These polls would suggest otherwise:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...bea_story.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/...b0a9b948529c90
Most issues of political correctness aren't related to anything that can be voted on.
It became news when Gap apologized.No idea. I saw it after, but I'm not a great person to ask about fashion or business news.
Not very often. But occasionally a teacher or administrator will overreach on issues of religion in the school, and that's when the local news station sends a reporter. They're not reporting on examples of kids praying in school and not being punished. A school having a prayer before a football game isn't news. A school deciding not to have a prayer, or a few parents complaining about the prayer... that's what becomes news. That's what gets people leaving comments on your station website and visiting advertiser links.Are kids sent home for praying in school? Is that not allowed anymore?
Power to do what? Make people talk? Make companies apologize?Yeah, that's not true at all. Simply put, being PC has its power in siding with the majority.
A lot of social progress has been made in this country before that progress was accepted by the majority. It's often not until changes are made that people learn to accept those changes.
I would characterize Trump as being un-PC. I know that sounds like semantic acrobatics but hear me out...Now, I agree that not everyone who is PC is militant about it. But the fact remains that PC is dominating the public discussion much more than anti-PC is. This is why Trump's anti-PC tactics are creating a groundswell of new support rather than just consolidating the old.
How I think about it is anti-PC is when you don't think we should go to great lengths to make sure we're not profiling on race, don't think we should sanitize mascot names, don't think people should lose their if a black person is portrayed unfavorably or stereotypical in advertising, etc. You think people who are fighting for those things are PC whiners. Most polls and anecdotal examples I've seen on these kinds of subjects would suggest people are satisfied with the status quo.
Un-PC is straight up saying we should ban Muslims, or that Megyn Kelly is on her period, or suggesting that gays are pedophiles, etc. While most people might not actually say these things, I do not think most people are offended by someone saying them.
Different media cater to different sides of the spectrum. It's a tried and true tactic to make your audience feel victimized or oppressed, and that you are the only leader speaking on their behalf in this world gone to . It's worked for centuries in churches, and it works in the media. Why do you think both liberals and conservatives complain about mainstream media bias against them?Really don't get the point of your contention. You're claiming that the media catering to anti-PC folks (which isn't true on the whole) proves that they are the majority, even though the coverage is aimed at making it seem like they are the minority?

Reply With Quote
