Quote from: Remember when African Americans were called "colored people?" The phrasing implies that something made them that way not that they were born that way. The same principle applies here.
I'm sorry, but this is nonsense. The term "colored people" was first used around the turn of the last century by African Americans who wanted an alternative to the offensive words then used to describe them. The reason it became offensive in itself is the same one that eventually makes all euphemisms as offensive as the words they replace: the attitude of the majority population toward the referent of the word. Compare "retarded" and "handicapped," both of which were invented to replace terms like "moron" and "cripple;" they too became offensive in their own right, and "disabled" is going the same way, giving rise to abominations like "differently abled" and "developmentally challenged."
In any case, "people of color" has a different meaning from "colored." The latter refers to African Americans, and the former refers to any and all groups who aren't "white."
QuoteDo you know anyone who has transgendered?
Of course not; I never said "transgender" was a verb.
In
practical terms, I really don't care whether "transgender" or "transgendered" becomes accepted usage; language evolves according to the way it's used. In
grammatical terms, "transgendered" is correct. The word is derived from "gendered," which is an adjective meaning "having a gender." For example, one would say "In French and Italian, nouns are gendered;" it would be absurd to say "... nouns are gender."
But ultimately, this will be decided by the invisible tongue of the marketplace.