Seasons
This is a forum or general chit-chat, small talk, a "hey, how ya doing?" and such. Or hell, get crazy deep on something. Whatever you like.
Posts 457 - 468 of 6,170
Posts 457 - 468 of 6,170
jbryanc
23 years ago
23 years ago
Maybe we are even more politcally correct up here in Canada. For the last several years what used to be the society for the retarded, mentally disabled, whatever, has moved through all the phases of 'challenged' 'differently abled' until they arrive at "Association for Community Living".
STRMKirby
23 years ago
23 years ago
Well retard means slow in italian, so I guess that's not politically correct. I guess the most correct way to call them is whatever their disease is(such as Down Syndrome victim or something).
Mr. Crab
23 years ago
23 years ago
Yes, "slow" is exact;y what it means. Which seems more politically correct to me than "incapable". But the definition of mental retardation has nothing to do with any specific ailment, it's just showing up in the lowest standard deviation on the IQ bell curve.
Butterfly Dream
23 years ago
23 years ago
It depends on the way words are used in conversation. Kids will call each other "retard" or say "That is so retarded." Use the word "victim" around certain people, too, and you will get an earful.
I wasn't even supposed to call my clients "clients" but "consumers."
I wasn't even supposed to call my clients "clients" but "consumers."
Shadyman
23 years ago
23 years ago
Why not? LOL
"I can't come to dinner honey cause I have another client coming in"
"I can't come to dinner honey cause I have another client coming in"
Butterfly Dream
23 years ago
23 years ago
"Consumer" was an eerily appropriate term, because taking care of them really does consume you.
Mr. Crab
23 years ago
23 years ago
Well, *were* they clients? Were they paying you for a service? Or were they merely consuming public funds?
I can see why someone would object to being called a victim. Calling someone a victim isn't far off from calling them a mark. Unless they really are victims -- casualties of the acts of others who could not reasonably be expected to have prevented it.
I can see why someone would object to being called a victim. Calling someone a victim isn't far off from calling them a mark. Unless they really are victims -- casualties of the acts of others who could not reasonably be expected to have prevented it.
Eugene Meltzner
23 years ago
23 years ago
In another language, French I think, it means late. When I was studying in Israel we had a lot of fun with that whenever a student was late getting on the bus. We also had fun with the technical definition of "moron" which is someone with the mental capacity of a 7-12 year old. So if you call a six-year-old a moron, it's actually a compliment.
Mr. Crab, I haven't forgotten your discussion, I just haven't been alert enough to think hard when I've been at home and online.
Mr. Crab, I haven't forgotten your discussion, I just haven't been alert enough to think hard when I've been at home and online.
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