PLAY PODCASTS
Google's Annoying Inclusive-Language Guide

Google's Annoying Inclusive-Language Guide

Breakpoint · John Stonestreet and Kasey Leander

April 27, 20221m 12s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (traffic.libsyn.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

In one of the most annoying tech moves since Microsoft's "Clippy," Google Docs now offers unsolicited advice about how to avoid using non-inclusive language. Terms like "landlord" or "motherboard" trigger a pop-up warning that reads "these words may not be inclusive to all readers."

The folks at TechRadar were overly generous when they said that this was "a good idea, poorly executed." In reality, it's a bad idea, poorly executed.

It's more than annoying for Google to thought police our words in this way. It simply doesn't correspond with reality. Sure, not all "police officers" are "policemen," but connecting "landlord" with slavery or class warfare misses the full history of the word. And questioning the word "motherboard"? That's just silly.

Google has never been a neutral facilitator of communication, but this move demonstrates a misunderstanding of language itself. Words are more than social constructs. They reflect reality. Denying that certain realities exist with language doesn't change reality.

As a friend used to say, "sloppy words make sloppy thought possible." Misusing language damages our ability to think.