The problem is when people use "female" and "men".
Male and female are sort of dehumanizing words. Great to use in science, but awkward to use in casual conversation. It's like telling someone "Your epidermis looks so smooth".
When you use "females" in combination with more appropriate word for males (e.g., "men"), you end up sounding like an incel or something.
And since people generally don't use "males" when talking about men casually, even just using "females" outside an academic context is enough to make it sound a lot like how an incel would speak.
So "females" isn't a bad word, but incels use it in a way that demeans women. If you use it in a non-scientific context, you'll probably end up sounding like an incel.
(All the "you"s are meant to be the "general you"; I'm not trying to pick on anyone in particular)
Hence, this thread where someone pointed out that the word choice might have unintentional implications, which triggered a few oversensitive incels who percieved it as an attack on their choice to speak dismissively of women.
For someone who insists that context is the determinant of appropriateness, you sure don't seem to be considering that women might have a different context for the term. XD
Of course they do… how’s someone supposed to know that the person they are talking to is a snowflake and takes normal words to the extreme…?
Try asking.
Did I say otherwise somewhere…?
Yeah, you acted like someone offerring grammar advice was an ill omen of social decay.
How are people supposed to learn to avoid sounding like misogynists if we can't even warn them without triggering extreme moral outrage in sensitive snowflakeslike yourself?
This is entirely a feminist problem, not men, not women, feminists. And it’s a wonderful red flag for other people when it’s brought up.
Seems the other way around to me. You're the one getting mad about words here.
Oh hey, are you a feminist and take offense to people using everyday terms?
How do you suggest someone asks in normal everyday conversation…?
No one has provided grammar advice.
It’s not misogynistic, thats the entire point here. It’s only misogynistic to a very small portion of people and they haven’t even done a great job explaining why either.
Oh hey, are you a feminist and take offense to people using everyday terms?
I'm not offended, I'm amused. Simply describing the way one's language choices could be interpreted has become offensive to you.
Like, I think saying "feminist" without being specific is itself a very specific signal, because "feminism" isn't just one thing and the various movements under that umbrella diverge wildly. I can tell by your usage in this context that you're not actually interested in my opinions on the matter, you just want to simplify me away with a label. Because if I'm a feminist then you've already heard whatever it is I might have to say and you could disregard me without consequence, right?
How do you suggest someone asks in normal everyday conversation…?
"Hey, would it be a problem if I described [noun] as [other noun]?" Seems pretty simple and direct.
No one has provided grammar advice.
Potato-potahto.
It’s not misogynistic, thats the entire point here. It’s only misogynistic to a very small portion of people and they haven’t even done a great job explaining why either.
Said the (presumptive) male, as if my word choice in that first sentence fragment wouldn't have been more at home in a nature documentary than a normal conversation.
If the male is offended by descriptions of his language or the dehumanizing tone in these last few comments, then he will either ragequit the conversation, try for a some sort of written jab to regain a sense of dominance, or maybe even learn something about why people think it's sexist to refer to a person or group of people solely by their sex.
We know you think sex and gender are supposed to be synonymous, but the simple fact of the matter is that they never have been. Not even linguistically.