Me personally? I’ve become much less tolerant of sexist humor. Back in the day, cracking a joke at women’s expense was pretty common when I was a teen. As I’ve matured and become aware to the horrific extent of toxicity and bigotry pervading all tiers of our individualistic society, I’ve come to see how exclusionarly and objectifying that sort of ‘humor’ really is, and I regret it deeply.

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18 points

I’ve been trying to degender my language. I grew up saying “thank you (or excuse me, yes/no, etc) sir/ma’am” and then being in customer facing positions for years just absolutely cemented that in my mind to the point where it is an absolute knee jerk reaction to make assumptions about the gender of others. It’s an awful habit and makes me cringe every time I do it. I try to either just avoid the gender identifier (“thank you.”) which to my mind sounds impolite, or use gender neutral terms like “friend” which REALLY sound impolite. It’s tough but I’m working on it! The real trouble is getting my brain to stop gendering others and as a quite elderly millenial who actually identifies as Agender it is an annoying and difficult task. I’m envious of younger folks who won’t grow up with these kinds of ideas as a default.

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19 points
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Go with “Thank you, customer”

Really push the dystopia with dead eyes and big smile as you do it.

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4 points

Very fortunately, I now work from home in a job with basically zero interaction with anyone at all (it’s great) so this mostly applies to casual social interactions at say, a grocery store. I have to say though, using your suggestion in this context is actually hilarious and would be super gratifying.

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0 points

Very fortunately, I now work from home in a job with basically zero interaction with anyone at all (it’s great) so this mostly applies to casual social

What has the world come to that people are so happy to be hermits? How do you find joy in your life sequestered from society? Not hating, genuine question.

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9 points

In my last job (which was on a team of all cis women), people shared their pronouns…both singular AND plural (i.e., how they wanted to be referred to in a group). Which is pretty bizarre. Like, what if one person’s plural pronoun is “folks” and another’s is “friends”…then which term are you supposed to use?

And I came to hate saying “friends” because we weren’t friends. It was a soul-sucking corporate gig, and I wasn’t part of their mom squad…I never saw them outside of work, and I was always the last to learn about team changes, so let’s be real: we aren’t friends, we’re coworkers. It got creepy being expected to smile and address everyone as “friends”!

FWIW, I have nothing against folks or guys or y’all ;)

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5 points

This is what bugs me about chosen pronouns, it’s like a right someone has to tell other people how to use language, that can get complicated and needs memorization. People should have leeway on the words they use, even if they shouldn’t be making unwanted assertions about other peoples gender. Would be better to just have a set of genderless pronouns that are always polite/safe to use.

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4 points

I resonate deeply with this. I can’t be bothered to memorise all these pronouns. I’d of course do it for people I am close to, though.

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2 points

I maintain that “they/them” is that always-safe genderless pronoun type.

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1 point

or just refer to people as ma’am/sir, and if they get offended it’s their problem

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4 points

In an office?? I feel like that would be weird or come across as sarcastic. I call my boss by his first name. Heck, we don’t even call CEOs sir/ma’am anymore.

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9 points

I’m not trying to sound insensitive (I never come across anything like that in real life), but is it really that bad to assume someone’s gender? You literally don’t know anything about that person, or how they identify. Do people get offended when you missgender them if it’s the first time you’ve met them?

I could understand someone being offended if you do missgender them every time, but what if it’s the first time you’re meeting? Just say sorry and then say the correct pronoun.

First of all, I barely gender people (I’ve always been like this, saying friend, partner, mate…) so I’m really surprised by this new trend. Maybe I’m getting old lol.

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8 points

It’s not so much about offending someone (and yes, people absolutely do sometimes get aggressively upset about it) and more about attempting to change my own mental habits. I believe like race, sexual orientation, and politics, gender is a personal topic that doesn’t really need to enter into a casual, never to be repeated interaction between two people. You don’t say “excuse me, old person,” based on your perceptions of another’s appearance. Why is gender any different? It certainly isn’t an objective concept or one that can be readily or factually assumed. It’s outmoded and unnecessary.

Also, as I commented earlier, if I am using what I mean to be a term of respect to make someone else feel confident and comfortable, and through my language I risk doing the opposite, why would I want to do that if it’s something I can personally change?

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7 points

I’m not British but I just say “cheers mate” to everyone. Works for me.

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6 points

“Thank you friend” is impolite? Maybe it’s informal, but I think that’s a great solution to the problem. I can’t imagine anyone having a problem with that except maybe an aggro asshole.

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7 points
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Maybe I’ve just spent too long arguing with aholes on the internet but to me calling someone “friend” comes across as very sarcastic and condescending

Edit, it’s like calling someone you don’t know “buddy” or “pal”

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6 points

I’m not your friend, pal!

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3 points

I could see it online, yeah. If you use a friendly tone in person it wouldn’t be a problem.

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2 points

Fair enough! I do use it pretty frequently. I would really like it if someone said that to me, so maybe it isn’t as impolite as I perceive it. Thanks.

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6 points
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Can we just create some genderless pronouns instead of asking everyone you meet for theirs? I’d be down with that.

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3 points

I mean, isn’t that exactly what you just used? They/them are genderless pronouns that can be used for both plural and singular subjects. If you don’t know someone’s gender, it’s already what people default to.

Like, “They’re sending someone over at 3, but I don’t know when they’ll get here.” Or, “That person? Nah, I don’t know them.” Or, “Whose is this? Is it yours? Is it theirs?”

When people first started yelling about having to be polite about genders I always found it odd how they’d angrily refuse to use the neutral pronouns already in English, while using those same pronouns in their own sentences without really realizing it.

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1 point

The only problem I have with, “They” is that it requires context to distinguish the plural form and the singular. We need a dedicated, genderless word for singular third-person.

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6 points
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Interesting that this sir/ma’am thing is very location-dependent. I’ve been living in Scotland more more than a decade now and I probably heard someone address me as “sir” a grand total of twice. I remember because it always felt so jarring, like why was this random shop assistant speaking to me so subserviently O.o

But I heard in some places (USA?) it’s very commonplace.

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5 points

You know we’ve gone too far when people feel bad for saying thank you sir/mam…

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15 points

At one point, people thought we had gone too far because they weren’t allowed to say the N word anymore.

Sir and Ma’am are only respectful if the person hears it as such.

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9 points
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9 points

That’s fine, but also the vast majority of people are content being called by their assumed pronouns. I’m all for inclusion but I’m not going to erase two perfectly innocuous words from my vocabulary because one person might be sensitive about it.

Use your best judgement, if somebody corrects you then apologize and use their preferred pronoun moving forward. If that’s not good enough, that’s their problem.

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13 points

Not all people identify with the two-gender labels. For instance, I’m genderqueer, and I’d feel very dysphoric if someone told me “ma’am.”

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14 points

I’m a cis lady and I don’t like being called ma’am. It feels so forced and phony.

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10 points

I agree.

This world is going to hell in a wokebasket if people start thinking about what comes out their fucking mouth.

/s, cos you never fuckin know nowadays.

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8 points
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They don’t feel bad for using those terms, they feel bad about using them on someone incorrectly. There’s nuance here that is lost on those who struggle to grasp the difference and phrasing things as if we’re being forced to stop using them or “delete them from our vocabulary” is counterproductive.

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4 points

I don’t think it is univerally okay to make assumptions about someone’s personal identity before you know it. I am happy calling someone sir or ma’am after I know their gender identity. But in a casual interaction between strangers, there is no need for it at all and it is just an ingrained and outdated social convention that I personally am striving to move past.

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4 points

I like the Battlestar Galactica solution to this: sir should not be gendered. It should just be a term of respect and maybe authority. It’s gendered more out of convention than definition. I don’t know how we reach that point, but that’s my reference. I think it basically has to start with the military. They should stop using ma’am for women and use sir.

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3 points

I really like this take and love it when I come across it in media.

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2 points

I feel like we made many terms much more gendered than they were before. If I’m hanging with a mixed group and I say “hey guys” towards the whole group “guys” is being used as a genderless, inclusive term.

I personally feel that in everyday casual conversation we should focus on the intent of what’s spoken and not get into the minutia of the terminology. Sir/ma’am are terms of respect and the underlying message behind them is respect. If a person accidentally misgendered someone while using them, it doesn’t negate the intended respect.

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1 point
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