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Raportează o problemă de traducere



You’re very close. They’ve tried to change the meaning of 'phobia' over the last few decades, just to use it as a shutdown tactic in discussions.
Tell me: if those things are not actual phobias, why keep the word 'phobia' in the term? Would you bully and insult an arachnophobe just because they’re terrified of spiders? Does that make sense to you?
I'm seein' double here -- Four anti-LGBT hate threads!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxc7S2EyMGk
This is just a repost of the old thread which got deleted and was nothing more than a thinly veiled attempt to delegitimise the concepts of hatred and discrimination against the LGBT.
ah, well, anyways, to repeat what I said before, call it "hate against trans and/or gay people" then. also look up the damn meaning of the suffix "-phobia" it's just an odd, odd talking point.
I doubt it's a second person. This thread is OP's first post, which is a sure sign of an alt account when it's a thread like this.
Calling people snowflakes who are living with an actual medical condition is actually discriminating and rude, thank you for being a prime example.
Also no, phobia doesn't inherently mean "clinical diagnosis". The root from the Greek word means fear or aversion. Clinical phobias were named using that root because they describe specific fears, not the other way around. So using the same root to describe hostility toward a group is completely consistent with how language works. It's human nature to fear and distrust the unkown and that fear can subconsciously translate into prejudice and spite. The logic and idea behind these words is pretty straightforward without needing to be a linguist.
Also a misuse of a word doesn't make the word itself invalid. People get labeled 'racist' or 'Nazi' improperly at all the time but nobody argues those terms shouldn't exist because they can be misapplied.
Bad bait.