← Back to context Comment by jazzyjackson 3 days ago It's also fallen out of fashion which is why someone might be snidely questioning its use 6 comments jazzyjackson Reply quantummagic 3 days ago I took it as an honest question, but the quotations mean you're probably right. For the record, it's still a widely used term in DEI contexts, even though there has been some criticism and alternatives promoted:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_of_color ripped_britches 3 days ago Person of color is very different than colored quantummagic 3 days ago It's literally saying the same thing, just with fewer words. 3 replies →
quantummagic 3 days ago I took it as an honest question, but the quotations mean you're probably right. For the record, it's still a widely used term in DEI contexts, even though there has been some criticism and alternatives promoted:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_of_color ripped_britches 3 days ago Person of color is very different than colored quantummagic 3 days ago It's literally saying the same thing, just with fewer words. 3 replies →
ripped_britches 3 days ago Person of color is very different than colored quantummagic 3 days ago It's literally saying the same thing, just with fewer words. 3 replies →
I took it as an honest question, but the quotations mean you're probably right. For the record, it's still a widely used term in DEI contexts, even though there has been some criticism and alternatives promoted:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person_of_color
Person of color is very different than colored
It's literally saying the same thing, just with fewer words.
3 replies →