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8 votes
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Lambda Legal condemns anti-LGBTQ+ US executive orders, vows legal action: “We’ll see you in court”
17 votes -
TikTok is coming back online after US President-elect Donald Trump pledged to restore it
27 votes -
TikTok makes app unavailable for US users ahead of ban
54 votes -
Donald Trump says he'll 'likely' give TikTok a ninety-day extension to avoid US ban
19 votes -
US Supreme Court unanimously backs law banning TikTok if it’s not sold by its Chinese parent company
48 votes -
US President Joe Biden won't enforce TikTok ban
31 votes -
US gunman shot dead nine years after opening fire on diner over ‘Pizzagate’ conspiracy
22 votes -
New York starts enforcing $15 broadband law that ISPs tried to kill
51 votes -
Supreme Court seems ready to back Texas law limiting access to pornography
20 votes -
Texas sues Allstate Insurance over its collection of driver data
26 votes -
The US government stopped enforcing Robinson-Patman and destroyed independent grocery stores
33 votes -
California fire facts
26 votes -
US introduces additional export restrictions on AI-chips
14 votes -
TikTok says it plans to shut down site for US unless Supreme Court strikes down law forcing it to sell
38 votes -
What robotaxis brought San Francisco
13 votes -
Why fire hydrants ran dry as wildfires tore through Los Angeles
23 votes -
US based The Heritage Foundation plans to ‘identify and target’ Wikipedia editors
81 votes -
Massachusetts bill could fully legalize kei cars and override RMV ban
58 votes -
Squabble grows as US government holds back 2024 funding from world anti-doping watchdog WADA
9 votes -
New California law prohibits using AI as basis to deny insurance claims
51 votes -
California will require insurance companies to offer coverage in wildfire zones
25 votes -
The Jimmy Carter administration in the US played an important role in saving the ozone layer for the world
20 votes -
Pornhub is now blocked in almost all of the US South
53 votes -
More US telcos confirm Salt Typhoon breaches as White House weighs in
20 votes -
The return of non-PC language in the US mainstream
I don't know how appropriate this topic will be or how uncomfortable some users will be addressing it. But I noticed a switch online in the usage of previously determined slurs. When I was a child...
I don't know how appropriate this topic will be or how uncomfortable some users will be addressing it. But I noticed a switch online in the usage of previously determined slurs.
When I was a child in the '00s, it was pretty common for people to say the "r-word" as well as refer to things as "gay" whenever they meant stupid or bad. I remember ad campaigns to stop the latter from occurring (one commercial featuring Hillary Duff and another featuring Wanda Sykes). But both of those things went away as we got deeper into the 2010s.
The Obama and, especially, the Trump years were marked by increased progressive language. I do think the turn was in 2016 when using these terms became widely unacceptable. Even two years earlier the hit song Fancy by Iggy Azalea featuring Charli XCX contained the lyric: "That my flow r***** each beat dear, departed."
I think a lot of the hyper-political correctness of 2016 and onwards was a response to the Trump presidency. I think people on the progressive left felt the need to be hyper-vigilant about that. Once the Biden administration happened these rigid beliefs began to relax.
I'll use a few examples of this shift involving a network TV show, to take this conversation into a more concrete real world. Saturday Night Live.
Shane Gillis, a very non politically correct comedian was hired as part of the cast of SNL in 2019. Lorne Michaels hired him to appeal to a more conservative crowd or to at least not be so catering to its liberal demographic. Gillis, who is largely not a conservative, was caught in a scandal following his casting news. Clips from his podcast surfaced of him making fun of Asians and mocking their accents. Gillis was shortly fired.
Fast forward to this year: Shane Gillis hosts SNL. Not only that, in his opening monologue he says the r-word.
Another SNL adjacent example. Matt Healy, lead singer of the 1975, appeared on The Adam Friedland Show podcast. The podcast, originally called Cumtown, is known for its non-PC humor. Healy participated in jokes making fun of Ice Spice and laughed at the host's more racy humor. Scandal surrounded Healy, who was dating Swift at the time, and he was essentially "canceled." Except, he was immediately the musical guest on SNL not long after the scandal (they were the musical spot for Jenna Ortega's episode). If this was 2019, The 1975 likely would not have been invited to be the musical guests, and/or the host of the episode (in this case Ortega) would have been pressured by her PR team to make some sort of post disavowing their inclusion. This didn't happen. In fact this year Jenna Ortega criticized political correctness herself
The last SNL example I wanted to give was in Ariana Grande's recent episode a joke was included where Grande calls someone a pathetic little gay guy, followed by her saying "I meant gay as in stupid and bad" which was very well received on all corners of the internet.
So what happened here? My perception might be warped since in late 2022 I began using the subreddits r/redscarepod and r/theadamfriedlandshow where this type of humor and the usage of these terms was already normal. So it was a little odd to me when these began gaining steam in the outside world.
If it really was just a response to Biden's presidency I feel like we would now be returning to the hyper-political correctness of the 2010s during Trump's administration. But that doesn't seem to be happening.
Maybe political correctness fell out of style, and that will be the case for another five to ten years when it becomes fashionable again.
43 votes -
More liquor stores in Oakland California are selling produce, thanks to Saba Grocers and City tax initiative (2021)
17 votes -
Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots
33 votes -
Should I stay or should I go now?
36 votes -
US President Joe Biden administration grants California waiver to ban gas car sales in 2035
48 votes -
$10 billion in government loans announced for United States EV charging network, battery production
13 votes -
Why Elon Musk doesn’t have access to SpaceX’s biggest US government secrets
12 votes -
In a first, Arizona’s attorney general sues an industrial farm over its water use
26 votes -
It's time to break up Big Medicine in the US
33 votes -
Debanking (and debunking?)
8 votes -
US President-Elect Donald Trump picks Chloe Cole's anti-trans lawyer Harmeet Dhillon to lead DOJ civil rights post
16 votes -
Costs from hurricane Helene more than $53 billion in North Carolina. Currently available funding is significantly less than that.
14 votes -
The women of the West are making political history — and have been for 130 years
4 votes -
Trans refugees turn to TikTok and Instagram for help fleeing red states
22 votes -
A bird flu pandemic would be one of the most foreseeable catastrophes in history
34 votes -
Closing asset loophole can raise $100 billion in taxes, US Treasury now says
10 votes -
Oregon, USA introduces new statewide recycling rules to combat plastic waste
13 votes -
The price America paid for its first big immigration crackdown
29 votes -
Supreme Court wants US input on whether ISPs should be liable for users’ piracy, in $1 billion Sony v. Cox case
38 votes -
In Northeast D.C., a rancorous post-election fight erupts — over bike lanes
15 votes -
‘Do not pet’: A robotic dog named “Spot” made by Boston Dynamics is the latest tool in the arsenal of the US Secret Service
20 votes -
A history of US cabinet appointments ...and why they matter
15 votes -
Denmark is the latest country to join the Artemis Accords, the 48th country to sign the document outlining best practices for sustainable space exploration
6 votes -
New York Governor Kathy Hochul to relaunch congestion pricing with $9 base toll, sources say
15 votes -
JibJab - Second Term (2004)
5 votes