surely...
when you call someone a spastic, you are saying "there are people who have no motor control over their bodies because of an illness...you have a similar level of lack of co-ordination, and are as unusual, but you have no illness... you are just like that"
i don't see how that is offensive to someone with an illness.
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 12:54, Share, Reply)
when you call someone a spastic, you are saying "there are people who have no motor control over their bodies because of an illness...you have a similar level of lack of co-ordination, and are as unusual, but you have no illness... you are just like that"
i don't see how that is offensive to someone with an illness.
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 12:54, Share, Reply)
Well I WAS going to upload a picture of the Spazz wheelchair,
but seeing as both B3tards.com and Cr3ation B3ta are down you'll have to google it yourselves.
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 17:43, Share, Reply)
but seeing as both B3tards.com and Cr3ation B3ta are down you'll have to google it yourselves.
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 17:43, Share, Reply)
Here:
www.planetmobility.com/store/wheelchairs/manual/colours/spazz/
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 17:51, Share, Reply)
www.planetmobility.com/store/wheelchairs/manual/colours/spazz/
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 17:51, Share, Reply)
the thing about offensive words
is that they don't need a logical argument to make them offensive, and you can't logic the offensiveness away. Part of their meaning is the illocutionary force that they carry.
So while it's probably kind of rude in general to say "You play the ocarina like a homosexual,"
it's plainly offensive to lots of gay people to say "You play the ocarina like a faggot."
The spaz thing isn't about whether the comparison says something true or untrue about people with cp, it's about whether the word is offensive.
As far as I can tell, in UK English 'spaz' and various forms of 'spastic' are all offensive because of the strong negative illocutionary force they carry there. In American English 'spaz' doesn't carry that force, but I'm pretty sure that the noun 'spastic' still does.
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 14:06, Share, Reply)
is that they don't need a logical argument to make them offensive, and you can't logic the offensiveness away. Part of their meaning is the illocutionary force that they carry.
So while it's probably kind of rude in general to say "You play the ocarina like a homosexual,"
it's plainly offensive to lots of gay people to say "You play the ocarina like a faggot."
The spaz thing isn't about whether the comparison says something true or untrue about people with cp, it's about whether the word is offensive.
As far as I can tell, in UK English 'spaz' and various forms of 'spastic' are all offensive because of the strong negative illocutionary force they carry there. In American English 'spaz' doesn't carry that force, but I'm pretty sure that the noun 'spastic' still does.
( , Tue 5 Aug 2014, 14:06, Share, Reply)