> As a doctor, you’re probably going to become cynical after a while.
As my go to story on these sorts of issues, my partner had an ER doctor tell them that they hadn't been stabbed. The fact that there was an open wound oozing blood and multiple witnesses was not sufficient evidence. That wound was obviously a diabetic sore. That my partner is not diabetic was also a lie and the fact that their medical records showed no history of diabetes was merely proof of the incompetence of the previous doctors. Stitching the wound had to wait for two blood sugar tests to be performed, because the first test was could only have been a machine glitch. After a second negative test for diabetes, the doctor finally conceded that he couldn't rule out a stabbing.
How do some people end up making clearly counterproductive interpretations that ignore not only evidence in general, but clear evidence of harm to others?
I remember a Google employee changed a popular font for headings. It broke the layout on a very large number of websites.
Several people discussed this with the employee, suggesting the font should be forked rather than force-updated. The employee engaged, but refused. Eventually they said that if enough users contacted them with complaints, that would be evidence they would consider. When it was pointed out that it was very difficult to know how to contact them (they were not required to engage on the forum, or anywhere else, no contact information for them was otherwise findable, etc) they barely shrugged. It was as if part of the logic function in this human was managed by a 4 year old child internally.
Writers should use the singular “they” in two main cases: (a) when referring to a generic person whose gender is unknown or irrelevant to the context and (b) when referring to a specific, known person who uses “they” as their pronoun.
– apastyle.apa.org
I do not know the gender of the person under discussion, nor do I know if that person has pronoun preferences. I simply followed the "generic person whose gender is unknown" standard.
I've been using "they" in this manner for 50+ years. Never had anyone comment on it before. Are you attempting some kind of meta virtue signalling, considering "pronoun preferences" is a very recently added option?
As my go to story on these sorts of issues, my partner had an ER doctor tell them that they hadn't been stabbed. The fact that there was an open wound oozing blood and multiple witnesses was not sufficient evidence. That wound was obviously a diabetic sore. That my partner is not diabetic was also a lie and the fact that their medical records showed no history of diabetes was merely proof of the incompetence of the previous doctors. Stitching the wound had to wait for two blood sugar tests to be performed, because the first test was could only have been a machine glitch. After a second negative test for diabetes, the doctor finally conceded that he couldn't rule out a stabbing.