexpected blessings that come with coming out of the closet is that nobody expects me to prove my masculinity anymore.
Then again, you straight guys don't have to either. When you do, it makes you intolerable to be around. A bill like this is not a threat to your manhood. Your manhood is bullshit anyway. What is it, other than a Y chromosome, a cock and two testicles? The other anatomical facts about you don't dictate your behavior. Does the fact that my eyes are blue mean that I must be more social than hazel-eyed people? Does the length of my femurs determine if i should be better at doing taxes or at cooking? What about the shape if the instep of my foot-does that indicate that i have to be into monster trucks and cheap beer?
So why should your dick?
And why does the presence or absence of a dick mean that you should be called anything in particular in legal documents?
Are short people to be referred to in all legal proceedings as "The Short Person Smith" or "The Untall Person Jones"? Should your occupation title be different if you are fat or thin? And if you are hairy or smooth, should that fact be noted every time someone discusses you in a governmental context?
Absurd, huh? So is defining someone on the basis of gender. Look, I have a penis too. And I rally don't give a shit if anyone makes note of this fact or not. Outside of the guy I'm fucking, its nobody's fucking business. And it sure as shit isn't the government's.
You know what are some good job titles for women? President. Governor. Mayor. Senator. CEO. CFO. Executive Director. Soldier. Firefighter. Sailor. Doctor. Attorney. Pipe Fitter. Foreperson.
And you know what? Your dick doesn't shrink if you call them those things.
It's worse in Spanish, TT. Generic nonhuman nouns are designated male or female, whether or not the object in question has an actual verifiable gender (e.g. tigers are always male), or it's just a part of something with a verifiable gender (e.g. the hand is always female), or it's inanimate (e.g. the table is always female).
And, of course, the moon is female and the sun is male, but you could have guessed that.
And if you're learning Spanish in school, you have to memorize all this junk.
This is all just so that you know whether to use "la" or "el," "las" or "los," "ellas" or "ellos," or, better yet, so that you know whether the action verb referring to the object(s) should end in an "a" or an "o."
I don't know about non-Romance languages other than English, but we have pretty easy with English when it comes to gender. I don't think there's anything the Jeanne Kohl-Welles of Spain and Latin America can do.
If I see a person walking in the distance
who could be male or female, I could say,
"Look at that person. I wonder if they know where they're going", that would be incorrect because "they" is plural. If I replace "they" with "he" then I'm assuming
its a dude. (by the way, is it ok to call females "dudes"?) But what if its a broad?
We need a new word that is the plural of
he/she. I suppose "it" would work, as in,
"I'm not sure if it's a boy or a girl...(sounds
ok so far)..."I wonder if it knows where it's
going?" ...a bit too impersonal.
@3 There's a staff of lawyers, called the code reviser's office, that handles any changes ordered by the legislature. Once a change has proposed, the office writes up a new version of the law with the new wording. The new wording is provided to the legislature before they even vote on the bill.
These changes have already been made, they just need final approval.
America does not have an official language. English is commonly used, but that is by accident and not design.
We represent something very strange as far as nations go. Other states are defined by nationality-A Hungarian born in Romania will always be called Hungarian, even if his family has been there since the 1600's. A Turk born in Bulgaria will always be a Turk by nationality. In America, even if your parents were born in Russia, you are an American by nationality if you were born here.
We are not members of the Commonwealth. There has been talk of a "special relationship" with Britain,. but that's only been acknowledged since WW2, and is only used when it's politically expedient for the President of the time. Clinton saw Blair as an ideological ally who could help him shore up support in his own country for his very conservative platform within the Democratic Party. Prior to that, we had not heard the term since FDR, who used the term to gain support for the US' entry into the war. Since Bush and Blair both left office, we haven't heard the term again, and probably won't until there's another war we need British support for. In all reality, thhe special relationship is mythology.
So is the concept that we are shackled to tradition in ways that countrie belonging to La Francophonie, the Commonwealth, or the Ibero-American Summit. We dont belong to an equivalent of the EU, which would define us in terms of a North American identity. We are not, and will never be, tied down by tradition based upon language,the colonial past, or geography.
We are, in a word, free. Free to invent ourselves in any way we choose. Free to become whatever country we would like to be. And I would like us to be a country where the only barrier to success is merit. A nation that does not give unfair advantage based upon to whom one was born, or where, or with what gender or what sexuality. A land where the word freedom is spoken in many languages, in a thousand dialects, and in all such cases it is understood perfectly.
I want equality across the board for every American. A totally flat playing field, one in which the sweat on your brow and the blisters on your hands, as well as the brilliance of your ideas, is what determines how far you will go in life. Women sweat as hard as we do. They work every bit as hard as we do. And their ideas are just as brilliant. There is no reason why they should not be allowed to achieve whatever they can in free competition as equal players in a just society.
Tradition be damned. In America, our religion is the future, not the past.
Once the right wingers stop ranting about political correctness they can explain again why we should call torture an "enhanced interrogation technique".
When I was a kid, we had another word we used before people started calling everything "politically correct'.
Back then, we called it "polite".
I do miss the days when other people being polite wasn't something you scorned or ridiculed. You know, in some cultures, being polite is regarded as a positive trait. I guess for a lot of people, being an asshole is a better one.
Maybe we should name every "Pat" and be done with it?
Then again, you straight guys don't have to either. When you do, it makes you intolerable to be around. A bill like this is not a threat to your manhood. Your manhood is bullshit anyway. What is it, other than a Y chromosome, a cock and two testicles? The other anatomical facts about you don't dictate your behavior. Does the fact that my eyes are blue mean that I must be more social than hazel-eyed people? Does the length of my femurs determine if i should be better at doing taxes or at cooking? What about the shape if the instep of my foot-does that indicate that i have to be into monster trucks and cheap beer?
So why should your dick?
And why does the presence or absence of a dick mean that you should be called anything in particular in legal documents?
Are short people to be referred to in all legal proceedings as "The Short Person Smith" or "The Untall Person Jones"? Should your occupation title be different if you are fat or thin? And if you are hairy or smooth, should that fact be noted every time someone discusses you in a governmental context?
Absurd, huh? So is defining someone on the basis of gender. Look, I have a penis too. And I rally don't give a shit if anyone makes note of this fact or not. Outside of the guy I'm fucking, its nobody's fucking business. And it sure as shit isn't the government's.
You know what are some good job titles for women? President. Governor. Mayor. Senator. CEO. CFO. Executive Director. Soldier. Firefighter. Sailor. Doctor. Attorney. Pipe Fitter. Foreperson.
And you know what? Your dick doesn't shrink if you call them those things.
And, of course, the moon is female and the sun is male, but you could have guessed that.
And if you're learning Spanish in school, you have to memorize all this junk.
This is all just so that you know whether to use "la" or "el," "las" or "los," "ellas" or "ellos," or, better yet, so that you know whether the action verb referring to the object(s) should end in an "a" or an "o."
I don't know about non-Romance languages other than English, but we have pretty easy with English when it comes to gender. I don't think there's anything the Jeanne Kohl-Welles of Spain and Latin America can do.
As @10 says, other languages make it much more difficult. English, however, allows us to right this wrong. So let's fucking do it already.
who could be male or female, I could say,
"Look at that person. I wonder if they know where they're going", that would be incorrect because "they" is plural. If I replace "they" with "he" then I'm assuming
its a dude. (by the way, is it ok to call females "dudes"?) But what if its a broad?
We need a new word that is the plural of
he/she. I suppose "it" would work, as in,
"I'm not sure if it's a boy or a girl...(sounds
ok so far)..."I wonder if it knows where it's
going?" ...a bit too impersonal.
These changes have already been made, they just need final approval.
America does not have an official language. English is commonly used, but that is by accident and not design.
We represent something very strange as far as nations go. Other states are defined by nationality-A Hungarian born in Romania will always be called Hungarian, even if his family has been there since the 1600's. A Turk born in Bulgaria will always be a Turk by nationality. In America, even if your parents were born in Russia, you are an American by nationality if you were born here.
We are not members of the Commonwealth. There has been talk of a "special relationship" with Britain,. but that's only been acknowledged since WW2, and is only used when it's politically expedient for the President of the time. Clinton saw Blair as an ideological ally who could help him shore up support in his own country for his very conservative platform within the Democratic Party. Prior to that, we had not heard the term since FDR, who used the term to gain support for the US' entry into the war. Since Bush and Blair both left office, we haven't heard the term again, and probably won't until there's another war we need British support for. In all reality, thhe special relationship is mythology.
So is the concept that we are shackled to tradition in ways that countrie belonging to La Francophonie, the Commonwealth, or the Ibero-American Summit. We dont belong to an equivalent of the EU, which would define us in terms of a North American identity. We are not, and will never be, tied down by tradition based upon language,the colonial past, or geography.
We are, in a word, free. Free to invent ourselves in any way we choose. Free to become whatever country we would like to be. And I would like us to be a country where the only barrier to success is merit. A nation that does not give unfair advantage based upon to whom one was born, or where, or with what gender or what sexuality. A land where the word freedom is spoken in many languages, in a thousand dialects, and in all such cases it is understood perfectly.
I want equality across the board for every American. A totally flat playing field, one in which the sweat on your brow and the blisters on your hands, as well as the brilliance of your ideas, is what determines how far you will go in life. Women sweat as hard as we do. They work every bit as hard as we do. And their ideas are just as brilliant. There is no reason why they should not be allowed to achieve whatever they can in free competition as equal players in a just society.
Tradition be damned. In America, our religion is the future, not the past.
Thanks for the high school international studies lesson. How about ending affirmative action, especially against Asian students at our universities?
'man' can refer to male, but also refers to the human race.
'man'kind.
it has a gender neutral meaning.
English Comprehension Fail.
poor Jeanne has pussy-whipped herself, it seems....
Back then, we called it "polite".
I do miss the days when other people being polite wasn't something you scorned or ridiculed. You know, in some cultures, being polite is regarded as a positive trait. I guess for a lot of people, being an asshole is a better one.
Well, you are what you eat, assholes.