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by wgerard
2690 days ago
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One term encourages the idea that they're people first-and-foremost, with the adjective used to describe a particular subset of people. The other removes the emphasis on them being people and is pretty depersonalizing. As you can imagine, it's much worse when it's a historically marginalized group--as an example, fewer people will care if you say "blondes" vs. "blonde-haired people". |
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