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Stanford University Shows Their Hate For America, Includes The Word ‘American’ In Their ‘Forbidden Words’ Index

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(Western Journal) I’m not one for trigger warnings, but there are a few things you should know before you read the following:

1)If you have high blood pressure, relax and try not to get mad. But on the other hand, 2) You may not want to be drinking a liquid while reading this, because anger or laughter may cause you to spit it out onto your computer or phone.

 

Okay? Let us begin.

One of the world’s great universities, Stanford, has put out a document called the “Elimination of Harmful Language Initiative.”

The initiative lists all kinds of words one should not use: “paraplegic,” “brave,” “chief,” “people of color” and more.

And there is one forbidden word that has set off a prominent Stanford medical school faculty member: “American.”

“I remember how proud I was when I became a naturalized American citizen,” tweeted Dr. Jay Bhattacharya in response to Stanford’s language directive.

“I’m still proud to be an American, and I don’t care that Stanford disapproves of my using the term.”

 

 

Bhattacharya, M.D., Ph.D., is a professor at the Stanford School of Medicine who specializes in health policy, infectious diseases, COVID, health economics and scientific freedom.

If his name is familiar to you, it’s because he is co-author of The Great Barrington Declaration, a dissenting document against the establishment’s policies on COVID, signed by 16,000 medical professionals and scientists and 47,000 medical practitioners.

Speaking of harmful language, Bhattacharya is one who has been called a “fringe epidemiologist” whose beliefs needed a “quick and devastating published take down,” according to former National Institutes of Health director Francis Collins in a 2020 emailto Anthony Fauci.

At any rate, Bhattacharya proudly calls himself an American, despite the goofy Stanford language initiative.

“I don’t think lists of banned words have the intended effect of causing people to treat others with compassion,” he tweeted. “In my experience, they often have the opposite effect. Eventually, the thought police convict everyone.”

 

The term “American” should not be used, according to Stanford’s categorization of “Imprecise Language,” since “this term often refers to people from the United States only, thereby insinuating that the US is the most important country in the Americas (which is actually made up of 42 countries).”

Ah, no, Stanford. As with so many terms, “American” is universally recognized as a term meaning a citizen of the United States. Just like “Mexico” is what we say instead of the official title of United Mexican States. And a lot of North Americans who live in Canada would be insulted to be referred to as “Americans.”

Instead of “American,” Stanford wants us to say “U.S. citizen.”

Also, we should not say “paraplegic.” That is ableist language.

Rather, according to Stanford, we should use the terms “person with a spinal cord injury,” or a “person who is paralyzed.” Note that one way to tell if something is a top-down, politically correct term is its multiplication of words.

And why should we jettison “paraplegic?” Because, according to Stanford, “This term generalizes a population of people while also implying that people with disabilities are not capable.”

No, I don’t understand that explanation either, but then I haven’t spent $58,000 annual tuition at Stanford, so it’s no wonder it’s a mystery to me.

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