Sorry, I know I said I'd shut up, but I thought I'd add my comments to David's post-scripts...
Every country, people and indeed person has something in their past that they'd rather not have done. In most personal cases, it may be an argument, or hitting something, or not returning something they "borrowed". In the cases of countries, it tends to be rather larger, from slave trading to genocide.
However how long do you allow guilt and focussing on it to continue? Northern Ireland are still fighting a minor skirmish on the fringe of European politics that happened hundreds of years ago. Absolutely no-one alive today, nor anyone they knew, was there. So what on
Earth is the point of continuing that grudge? The Middle East and parts of South-Eastern Europe are still fighting battles that started millennia ago!
That's not quite the same as the situation here regarding connotations of a word which is still in use - in the same connotation - by some people in some areas. I, personally, can understand why an American audience would probably not want it used, yet I hear it used regularly in music and films that are massively popular in both the UK and US. What's acceptable and what isn't? My personal opinion is that it is far better used in a historical and accurate context than it is being used as an "edgy" phrase by a rapper who has never been near the Bronx or Southern States. As another example, would you cut that word out of a new version of To Kill a Mocking Bird? In that instance the way the word is used is the entire and whole point of the story.
"Political Correctness", in the context I believe most people would use it, is people banning words and phrases without even waiting for someone to be offended by it. I'm sure the US is the same as the UK in that we both have "professional offendees", who are offended by everything, regardless of context, and we also probably have the same group of people who will ban things/remove things because they "might" offend someone, rather than because it does. The latter is the most common cause of complaint in this country.
I work with a Muslim and a Sikh, both of whom celebrate Christmas as an excuse to party and give presents... My section also celebrated Diwali this year, but we didn't fast for Ramadan. Yet Birmingham City Council, two years ago, banned all reference to "Christmas", instead referring to "Winterval" and "Happy Holidays", just on the off chance that someone might complain. That's what people complain about. I don't think the use or otherwise of Guy Gibson's dog's name in a film is "political correctness", however trying to wipe it from history is both unnecessary and undesirable - however people also need to know and understand the context of
why Gibson named his dog that.
We, as humanity, have an exceptionally bad habit of not learning from history because we twist it to be what we want rather than what it really was. That's what I, personally, object strongly to. Why should I, or anyone reading this, be blamed for something I or they neither had any part of, nor any control over?
Rant over.
Oi. SADT. Out of my Dark Corner. I need to do some maintenance on the site... :d
Ian P.
(
http://www.ianpsdarkcorner.co.uk)