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Funny, I'm thinking the opposite based on my time around the internet.Personally, I think society in general is becoming too overly-sensitive and PC. I would really hate to see this seep into gaming communities.
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Funny, I'm thinking the opposite based on my time around the internet.Personally, I think society in general is becoming too overly-sensitive and PC. I would really hate to see this seep into gaming communities.
Exactly the point of my "enforce some way of saying 'good game' at the end of a match, whether it be a handshake, the words, or both." Smash will never be accepted as a sport until this happens...but hey, maybe you guys don't want that, I don't know. I know people that love to keep communities shrunken to what they already know and get all pissy when it grows.Let's ask another question: Using basketball as an example, does the NBA let players get away with poor sportsmanship? The answer is no. Any major professional sport holds their players to certain standards as related to sportsmanship and ethics. I really see no reason this should hold true in Smash for fighting games.
The NBA gives all of their players million dollar contracts, and players are representing a bunch of sponsors. THAT is why they aren't allowed to be douche bags. It's done because a small minority of spectators get uppity about people not following their particular brand of sportsmanship, and companies don't want their brand name associated with something people dislike. Basketball games themselves don't have any rule about shaking hands. The ref will not call a foul on you for not helping your opponent off the ground. Similarly, tournaments shouldn't be mixing venue/conduct rules with game rules unless the one is interfering with the other (i.e. crowds heckling players mid-game).Exactly the point of my "enforce some way of saying 'good game' at the end of a match, whether it be a handshake, the words, or both." Smash will never be accepted as a sport until this happens...but hey, maybe you guys don't want that, I don't know. I know people that love to keep communities shrunken to what they already know and get all pissy when it grows.
I agree 100%Its not necessarily true with brawl vs melee...i have seen some REALLY immature melee players and really mature brawl players.
Age I agree with...
anyways carry on.
That's a pretty **** post.**** *****
You've obviously never sat courtside at an NBA game or heard audioclips of what the players say. They say every curse word, including gay. Many even use the word "f**" and "f**got." Just look up video of it. I just saw one earlier today, and Charles Barkley must have dropped the f bomb 50 times in a row, and Shaq cursed out a referee to a reporter and straight up responded to the question "you know this is on live TV?" with the phrase "I don't give a s***" like straight out of the Shawshank Redemption!Let me as you a question: When you go see a basketball game, do you expect the players and audience members to scream "****" all the time? Do you expect f-bombs every other sentence? Absolutely not. And if you did, then basketball would be a niche game that no one took seriously, and that very few people played.
Let's ask another question: Using basketball as an example, does the NBA let players get away with poor sportsmanship? The answer is no. Any major professional sport holds their players to certain standards as related to sportsmanship and ethics. I really see no reason this should hold true in Smash for fighting games.
related: http://www.sankakucomplex.com/2012/03/12/pokemon-champion-loses-title-for-hotel-feces-flinging/ :D*Side Note* In Pokemon, we have very strict behavior standards (not surprising, considering it's a kids property). You can, in fact, enforce sportsmanship and behavior standards effectively, contrary to what many people here have been saying, and it's very very evident in the Pokemon TCG, which is considered to have the nicest, friendliest players of any competitive TCG by far (I say this like there are a lotReally, YuGiOh! and Magic are the only other 2 legit TCGs), not to mention the nicest environments to play in. There's got to be something to that.
This.When did homosexual people co-opt the word gay as theirs and theirs alone? I firmly remember that word meaning "happy," at one point. I'm not trying to raise a fuss, I'm genuinely curious (and playing devil's advocate). Why should I be prohibited from saying something due to someone else's opinions on it?
I also think that people are far too hung up on the meanings of individual words, and "not offending people," rather than the message being conveyed by the collection of words, together. But that's just my opinion, anyways.
Fierce Deku's post is good and makes logical sense, nonetheless.
It's not known exactly when "gay" came to mean "homosexual." There are a few sources using it this way from the early 20th century but it wasn't widespread until the 1960s. As for whether homosexuals "co-opted" the term I really don't think it happened like that. Terms to describe homosexuals were used mainly by heterosexuals, derisively. There was the clinical term homosexual and various slang terms such as queer, f*ggot, and gay, which had varying degrees of negative connotation. "Queer" and "f*ggot" were considered highly offensive, and "homosexual" was considered clinical and implicative of mental illness due to the history of the term, so the only common, acceptable term left was "gay." I'm not sure when "gay" became THE accepted term for describing homosexuals, but I believe it was relatively recently, after the word was already being used.When did homosexual people co-opt the word gay as theirs and theirs alone? I firmly remember that word meaning "happy," at one point. I'm not trying to raise a fuss, I'm genuinely curious (and playing devil's advocate). Why should I be prohibited from saying something due to someone else's opinions on it?
This is a common viewpoint of those who are unaffected by the meaning of such words (white, straight males generally). If you were gay you might see this differently.I also think that people are far too hung up on the meanings of individual words, and "not offending people," rather than the message being conveyed by the collection of words, together. But that's just my opinion, anyways.
My guess would be that they feel keeping their individual personality and speech patterns is more important than accommodating for the sake of not hurting somebody else's feelings. There are people out there that feel if you're hurt by a word, you just need to suck it up and get over it because the word isn't an action. In my opinion, it's very shallow thinking. Not everybody is that tough, and not everybody can avoid attaching a word to a memory.I've never understood this position, anyway. Racial/gender/sexual epithets are very hurtful to large groups of people, and it costs you nothing to not say them. Why persist in saying things that offend people, when it costs you nothing not to?
Ok. I'll look for it.It's not known exactly when "gay" came to mean "homosexual." There are a few sources using it this way from the early 20th century but it wasn't widespread until the 1960s. As for whether homosexuals "co-opted" the term I really don't think it happened like that. Terms to describe homosexuals were used mainly by heterosexuals, derisively. There was the clinical term homosexual and various slang terms such as queer, f*ggot, and gay, which had varying degrees of negative connotation. "Queer" and "f*ggot" were considered highly offensive, and "homosexual" was considered clinical and implicative of mental illness due to the history of the term, so the only common, acceptable term left was "gay." I'm not sure when "gay" became THE accepted term for describing homosexuals, but I believe it was relatively recently, after the word was already being used.
If you're genuinely interested in the history of the word, the article on "gay" on Wikipedia has a nice summary.
Isn't it similarly selfish to expect there to be rules in place so that you won't by chance be offended by something someone might happen to say? There are words that make me feel uncomfortable, and I'm not going to go out of my way to be offensive. That isn't what I'm saying. But should I restrict someone from expressing themselves in a way that they like to (within reason, because violent/harassing messages as a form of expression should not be tolerated [i.e. saying things with the intent to harm]), because I, or someone else, could get offended/hurt?As far as why you shouldn't say some things, you're not prohibited, except maybe in certain Smash tournaments, but I would be very surprised if they started ejecting people for this reason. On the other hand, you might come across as a jack*ss if you just go around saying whatever you feel like, regardless of how it might affect other people. And it seems pretty selfish to put your own need to use certain words, which is minimal to nonexistent, over the needs of others not to be shamed, mocked, and embarrassed.
If they didn't co-opt it, then why not refer to yourselves as something else with the same meaning? Like lollipops? Or fuzzycats?By the way, it's amusing you think the term "gay" was co-opted by gay people. If anyone co-opted it, it was those who started using the word to mean "lame." It's also worth noting that the word you want to keep using, with the connotation for which you want to use it (lame), would not have this connotation if the word had never been used to describe homosexuals. The origin of this presenct meaning of "lame" is tied directly to negative images of gay people. Gay people were seen as lame, weak, girly, effeminate, etc., and it's not hard to see how this meaning carried over into this present usage of the word.
Black, straight male, actually.This is a common viewpoint of those who are unaffected by the meaning of such words (white, straight males generally). If you were gay you might see this differently.
I've never understood this position, anyway. Racial/gender/sexual epithets are very hurtful to large groups of people, and it costs you nothing to not say them. Why persist in saying things that offend people, when it costs you nothing not to?
Players should be able to talk how they want.When did homosexual people co-opt the word gay as theirs and theirs alone? I firmly remember that word meaning "happy," at one point. I'm not trying to raise a fuss, I'm genuinely curious (and playing devil's advocate). Why should I be prohibited from saying something due to someone else's opinions on it?
I also think that people are far too hung up on the meanings of individual words, and "not offending people," rather than the message being conveyed by the collection of words, together. But that's just my opinion, anyways.
Fierce Deku's post is good and makes logical sense, nonetheless.
No they shouldn't. They shouldn't be able to say or do things that cause measurable damage to other people. If what you say causes someone either social harm and it isn't true or causes them some amount of financial loss you should not ever be allowed to say it. When what you say either causes a player to no longer want to be part of the community or causes investors to lose money you've crossed the line.Players should be able to talk how they want.
If words have no understood meaning then how has anyone ever been far even as decided to use even go want to do look more like?The word '****' could mean ice cream in BoatModeSpeak. This argument is kind of pointless though.
My point is that words have no meaning aside from the context we give them, and that the same word can mean different things in different situations/times. So, we shouldn't be getting so caught up on the word itself.Just saying, when a gamer says that was gay. Like you get gimped and say that was gay, how could you translate that to that was happy? So the argument of gay meaning happy is invalid
I'm a fan of Melee, too, but if it has to die because the majority of players refuse to hold their tongue, then so be it.I know I really don't want melee to die, and this type of censorship is a great way to kill it.
Nope. As a business major I can safely say you're 100% wrong. People making a community look bad are what we'd call "toxic customers". The reason game stores kick out the fat neckbearded guy with the Cheeto stained shirt emitting the smell of a fish carcass while bad mouthing any franchise that isn't his personal preference is because he keeps away more potential customers and money than he himself gives the store. The same principle applies here. Not only should we not tolerate the people who use charged language and eject them from events for it, we should also not tolerate the support structure for it. Sure we'd lose a few big names, but we'd have such a larger appeal that we'd get enough new players to more than make up for it.TL;DR The language is a problem, but one we can't do a whole lot about. Censor the recorded stuff, give out warnings to people abusing it. But, censor the whole community and you kill the game.