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A report published in an online publication for journalists on Thursday described how reporters and others in mass communications choose new categories of victims, craft politically correct language to replace traditional wording, and ensure the complete and total replacement of the old concept with the new, PC version.

How do they do it? They just do it.

The Poynter Institute for Media Studies, theĀ parent organization of PolitiFact, reports that the easiest way to create a revolution in language is through the top-down change of terms used by journalists in news stories. . . .

Poynter reported that the ā€œsimple solutionā€ to assure intellectual and linguistic compliance is to ā€œcreate and enforce style guides.ā€ The storyĀ highlights Kaitlyn Jakola, managing editor of a nonprofit online media outlet, who credited her ability to impose her word preference on the nation to the average reporterā€™s conformity and lack of curiosity.

ā€œUltimately, [from] my experience as a copy editor, people just want to be told what to do. And 99.9% of journalists are not going to argue with you about whether they can use (a) word, unless theyā€™re persnickety or curmudgeons,ā€ JakolaĀ concluded. ā€œWe donā€™t have to talk about it. Weā€™re just going to do it and make it normal.ā€

ā€œIā€™ve tackled it through newsroom policy. And every newsroom Iā€™ve been in, Iā€™ve said, ā€˜Hey, we need to have a policy on the language weā€™re going to use,ā€™ā€ Jakola told Poynter.org. And thatā€™s all that has been necessary.

Meanwhile, academics seek to indoctrinate the undergraduates to create the next generation of language censors. Patti Wolter, a journalism professor at Northwestern University, said, ā€œAs a professor, I want my students to be the ones who develop style guides [about] this in their workplaces,ā€ or at least be ā€œthe voices in their workplaces that promote that kind of thinking and writing.ā€

ā€œMy job is to train the next generation to be thinking that way,ā€ said Wolter.

Her comments came in a story about changing the use of words related to mental illness, like ā€œcrazyā€ and ā€œbonkers.ā€ Brandeis University, which has been well ahead of the curve, released its ā€œoppressive language listā€ to further this trend. For instance, the university recommends that all gender-specific nouns or adjectives (e.g., ā€œfemale-identifyingā€) should be replaced with ā€œassigned female/male at birthā€ and ā€œladies and gentlemenā€ with ā€œfolx.ā€ The term ā€œtrigger warningā€ left peopleĀ triggered, while phrases like ā€œkilling itā€ and ā€œtake a shotā€ are deemedĀ too violentĀ ā€” criteria broad enough to indict everyone fromĀ Lin Manuel MirandaĀ andĀ Linda SarsourĀ to the federal governmentā€™sĀ COVID-19 vaccination campaign.

The same top-down process holds for which phrases a network will emphasize, such as ā€œwhite rage.ā€ CNN and MSNBC haveĀ usedĀ the phrase 82 times since January 1, 66 of them this month, according to Grabien Media.

The greatest wordsmiths said that the politicization of language leads to a flattening and impoverishing of the written word. . . .

Readers must also demand more of journalists and reward writers who use accurate, precise, and clear English. Until this again becomes the norm, the reader must consume with great discretion.

ā€œWhen it comes to politics, we might be better off being more skeptical andĀ digging deeperĀ to understand the truth for ourselves. Thatā€™s because what is said is often the opposite of reality,ā€Ā wrote Jackie Gingrich Cushman in The American Spectator. ā€œMy point is that, when discussing media and politics, be wary of words; they are often used to protest and portray the opposite of what you might be expecting. Consider this a word to the wise.ā€ . . .

Should news sources be allowed to force PC language to its viewers? Let us know your thoughts and prayers for America in the comments below!

(Excerpt from The Dailywire. Article written by Ben Johnson. Photo by Unsplash)

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