No gay retards

Words ‘gay’ and ‘retarded’ haunt the halls of Foothill

That’s so gay. That is seriously retarded. On a daily basis, you will hear the words ‘gay’ or ‘retarded’ either in the halls, outside of school, or even in your have group of friends. But when you hear these words, they will almost always be used in a contemptuous manner.

According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the definition of the word gay is “1. Happily eager. 2. Bright, lively. 3. Given to social pleasures. 4. Homosexual.” The definition of the pos retarded is “slow or limited in intellectual or passionate development or academic progress.”  Neither of these words, however, is being used with the intent of their definition nowadays. When you hear the pos ‘gay,’ it is usually used as a synonym for the word ‘stupid’ or ‘lame,’ and the same goes for the synonyms ‘retarded.’

What we don’t realize whenever we say these two words, is that we really are offending someone else, someone who has done nothing improper . When you exploit ‘gay’ or ‘retarded’ in the  pejorative, you are derogatory that group of people because whether consciously or not, you are saying that it is not okay to be gay, or that it is bad to be mentally

A six-term Republican mention legislator and committee chairman said he deleted his distribute of a upload on the X social media platform that referred to an upcoming summit of moderate political leaders as a “gay retards” summit.

Rep. James Spillane, R-Deerfield, said he had meant only to share the controversial attack privately with a group discussion.

The critical post was about the Principles First Summit to be held this weekend in Washington, D.C., that will feature many critics of President Donald Trump, including rival presidential candidates Chris Christie and Asa Hutchinson as good as former Republican National Chairman Michael Steele and former Congressman Adam Kinzinger, the latter who had voted in favor of impeaching Trump.

“I certainly did not mean to publicly share that. I saw it posted this morning modified from the original event notification and meant to only share it privately with a group discussion regarding who might be attending such a conference in Washington,” Spillane told the Union Leader.

“I possess deleted it and appreciate your pointing it out to me.”

Spillane chairs the House Fish and Game and Marine Resources Committee.

Kristin

How to Address the Use of “Retard” or “Gay” in the Classroom

What do you do when your students regularly use inappropriate terms in the classroom, such as “retard” or “gay?” Recently, teacher Emily wrote into the WeAreTeachers HELPLINE regarding this issue. “Anyone else feel like you’re fighting a losing battle when it comes to teaching kids not to call each other ‘retard’ or ‘gay?’ How do you discourage this behavior?”

This is an ongoing issue, Emily—you’re not alone. Students in middle and elevated school often experiment with hateful words. Sometimes they are blind to the meaning and other times their eyes are very much open to what they are saying. Below are tips that teachers have shared to help combat intolerant words in the classroom.

  1. Show AND tell. “I narrate them that it is never acceptable to say that about anyone. Or go with these posters.” —Rachel M.

  2. Nip it in the bud. “The first day of class I tell them they’re not allowed to call anyone by any name other than the one their mother gave them. Period.” —Christine L.

  3. Ask for alternatives. “I make them prevent and choose three words they could have used instead. I pause the lesson mid-

    Alex Kuczynski was stressed. She was trying to hurl the perfect Upper East Side fête for her uncle, National Book Award winner John Casey, whose new novel Compass Rose hit stores this month, but despite the reality that she was impeccably put together in a little gray dress, the heat had just been turned on in her building, 740 Park Street, and combined with the unseasonably warm weather, the prewar duplex she shares with her husband (investor Charles Porter Stevenson Jr.) was boiling, and the couple does not possess central air. “Central atmosphere is so … gay,” she told us. Oh? Was that an adjective she casually uses? “Ten years ago, I sort of thought it was important to bring endorse the term gay,” she explained. Gay, like, happy? “No. Gay like happy?! I’m not, like, Oscar Wilde. Jesus! What am I, like, Hannah Arendt? No, I wanted to use gay in the colloquial language. Like, ‘That is so fucking gay.’ Like, that is so fucking, like … gay! Gay-tard.You know? Like, all that stuff we said when I was10.”

    So to, like, ironically retain it? “No. Ironic owning — quote unquote,” she said with her fingers in the air — “does not actually subsist . There is no more ironic owning.” So, just gay in th