Several professors, headed by
project leader Daniel
Oto-Peralías at Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Spain, have created a new app that they claim will
help identify “offensive” and “harmful” street names and “repair past
wrongs.”
The
STNAMES LAB app was described by Oto-Peralías and fellow geography professors Derek
Alderman of the University of Tennessee and Joshua Inwood of Penn State
University as an “important education tool” in a recent article at The
Conversation. The intrepid professors wrote that the app “will help communities understand how
discriminatory beliefs are woven into everyday spaces and the harm caused by
offensive names.” They added, “We
believe the app will help people see the changes necessary to recognize and
repair past wrongs in street naming.” Users of the app can search for offensive
street names in North America and western Europe-- and even get their exact
locations. (Perhaps in case they want to “cancel” any street signs that sport
names that offend them personally.)
For
example, the professors noted that they found hundreds of street names
containing the obviously harmful words “savage” and “squaw.” “Savage” is, well,
kinda mean sounding, and squaw is supposedly a derogatory term directed at
female Native Americans…though everyone I’ve ever met believes it simply means
a female Native American. (Not that it should matter. We can no longer even say
what a “female” is, anyway. We are incessantly told that it certainly
has nothing to do with a person’s genitalia.)
What
street name wouldn’t be offensive to someone determined to be offended?
Countless streets are named for a person. In these cases, the offendee(s) are
going to feign “harm” if the person the street was named after ever thought, said,
or did anything with which the offendee disagreed, no matter how
minutely or far back in the past it may have been.
Nearly
every smaller town has a “Main Street.” This seems insulting and non-inclusive.
What about all the other streets-- of various types? Why are they relegated to lesser
status?
How
about “Broad” Street?! Talk about offensive! And misogynistic! Or “Church”
Street! Are atheists just supposed to put up with this demeaning and harmful designation?
Some types of streets appear to me to
be offensive, as well. “Thoroughfare” and “drive,” for example. The former
categorization may well be offensive to those who aren’t particularly thorough,
while the latter is patently offensive to those who happen to lack
determination.
Whatever.
Personally,
I don’t look to street names whenever I have an overwhelming urge to be
offended. I just turn on the “news”-- or read an article by or about professors.
Works every time. But maybe that’s just me.
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