I heard at the news that in british schools teachers should avoid the words mum and dad because they're anti-gay.
Is that true?
and do you agree with that?
The British Media have a habit of rolling out these stories every so often to make your typical "Sun" reader fume with rage (you know the one who's proud to have the queen's head on his money), usually it's an EU rulling which usually has no substance at all, or a story about Christmas being cancelled due to offence to other religions.
However, sometimes this does get carried over into society, Kids shouldn't be competive, everyone in a class goes at the speed of the slowest in class so they don't feel left out.
In my opinion it's all bollocks, my kids will sure as feck compete, how do you get on in life with out competitivness(?) and I'm also sure they if they happen to take after their mother in the brains department they will be encouraged and not held back.
I did post something yesterday about equal rights, and I think this relates, it's fine to have equality but not at someone elses expense, so you can't say my mum or dad because someone who doesn't have one will be offended!! fuck off it's all a bunch of tree huggy-wuggy, touchy-feely, hippy bullsh!t
I always go back to British Comedian Stewart Lee on this one. Here's what he had to say about a survey where 84% of people agreed with the statement "It's political correctness gone mad".
Stewart Lee wrote:
It really worries me that 84% of this audience agrees with that statement, because the kind of people that say "political correctness gone mad" are usually using that phrase as a kind of cover action to attack minorities or people that they disagree with. I'm of an age that I can see what a difference political correctness has made. When I was four years old, my grandfather drove me around Birmingham, where the Tories had just fought an election campaign saying, "if you want a nigger for a neighbour, vote Labour," and he drove me around saying, "this is where all the niggers and the coons and the jungle bunnies live." And I remember being at school in the early 80s and my teacher, when he read the register, instead of saying the name of the one asian boy in the class, he would say, "is the black spot in," right? And all these things have gradually been eroded by political correctness, which seems to me to be about an institutionalised politeness at its worst. And if there is some fallout from this, which means that someone in an office might get in trouble one day for saying something that someone was a bit unsure about because they couldn't decide whether it was sexist or homophobic or racist, it's a small price to pay for the massive benefits and improvements in the quality of life for millions of people that political correctness has made. It's a complete lie that allows the right, which basically controls media now, and national politics, to make people on the left who are concerned about the way people are represented look like killjoys. And I'm sick, I'm really sick-- 84% of you in this room that have agreed with this phrase, you're like those people who turn around and go, "you know who the most oppressed minorities in Britain are? White, middle-class men." You're a bunch of idiots.