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EU bans use of 'Miss' and 'Mrs' (and sportsmen and statesmen) because it claims they are sexist

By Daily Mail Reporter

 

Using 'Miss' and 'Mrs' has been banned by leaders of the European Union because they are not considered politically correct.

Brussels bureaucrats have decided the words are sexist and issued new guidelines in its bid to create 'gender-neutral' language.

The booklet warns European politicians they must avoid referring to a woman's marital status.

This also means Madame and Mademoiselle, Frau and Fraulein and Senora and Senorita are banned.

 

'Political correctness gone mad': The European Parliament has banned MEPs from using 'Miss' and 'Mrs' because it claims they are sexist

Instead of using the standard titles, it is asking MEPs to address women by their names.

 

And the rules have not stopped there - they also ban MEPs saying sportsmen and statesmen, advising athletes and political leaders should be used instead.

Man-made is also taboo - it should be artificial or synthetic, firemen is disallowed and air hostesses should be called flight attendants.

Headmasters and headmistresses must be heads or head teachers, laymen becomes layperson, and manageress or mayoress should be manager or mayor.

Police officers must be used instead of policeman and policewoman unless the officer's sex is relevant.

The only problem words that do not fit into the guidelines are waiter and waitress, which means MEPs are at least spared one worry when ordering a coffee.

 

They have reacted with incredulity to the booklet, which has been sent out by the Secretary General of the European Parliament.

 

Scottish Tory MEP Struan Stevenson described the guidelines as 'political correctness gone mad'.

 

He said: 'This is frankly ludicrous. We've seen the EU institutions try to ban the bagpipes and dictate the shape of bananas, but now they seem determined to tell us which words we are entitled to use in our own language.

 

'Gender-neutrality is really the last straw. The Thought Police are now on the rampage in the European Parliament.

 

'We will soon be told that the use of the words "man" or "woman" has been banned in case it causes offence to those who consider 'gender neutrality' an essential part of life.'

West Midlands Conservative MEP Philip Bradbourn is calling on the Secretary General to reveal who authorised the publication of the booklet and how much it has cost.

He described it as 'a waste of taxpayers' money' and 'an erosion of the English language as we know it'.

'I will have no part of it. I will continue to use my own language and expressions, which I have used all my life, and will not be instructed by this institution or anyone else in these matters,' he said.

'I shall also expect the many translators who sit in the European parliament to translate accurately the language I use. I find this publication offensive in the extreme.

'The Parliament, by the publication of this document, is not only bringing itself as an institution into more disrepute than it already suffers, but it is also showing that it has succumbed to the politically correct clap-trap currently in vogue.'

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Some of you guys honestly need to wise up when you're reading the Daily Mail.

 

You know it has the worst reputation of any paper in the country, right?

 

You know that the editorial policy is to print anything and everything that fits into its reactionary political agenda?

 

You know that it has less concern for providing balanced, fair reporting than for stirring up its readers?

 

Try this, from news.scotsman.com:

 

A EUROPEAN Parliament guide to "gender neutral" language is a voluntary code intended for staff and not politicians, officials in Brussels insisted last night.

 

But a European Parliament spokesman said: "The information is a guideline only and it is intended for staff and not for MEPs. It is particularly useful for translators and interpreters, who are being asked to consider gender-neutral languages when they are translating documents or interpreting MEPs speaking in the chamber.

 

"But it is also clear that where MEPs are using gender-specific terms, interpreters are told they should accurately interpret what they are saying, using the equivalent gender-specific terms where appropriate".

 

So: it's not a 'ban' of anything by the EU and the headline is misleading.

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These are just GUIDELINES issued to MEPs and other EU officials about how to deal with the thorny issue of addressing females in these PC days.

 

Apparently some lesbians and women who've been left on the shelf or otherwise ignored by menfolk don't like being addressed as Mrs as that doesn't fit their status, 'civil partnership' or whatever.

They also don't like being addressed as Miss because they say that it assumes they are vulnerable or less capable/secure than 'Mrs'.

And they can't pronounce Ms no matter how hard they try.

 

They just don't see how come it's just them women and not us blokes that have to suffer, so some poor overpayed and understressed Eurocrat has to issue some new guidelines to keep them happy. ;)

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