This is the same kind of PC garbage as people claiming a thrown roll of tape equals fascism.
So as long as one uses PC-words it's OK to deliberately offend people, but if one says something without any intention of offending but uses some word that someone somewhere finds offensive that person should be reprehended.
It's freakin' obvious that the only thing that matters is intention.
That said, it seems really weird for the complaint to come from a guy who's column is itself a bad pun at the expense of a Chinese system of spirituality. "Tao Jones?" Really?
Nope, if form is important but not intention that's the conclusion.Your inference is without merit.
That statement is absurd. It is the responsibility of the party initiating communication to ensure that his message is conveyed in the manner he intends and that the recipient understands it to mean what the speaker intended. If you need to communicate with someone who does not speak your language then the onus is on you to communicate your ideas in manner that will be understood by the other party; the other party cannot be held responsible for his inability to understand you. Similarly, if you draft a letter on a business matter and your ideas are rejected because you wrote the letter in a casual, rather than formal, manner then it is on your head if that letter is ignored for that reason.
If you want to communicate with someone in a manner that does not offend them then you are responsible for not causing offense. The listener is the passive recipient of your communication and cannot be held accountable for being offended by you. The listener is not at fault for being offended, you are at fault for offending him.
The trick comes in when you recognize that some people have over active pain-bodies. Taking and finding offense becomes self rewarding and self reinforcing. There simply isn't a way, except through lack of communication, to avoid offending such individuals. Well, even lack of communication can be construed as offensive sometimes. Maybe there simply isn't a way at all.
When you have to go through state mandated sensitivity training(for everyone, I didn't do anything special) and listen and nod to stories about how offensive groundskeepers are when they idle a dangerous weedeater to watch female pedestrians walk by in close proximity to where they are working you start to understand some people are just looking for trouble wherever they can find it.
Not even the author of the WSJ article called it racist. He did that journobabble thing where he "asked the question" 'is this racist?' in the title, but didn't actually say it was racist himself. He said that it was cringeworthy and extremely stereotypical, and pondered whether racism will ever disappear as long as stereotypes like this continue to "dehumanise" certain peoples.
"Is your font racist?" is clearly an attention grabbing headline.
That was hardly racial in character, though, and while it applied to East Germans as much as to Poles or Russians, it did not apply to Polish-Americans or Russian-Americans. If anything, the difference posed was an Atlantic one, the Soviet Bloc becoming the new incarnation of European tyranny to follow Hanoverian Britain, Bourbon France, Hohenzollern Germany and the Third Reich, and Western Europe an Easterly outpost of American democracy.You could probably dig up quite a lot of anti-Russian sentiment during the Cold War times, especially since the Soviet Union was often referred to as "Russia". See also the cartoon characters Boris Badenoff, Natasha Fatale, and, of course, Larry Wolff's Inventing Eastern Europe.
I basically agree with what BvBPL said, but would add that intent is important in determining if the speaker is a racist, or if he is "merely" saying racially offensive things. However, this distinction is far too subtle for a lot of people in this thread to understand.
To be clear, "intent" is completely irrelevant in determining whether something is offensive or not. If I start a sentence with "no offence, but...", or "I'm not being racist, but...", you can guarantee that what I'm about to say is offensive and/or racist, irrespective of my pleadings otherwise. Not intending offence or not intending racism absolutely does not make you immune somehow to accusations of offensiveness or racism. Anyone saying otherwise is stupid and wrong. No offence intended, of course.
No offence intended here luiz - sincerely, what I am about to say is not intended to offend you, rather, I only wish to state my opinion - but this is the most immature thing you have ever posted. You're an ultra-privileged, spoilt, poor-little-rich-kid knowitall, who complains about the most mundane things that your government does incessantly, yet spectacularly fails to see the irony of your posts in this very thread. All of this coming from a guy who once argued vehemently (and hilariously) that throwing a roll of tape was a sign of fascism coming to Brazil is really the icing on the cake. Threads like this are a constant reminder of why I can never take you seriously.Intent is of course the only thing that matters, and it's mind-bogglingly stupid to say otherwise. It's not about saying "No offense intended but..." or "I'm not racist but...", it's about judging what was said by what was meant, not by our own biases.
For instance, the word "criollo" in Spanish America usually means something local to the country. In Brazil the word "crioulo", which has the same origin and sounds just like the spanish counterpart, came to be an ugly racial slur, the same as the "n-word" in the US. So once a recently arrived peruvian student from college invited a bunch of friends to his house and announced he would prepare a "criollo dish". Some of the people invited were black. Were they offended by the use of such a racially-charged word? Of course not, because they aren't morons and realized the peruvian guy meant no offense, he was simply using the word as it is used in his country.
Not intending offense and not intending racism should absolutely make someone immune from accusations of racism. Words are just conventions and in themselves are completely harmless. I thought this was a tautology but apparently it's a contentious matter with the PC Gestapo.
Taken at face value, this would seem to suggest that it is wholly unnecessary to contemplate the possible consequences of ones actions, as long as your preferred consequences are good. We might say that, for example, a drunk-driver rarely intends to smear somebody across the pavement, so it's unreasonable to criticise somebody for drunk driving.Intent is of course the only thing that matters, and it's mind-bogglingly stupid to say otherwise.
I don't really think this describes the vast majority of people. In other words, for the sake of a tiny minority of people who, by your description, have psychological issues that are best handled by trained professionals, we shouldn't just wholesale abandon the policy of trying to minimise the amount of offence we cause to other people. You're throwing the baby out with the bathwater: because it is pretty much impossible to go your entire life without offending someone, we shouldn't even try to not offend people at all. Instead, we should do away with considering how other people might react to what we're saying, and only focus on our intent: Intent is the only thing that matters, in this new logic that luiz is creating.
But that's clearly nonsense.
Well in that case I misinterpreted your post - I think we basically agree. Boo hoo, no more "Chop Suey" font, company removes font from website, everybody gets on with their lives. The best outcome, right? I don't think anyone will mourn the loss of that font, least of all the people involved here.I'm actually not saying we should try not to offend. My baby is firmly in his little shower chair and the temperature is luke-warm. I believe I am reading luiz differently than you and I think that difference lies in context.
There are a tiny majority of people, as you put it, that are going to find something wrong with everything. There is a larger minority of people that find offense in minor things erratically. There are more people yet who are offended only rarely. The problem lies with mass communication and advertising. There is no way at all you are going to come out with messaging that everyone is going to like. Recognizing that "pleasing all of the people all of the time" is an unrealistic goal, which is I believe the intent here, is not nonsense. There is legitimate discussion to be had in attempting to draw the line between when something is widely offensive and needs correcting and when instead we should recognize that the offended person should probably be referred to counseling instead of buttressed.
Communication's burden lies most heavily on the sender, but indeed, it's never wholly a one-way street. To assert that earnestly is to be forever trapped, again without context, in a 200 level Communication Studies textbook.
No offence intended here luiz - sincerely, what I am about to say is not intended to offend you, rather, I only wish to state my opinion - but this is the most immature thing you have ever posted. You're an ultra-privileged, spoilt, poor-little-rich-kid knowitall, who complains about the most mundane things that your government does incessantly, yet spectacularly fails to see the irony of your posts in this very thread. All of this coming from a guy who once argued vehemently (and hilariously) that throwing a roll of tape was a sign of fascism coming to Brazil is really the icing on the cake. Threads like this are a constant reminder of why I can never take you seriously.
Feel free to judge whether I truly intended to offend you or not. But know that I absolutely did not intend any offence, and think that you would be hypersensitive to treat it as an offensive post. I'm just stating my opinion; feel free to call the mods AKA THOUGHT POLICE if you wish.
There are two big differences here:Taken at face value, this would seem to suggest that it is wholly unnecessary to contemplate the possible consequences of ones actions, as long as your preferred consequences are good. We might say that, for example, a drunk-driver rarely intends to smear somebody across the pavement, so it's unreasonable to criticise somebody for drunk driving.
Well, that's rather the point, isn't it: that we have a responsibility to inform ourselves about the possible consequence of our actions, rather than simply blundering along on a string of good intentions. The absence of intent to harm is not an excuse for being reckless, pig-ignorant, or self-centred.There are two big differences here:
-The drunk driver knows his actions might lead to death of others.