Euro chiefs ban 'Miss' and 'Mrs'

Canada
March 19, 2009 3:05am CST
The European Parliament has banned the terms 'Miss' and 'Mrs' in case they offend female MEPs. The politically correct rules also mean a ban on Continental titles, such as Madame and Mademoiselle, Frau and Fraulein and Senora and Senorita. Guidance issued in a new 'Gender-Neutral Language' pamphlet instead orders politicians to address female members by their full name only. Related Articles * EU's attempt to ban courteous salutations must be ignored * Vive la différence * Good hospitals are run by medical staff, not by bureaucrats and accountants * People are now freer to travel in China than they are in Britain * Christian nurse row: now teachers could be disciplined for discussing religion Officials have also ordered that 'sportsmen' be called 'athletes', 'statesmen' be referred to as 'political leaders' and even that 'synthetic' or 'artificial' be used instead of 'man-made'. The guidance lists banned terms for describing professions, including fireman, air hostess, headmaster, policeman, salesman, manageress, cinema usherette and male nurse. However MEPs are still allowed to refer to 'midwives' as there is no accepted male version of the job description. The booklet also admits that "no gender-neutral term has been successfully proposed" to replace 'waiter' and 'waitress', allowing parliamentarians to use these words in a restaurant or café. It has been circulated by Harold Romer, the parliament's secretary general, to the 785 MEPs working in Brussels and Strasbourg. Struan Stevenson, a Scottish Conservative MEP described the guidelines as "political correctness gone mad." He said: "We have seen the EU institutions try to ban the bagpipes and dictate the shape of bananas, but now they see determined to tell us which words we are entitled to use in our own language." Philip Bradbourn, another Conservative MEP, vowed to ignore the booklet, which he described as a "waste of taxpayers' money" and called on Mr Romer to reveal its cost. He added: "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." Seven years ago, an attempt to amend noise laws came close to effectively outlawing bagpipes. However, a number of bizarre EU rules remain in place, including a directive stating that every pair of rubber boots must be supplied with a user's manual in 12 languages.
1 person likes this
2 responses
• Canada
21 Mar 09
If language had started off being gender neutral, this would not be an issue today. It's sad when courteous titles reflect labelling women in an unequal way to men. Men go through their lives being themselves, while women are passed from one identity to another, unless they are "different" like I am, in which case people are constantly on their cases about not being traditional. Time you guys get to deal with this instead of just us!!!
@Lakota12 (42600)
• United States
20 Mar 09
Might need the boots to wade thro all that manure . Sounds like a bunch of BS to me I know that I Wouldnt change how I address a person.al people older than me is miss Jill or Mr. Sam As tewardess or stewart thats just what they are but I think that now they are called flight attendants as men do it too.