The topic of discussion for this
Constitution Monday comes from the First Amendment to the United States
Constitution, which lists five different freedoms: religion, speech, press,
assembly, and petition the government. Tonight, I will discuss the second
freedom: “Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech….”
The American Left has been changing
the meaning of words for many years. The first meaning that I remember being
changed is for the word gay. Once upon a time many years ago, this word
meant lighthearted and carefree, but today most people recognize that it refers
to homosexuals, usually males. Leftists took a perfectly good word and changed
its meaning.
I next became aware of the leftists
changing of words was when I learned that I should not use the term illegal
aliens, which refers to people who enter our nation illegally. Some years
ago, the leftists told us that we should not use that definition because “no
one is illegal.” We were told by the grammar police that we should use the term
undocumented immigrant. Both definitions refer to the same group of
people, but the first classification is a more accurate one. The word alien refers
to a person who “belongs to a foreign country or nation.” The word illegal means
something that is “forbidden by law.” So, the term illegal alien describes
someone from a foreign country or nation who entered our country against the
laws of the nation.
Now the grammar police are after us to
change our words again. This time they are not just changing the meaning or
telling us to use different words. They are eliminating words and telling us
that we cannot use them because they are racist.
David Harsanyi at The Daily Signal said that “Attempting to dictate what words we use is another way to
exert power over how we think.” The laws of the land do not attempt to control
our thoughts, but people who desire control over us do not want us to think
freely. It seems that permission to use certain words depends on who is saying
them.
Harsanyi explained that President Donald
Trump used a “deeply racist” word when he described the rioters in Minneapolis as
“thugs.” He reminded us that President
Barack Obama used the same term when speaking about the rioters in Baltimore in
2015. Harsanyi explained that the word does not have a racist connotation
because it means “violent person, especially a criminal” and does not refer to
any race. The word is perfectly good to describe rioters no matter their race.
He admits that there are most likely some rioters who are not violent or
criminal, but who are merely looters – defined as “people who steal
goods during a riot” – another word that is considered to be racist.
The recent assaults on the English
language have consisted largely of euphemisms and pseudoscientific gibberish
meant to obscure objective truths – “cisgender,” “heteronormativity” and so on.
Now, we’re at the stage of the revolution where completely inoffensive and
serviceable words are branded problematic.
CNN, for instance, recently pulled
together its own list of words and phrases with racist connotations that have
helped bolster systemic racism in America.
Unsuspecting citizens, the piece explains,
may not even be aware they are engaging in this linguistic bigotry, because
most words are “so entrenched that Americans don’t think twice about using
them. But some of these terms are directly rooted in the nation’s history with
chattel slavery. Others now evoke racist notions about Black people.”
What are some of the words that unsuspecting
bigots might use? Leftists tell us that we should no longer use the word master
– as in master bedroom or to describe a golf tournament – or slave
because both words are reminders of the institution of slavery – a
worldwide problem that continues in some nations today. Other words that we
should not use are peanut gallery, eenie meenie miney moe, gyp, and no
can do. It seems that peanut gallery – a term claimed to be “directly
rooted” in the history of our nation – refers to the “back sections of theaters”
where “poor and black Americans were relegated.” This cliché was not used until
after the Civil War had been fought and won to free the slaves. Harsanyi
explained why master is a good word.
We should feel no guilt using the word ‘master.’
Her performance was masterful. She mastered her instrument. The score was a
masterpiece. The composer was a mastermind.
Even CNN concedes that “while it’s unclear
whether the term is rooted in American slavery on plantations, it evokes that
history.”
It’s not unclear, at all. The etymology of
the word “master” is from the Old English and rooted in the Latin “magister,”
which means “chief, director, teacher, or boss.” “Master’s” degrees were first
given to university teachers in the 14th century in Europe.
Until a few months ago, the “master
bedroom” evoked visions of the larger bedrooms, and the Masters Tournament
evoked images of golfing legends like Tiger Woods, winner of four titles.
Simply because the Nazis used the word “master”
in their pseudoscientific racial theories – not in the 1840s, but in 1940s –
doesn’t mean I am offended by the postmaster general. We’re grown-ups here, and
we can comprehend context.
Or we used to be.
I consider myself to be an adult and
capable of choosing my own words. I do not care if illegal aliens are embarrassed
by this definition. If they do, they can go back to their country of origin
and/or do what is necessary to become legal immigrants. I will continue to use
the word master in
describing my bedroom or in any other way that I choose. I will use the words thugs
and looters to describe people who fit those definitions. I will
even continue to use the phrase eenie meenie miney moe at times when I
am unsure of a decision. I encourage all my readers to stand tall against the
grammar police, or we will lose our freedom of speech.
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