It sounds way less offensive to those who decry the original terminology’s problematic roots but still keeps its meaning intact.
It sounds way less offensive to those who decry the original terminology’s problematic roots but still keeps its meaning intact.
well that’s good to know, i figured they would, but that seems like a more historically relevant point to me.
i mean maybe, but it just seems weird to me that we would establish that women comprehend words like “kill” differently, and that we should cater towards that, while we’ve spent the last like, thirty years if not more trying to move away from these things.
I mean we literally have deer hunting seasons to cull the population of deer as they no longer have natural predators, what’s the harm in using the term “killing” for referring to ending a process. It makes sense when you think about it. A process is born or created, and then it may fork, or it may not, and those forks may be killed, they may not be, the mainline process will inevitably be killed, either at its own discretion, or forcibly. through a termination.
It might be violent, but it’s a process, it’s literally just lines of code that are being run. There’s nothing special or fancy behind them, it makes perfect sense to use terms like “killing a process” and “stop” and “terminate” for shutting them down, it’s immediately interpreted.
we know from raising children that it’s not good to shield them from potential allergens (the get allergies if you do that) and that it’s also good to expose them to generally more unsanitary environments (they build up a better immune system response ability) as well as encouraging them to do things they may or may not be capable of, teaching them how to deal with failure, and teaching them how to deal with the general pain and suffering of life. Why have we suddenly decided that “maybe we shouldnt use kill as a terminology to describe the act of ending a processes lifetime” that seems inconsequential to me in the grand scheme of things.
There might be data to support it, but i think the data to support that we simply don’t push younger girls towards the field of CS is significantly more evident. It has a historical basis, and it tracks with what we’re doing today, and the majors and degrees that they’re focusing on as well. While we’re here, we should probably also do something about younger men in the education space, and the world at large, as they don’t exactly have anything to aspire to or focus on.
just another moderately relevant example here to extend upon my point.
The one thing men had was control and responsibility over women when they didn’t have rights. Now that they have rights, we haven’t exactly changed anything in regards to how we raise boys, and we’re surprised when they start following the likes of tate and the manosphere crowd. Women haven’t previously had this opportunity to the same level they do now, so they’re still taking advantage of it because they can. But we’ve basically forgotten about an entire sect of society accidentally at this point.
I don’t think it’s intentional, i just think it’s a consequence similar to the decline of the tradesman over the years. Now those jobs have generally better prospects than getting into college, and they’ve become a very tempting opportunity.
There are many problems and many solutions. We don’t need to focus on one problem and pick only one solution.
My entire point here was that there is concern that industry jargon can be accidentally exclusionary to some demographics, interest and research on it isn’t new, and the effect is usually a “death by a thousand cuts” type thing, like migroaggressions are.
I didn’t specialize in this, so my knowledge on it is from one part of one class I took like 15 years ago, but I can absolutely see how it could matter.
People aren’t rational and society doesn’t raise us rationally. We can be perfectly ok with something in one context but not ok with it in another context. We can be ok with one thing, but not ok with another similar thing.
I agree there are deeper societal issues about how we raise boys and the incentives/traumas we put on kids. That doesn’t mean we cant pick off this low hanging fruit at no cost.
It’s important to meet people where they are, not where we think they should be.
it’s certainly possible it matters, but ultimately in the field of engineering, if you’re designing a bike, it’s probably more important to fix that problem where the bike crumples in half impaling the rider on the way down rather than the fact that the water bottle mounting holes need de-burring off the factory line to help prevent them from cutting people slightly.
Dealing with microaggressions is definitely one of the problems at all times, there is a question of whether it even exists to any significant degree, considering a lot of people make jokes about other things at the sarcastic expense of something. Is self deprecating humor a self microaggression that we should stamp out because it subconsciously influences people to be a worse person?
You see what i’m getting at here? I feel like it’s just a really hard problem, with a really hard solution, and i feel like the best solution is to treat it like a moderately insignificant problem, while being consciously aware of it. In fact one could probably argue being consciously aware of microaggressions is going to make you immune to them from the get go.
I also feel like it’s probably effort needlessly spent relative to other issues as well, like for example we could move to stop microaggressions, or we could like, move to stop racial bias hiring practices, which are probably going to be more beneficial. Or like, make an AI less racist, or like, don’t use AI for crime detection and stopping at all probably.
like it’s a death by thousand cuts sure, but i feel like we’re ignoring the missing leg and the dislocated and fractured jaw here as well.
yeah, absolutely a great stop gap measure here would be doing this on a person by person basis, if X doesn’t like Y using Z term, they can mutually come to the agreement to not do that.
Another thing we need to consider, is that we can’t expect everyone to meet us where we are, because a lot of people (me included as a neurodivergent individual) i do not have normal behaviors, i just ghost friends for long periods of time, i don’t hold that against them if they don’t like that. That’s just a thing i do, and if they don’t like it, it’s fine, i won’t talk to them, and they don’t have to talk to me. Anything other than that would be an aggressive overstepping of my personal boundary lines. As well as theirs.
I think this is ironically, a shooting yourself in the foot problem, from the broader context, because we’re doing this “insignificant” thing to “marginally improve things for others” when in reality, we may actually just be making things more complicated for people who do not function inside of the bubble of normality.
I think ultimately, the best thing we can do is to simply prime people to not care. Things are shitty, shitty people say shitty things, just don’t worry about it and you don’t have a problem, at the end of the day, 90% of this shit is relatively minor, and thinking about it is only going to cause unnecessary anguish.
This solution is zero effort
It does. Ask POC
It’s zero effort to change jargon like this.
We can do both. That was a bold false dichotomy
If your argument is that neurodivergent people can’t switch from “whitelist” to “allowlist” I think that says more about your personality than neurodivergency.
Ok there, that sounds like a pile of FUD to prevent progress
Ok there psychology genius. Tell us how to do this and receive your nobel prize
I’m done replying to your novel length piles regressive bullshit and excuses dressed up in polite language.
idk about that one, maybe that would be the case if the issue was forgetting to weld it into one piece.
there’s certainly potential for that, but like i’ve already stated i’m not sure how immediately relevant it is, nor how productive it would be, there’s also the issue of intrinsically applied microaggressions which could easily lead to “hallucinated” microaggressions. That’s probably an equally significant problem at scale.
i mean, fundamentally no. Changing long term habits is not a super trivial thing even as an individual, and doing this on the societal scale is basically going to be impossible at large. At least 20% of the population is probably going to start being outright racist in response to this (in america at least)
idk if you curse but if you do, you should be trivially aware of how much effort it can take to simply not curse. It’s literally just a force of habit beyond a certain point.
yeah, absolutely, that’s definitely an option, my concern is that we’re putting too much focus on fixing like 3% of the issue, with like 10% of the effort, when we could be fixing like 20% of the issue with like 25% of the effort, which short term is going to be more beneficial.
that is an incredibly narrow and uncharitable view of my argument. If that’s what you think i’m arguing you should probably go read a few books before reading this post.
i mean, it’s a possibility, a lot of really subtle solutions do bring about a number of subtle problems, of which are even harder to fix. We have gay rights now, but there is a non insignificant problem with infighting between members of the queer community. How do we fix that? That’s a good question. Granted this is a much less subtle example, but my point holds.
ok yeah so it’s really simple. You know how you open the internet, and like, people yell at you and shit? And how they like call you stupid and bad and shit? And you know how you can just like, ignore 90% of it, because it’s literally meaningless.
It’s extremely likely that a large number of microaggressions being committed are entirely subconscious or not even intended to be offensive in any manner. Chances are, you are simply thinking too hard about what is going on, and you should probably worry less about that, and worry about other issues like social representation or even governmental representation.
the irony being, that this entire post is just an elaborate series of microaggressions. Though not likely directed in a racial manner, they are still microaggressions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microaggression
perhaps maybe you should go do some reading on the topic. I’ll wait.
Tldr your novella of regressive FUD.
You can’t get a perfect solution so you refuse to accept any solution is the Hallmark of the disingenuous redpill in disguise.
Go sell your snake oil elsewhere
my true TL;DR is that i think there are probably better and more apt things to focus on.
i’m not asking for one, i’m just positing that i don’t think this is the most optimal and productive way to go about solving our problems at the moment. I feel like we’re stepping a little bit too far forward in the grand scheme of things with this one.
Also i like that you call me red pill, very funny. I’m way to nihilistic to be red pill but ok.
unfortunately i’m fresh out of snake oil, i sold it all to smurf accounts (and it was laced with a carcinogen)
Still peddling FUD?
IDK, I didn’t read it. Piss off with your disingenuous “no solution is good enough” anti-progressive bullshit
idk maybe you’ll have to read it and find out. Maybe i should start writing furry smut in these posts though, you would probably read them then.