@courtneyatzn Number 2 is so subjective that I honestly don’t agree with making that decision for someone else. We all value things differently and don’t really have control over what is going to trigger certain things. I have had enough random crying fits(related to mother dying at 52) that I physically,y couldn’t contain to say that it’s just something you “control”.
The caveat being that they don’t get to decide for me what is offensive/they don’t get to expect me to act on their behalf.
For example: I don’t care about the alphabet soup. It’s knowledge that is not relevant to my life in anyway, for someone in that life? It could have been a lifetime of suffering to figureout the letter they are.
So my making a mistake for something that has actual meaning for them? I can understand being upset. As long as they react within reason and respect the lack of malice? We good.
Now if they try and demand I grovel or anything beyond a basic apology? Yeah that’s too far, but that doesn’t really happen statistically so not something I worry about.
Almost everytime I hear about these situations, when I see the actual words used? It was offensive as shit
“I just asked what it’s like to be trans”
“You asked them what it felt like to molest children”
“Yeah that’s what I said”
“You really believe those are the same thing don’t you?”