I'm reading an article from the Star-Telegram of Dallas-Ft. Worth about how the number of white students in Texas government schools has dropped while for all other races the number has increased. Except that the word "white" is never used. Whites are referred to exclusively in this article by the idiotic term "Anglos." Apparently the hispanic population in Texas has increased to the point that the (polite) term that hispanics prefer to use for whites is now mandatory among the media.
"Anglo" is a shortened version of "Anglo-Saxon," which refers to a segment of the British people. But now it has become a "politically correct" term for all white people in the U.S.
The way our language is used as a weapon against us -- at the same time it's being replaced by Spanish -- really pisses me off. From "white" to "Caucasian" and "Anglo"; from the word "man" almost completely replaced by "males," "guys," and "boys"; from "God" becoming gender neutral or even female, among many many every day examples that can be cited, the onslaught against English by non-white racists and feminists is a key component of the war against whites, a weapon of which far too few whites are even aware.
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/16687275.htm
Edit: This article may require registration to view.Edited by: Don Wassall
"Anglo" is a shortened version of "Anglo-Saxon," which refers to a segment of the British people. But now it has become a "politically correct" term for all white people in the U.S.
The way our language is used as a weapon against us -- at the same time it's being replaced by Spanish -- really pisses me off. From "white" to "Caucasian" and "Anglo"; from the word "man" almost completely replaced by "males," "guys," and "boys"; from "God" becoming gender neutral or even female, among many many every day examples that can be cited, the onslaught against English by non-white racists and feminists is a key component of the war against whites, a weapon of which far too few whites are even aware.
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/16687275.htm
Edit: This article may require registration to view.Edited by: Don Wassall