This message is from the T13 list server.


LA is a sack of LIBERAL LOSERS!  We solved this issue a long time ago.

"Cable Select"

Look out ol' Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton will be storming down the doors
at meetings looking to extort money for use of "slaves to make money".

This ranks up with "male/female connectors"!

Aka now "Plug" and "Socket", anybody have a pickup line in that works for
that in local pub?

The LA rag newpaper is trying to redeem itself after the bigot lies it
spread about the new governer out here in the left coast.

Yeah this is all about politics.

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Wed, 26 Nov 2003, Brian A. Berg wrote:

> This message is from the T13 list server.
> 
> 
> This validity of claim below is documented at
>   <http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/outrage/master.asp>
> 
> Brian Berg
> 
> 
> 
> Claim:   The County of Los Angeles has requested that equipment vendors
> avoid using the industry term "Master/Slave" in product descriptions and
> labelling.
> 
> Status:   True.
> 
> Origins:   Social
> changes of our era have been accompanied by linguistic changes: as
> discrimination based upon race, gender, or physical condition has become
> less socially acceptable, we began to frown upon the use of pejorative
> terms associated with race, moved towards more gender-neutral usages of
> language (e.g., 'chairperson' instead of 'chairman'), and replaced terms
> for describing the disabled with less stigmatizing ones (e.g., 'mentally
> handicapped' rather than 'retarded').
> 
> Along with these linguistic changes have come tales of the "political
> correctness run amok" variety - cases where certain usages were  deemed
> unacceptable merely because they bore a resemblance to terms now
> considered inappropriate, even though the usages had little or nothing
> in common with the now-inappropriate terms in a linguistic sense. For
> example, we've read of the 1999 incident in which a mayoral aide
> (temporarily) lost his job for using the word 'niggardly' in a staff
> meeting, even though the word's origins have nothing to do with race,
> and even though the aide used the word correctly (to mean 'miserly' or
> 'stingy'). Or we've heard the (possibly apocryphal) tale of a writer who
> was informed by his editor that his use of the hunting term 'duck blind'
> was unacceptable, as the preferred substitute for the latter word is now
> 'visually impaired.'
> 
> How far we should take this linguistic sensitivity to social issues has
> long been a subject of (often heated) debate. Can female members of the
> fire department be referred to by the traditional title of 'fireman,' or
> does true gender equality require that they be identified as
> 'firewomen'? Is the existence of separate gender words for the same
> concept itself a form of gender discrimination, requiring us to adopt a
> neutral term such as 'fireperson' for everyone? Or should we just chuck
> the whole thing and call everybody 'firefighters'? What one group sees
> as socially progressive, another group is bound to view as a needless
> discarding of the familiar and traditional.
> 
> Another example of this phenomenon surfaced recently in reference to
> 'master/slave,' a term commonly used in computing (and related
> industries) to describe the unidirectional control of one device or
> process by another. Equipment vendors who do business with Los Angeles
> County received a message in November 2003 from the county's Internal
> Services Department (ISD) informing them that "based on the cultural
> diversity and sensitivity of Los Angeles County," labeling or describing
> equipment with the term 'master/slave' is no longer acceptable:
> 
> Subject: IDENTIFICATION OF EQUIPMENT SOLD TO LA COUNTY
> Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 14:21:16 -0800
> From: "Los Angeles County"
> 
> The County of Los Angeles actively promotes and is committed to ensure a
> work environment that is free from any discriminatory influence be it
> actual or perceived. As such, it is the County's expectation that our
> manufacturers, suppliers and contractors make a concentrated effort to
> ensure that any equipment, supplies or services that are provided to
> County departments do not possess or portray an image that may be
> construed as offensive or defamatory in nature.
> 
> One such recent example included the manufacturer's labeling of
> equipment where the words "Master/Slave" appeared to identify the
> primary and secondary sources. Based on the cultural diversity and
> sensitivity of Los Angeles County, this is not an acceptable
> identification label.
> 
> We would request that each manufacturer, supplier and contractor review,
> identify and remove/change any identification or labeling of equipment
> or components thereof that could be interpreted as discriminatory or
> offensive in nature before such equipment is sold or otherwise provided
> to any County department.
> 
> Thank you in advance for your cooperation and assistance.
> 
> Joe Sandoval, Division Manager
> Purchasing and Contract Services
> Internal Services Department
> County of Los Angeles
> 
> 
> Note: You are receiving this email because you have registered with the
> County of Los Angeles. If you do not wish to receive future L.A. County
> Event news, simply click the link below, and update your registration
> information to remove email notification.
> 
> To verify that this wasn't a hoax or an internal joke which mistakenly
> escaped to the wider world of the Internet, we called the Purchasing and
> Contract Services division for the County of Los Angeles, and they
> informed us that yes, they did issue this message, and yes, it was meant
> seriously. The representative we spoke with said that someone within the
> County bureaucracy - a person who probably didn't understand computer
> terminology - had taken offense at 'master/slave' references and
> complained to the board, whereupon the Internal Services Department was
> obligated to issue notification requesting that vendors refrain from
> using that terminology.
> 
> Whether this message reflects more a "socially progressive" change or
> one of the "needless discarding of the familiar and traditional" variety
> we couldn't say, but - much to the chagrin of several vendors who passed
> it along to us - the County of Los Angeles is apparently serious about
> it.
> 
> Last updated:   24 November 2003
> ___________________________________________________________________
>  Brian A. Berg            [EMAIL PROTECTED]        Voice: 408.741.5010
>  Berg Software Design                             FAX: 408.741.5234
>  P.O. Box 3488         visit the Storage Cornucopia at www.bswd.com
>  14500 Big Basin Way, Suite F       Consulting: SCSI/FC/SAN/storage
>  Saratoga, CA 95070 USA                          Cell: 408.568.2505
> 

Reply via email to