Guest guest Posted December 22, 2001 Report Share Posted December 22, 2001 Sometimes it is easier to see something by analogy. If we were practicing a variety of traditional african medicines, say ethiopian, Zimbabwean and somalian, would it be prudent to call our field Traditional Negro Medicine? Just because we are comfortable with the term. Don't get me wrong. I am a free speech advocate. I am against hate speech laws. This isn't about regulation, it is about what is a wise course of action for widespread popular acceptance. Some organizations already characterize our profession as careless with regard to several "liberal" issues, such as endangered species, regulation of toxic and dangerous materials, etc. Our field is overrepresented by white people already, for a variety of reasons. And all the power in the field is held by white people. Are we also to be labeled as insensitive to ethnic minorities. I do not think this issue can be dismissed so lightly. -- , FAX: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 2001 Report Share Posted December 22, 2001 > I do not think > this issue can be dismissed so lightly. Sigh. The terms we use to describe each other change like the seasons. I have a problem with the new American religion of political correctness, its all about appearances, or terms. How superficial can we get? Two people die secondary to internal bleeding caused by a knife wound to the abdomen. One passes away stabbed and robbed in a back alley, the other dies on the operating table. What's the difference? They both died of the same thing, yet the intent of the person yielding the knife was quite different. When I yield a term such as OM, I'm thinking of a magical, flexible, efficacious gift from another culture that has given me a career path as well as a spiritual one. OM to me is AUM, the sound of God that echoes through the universe. Is that offensive to anybody? Sorry. -- Al Stone L.Ac. <AlStone http://www.BeyondWellBeing.com Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 2001 Report Share Posted December 22, 2001 , Al Stone <alstone@b...> wrote: > > The terms we use to describe each other change like the seasons. This is so untrue. there are certainly fluxes backand forth with some terms, but that does not mean it always a two way street. However, many pejorative terms have permanently left the speech of polite people. I don't need to name the terms previously applied to jews, blacks, italians, irish, etc. Just because one is unaware of the longstanding offense taken to a term doesn't justify its continued use, for whatever rationalization one has come up with. I have > a problem with the new American religion of political correctness, its > all about appearances, or terms. It is about oppression of a minority group through the use of language, not about appearances. I oppose laws in this area, but I merely think we alienate a large segment of our potential supporters by our callousness in this and other areas of concern. The same people who get riled by the term oriental are often open to alternative healthcare in principle. And those people will only find it more offensive to dismiss their concerns because one has conjured up some mystical, romantic interpretation of a term that was generally applied with derision throughout european and american history. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 2001 Report Share Posted December 22, 2001 No offense, Al. There are personal definitions, legal ones, academic ones, and historically accurate ones. At each level of human existence, there are appropriate, personal, and public meanings of terms. On Saturday, December 22, 2001, at 11:02 AM, Al Stone wrote: > > . > > When I yield a term such as OM, I'm thinking of a magical, flexible, > efficacious gift from another culture that has given me a career path as > well as a spiritual one. > > OM to me is AUM, the sound of God that echoes through the universe. > > Is that offensive to anybody? > > Sorry. > > -- > Al Stone L.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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