The privilege-as-bias discussion has been had a few times, including in the context of gendered pronouns.
Which is no reason not to have it again, I suppose, but I encourage you to think carefully before doing so about your strategy for progressing it further than previous incarnations have, so we don’t keep going ’round the same mulberry bush.
Unrelatedly, tradition isn’t a bad thing to appeal to when it comes to the meaning of words, or really to any activity that depends on a community’s predictable adherence to conventions.
Why do we drive on the right side of the road in the U.S. rather than the left, and stop at red lights and go at green lights rather than vice-versa, and use “hello” to greet people rather than “ahoy” or “shoelace”? Basically, tradition.
Would it be better to switch? Well, maybe. But for at least some of those things, it’s better only if we all switch at once, which is difficult to manage.
The privilege-as-bias discussion has been had a few times, including in the context of gendered pronouns.
Which is no reason not to have it again, I suppose, but I encourage you to think carefully before doing so about your strategy for progressing it further than previous incarnations have, so we don’t keep going ’round the same mulberry bush.
Unrelatedly, tradition isn’t a bad thing to appeal to when it comes to the meaning of words, or really to any activity that depends on a community’s predictable adherence to conventions.
Why do we drive on the right side of the road in the U.S. rather than the left, and stop at red lights and go at green lights rather than vice-versa, and use “hello” to greet people rather than “ahoy” or “shoelace”? Basically, tradition.
Would it be better to switch? Well, maybe. But for at least some of those things, it’s better only if we all switch at once, which is difficult to manage.