Posted on 09/23/2016 7:02:36 AM PDT by COUNTrecount
NO! It is, straight out, a complete AGGRESSION against non-liberal values, at least as taught by government schools!
If they come here then they should join our culture, which means adopting English. Coming here to maintain their language and culture is not immigration but invasion.
Somehow Italian, Romanian, Spanish and other immigrants with easily mispronounced names handled this with no problem. They even had their names CHANGED at Ellis Island, and dealt with it.
In my teaching career, I always tried to ask the kid to say his or her name, but some were so out there that it was hard to say it correctly. And to take the obvious race bit out of it, the hardest name to get right was ‘Alexia’. The girl was from a Greek family and insisted that it was pronounced ‘Alex ee a’ with the emphasis over the i. For two of three years I called her ‘Alex’. She must have been ok with me because she brought me back bits of marble from the Parthenon and the Temple of Apollo.
Okay, let’s give every student a number at the beginning of the year and refer to them by number only. Wait, number order could be injurious to their psyches. Let’s go with “hey you.” There is bound to be something wrong with that, too. How about we just abolish the public indoctrination system all together.
In the novel “Unintended Consequences” there is a government agent who is usually referred to by her initials — GG.
Turns out her first name (which she prefers not to use) was given to her when she was born — although her mother couldn’t think of a name, a helpful intern at the hospital had a suggestion. The name she was given rhymes with “Gloria” but it’s spelled in a unique way — Gonorrhea.
Costley ... as in "expensive, with an "e"."
Not a chance ... it's been everything from "Costely" to "Costello" to "Costelery" to "Castleray" and probably some that I can't even remember.
I couldn't care less how they pronounce my name, as long as I know who they're directing the question to and that they remember who gets the credit when I do something right. IF I do something wrong, I'm hoping that they can't find me because my name doesn't match what their memory holds.
Who wants to go on the air and respond to Rita Cooley?
I will admire a politician who actively endorses abolishing “political correctness”.
There are FIVE letters in my last name. It has been misspelled and mispronounced since first grade. It didn’t stop me from getting a Chemical Engineering degree and two Masters.
Wish I had known about all this micro aggression back then. I might have gotten even better grades.
I had a Greek classmate whose name was Aspacia Apostolakis.
Why don’t they just move to North Korea if they love totalitarianism so much?
I have a Welsh first name that is easy to pronounce if you take a moment or two to really look at it. But most people just glance at it and then butcher it. That was absolutely humiliating as a kid in school, especially when there was a sub (guaranteed to be even less literate than the teacher). College was a much better experience in that way because most professors could read.
I definitely get the anxiety and feeling of burden attached to having a frequently mispronounced name (thank you SO much, Mom and Dad), but freaking deal with it and move on! Most of us manage to do that. Sheesh.
What if the professor is from a country where the native language doesn’t contain the sounds needed?
Japanese famously have trouble with “l”. Americans learning Spanish have a tough time trilling the “rr” double r sound. Many non-Jews find the “ch” sound difficult. And so on. These are microaggressions?
I have a 5 letter last name that seems impossible for people to pronounce or spell properly. I was never offended.
In ever so many ways, modern Leftist "thinking," is a return to the idiocy that Dean Swift describes in Gulliver's voyage to Laputa. It is very, very difficult to even satirize their obsessions.
“way too silly”
A teacher should know the difference.
Until second grade, my last name was Dinki. Then we changed it to Rogers, which was my grandmother’s last name on my father’s side. I was Dinki until graduation, but I did just fine. National Honor Society.
Afrodeseac is a great name for a black porn star from the 70s.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.